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late 7th – early 6th century BC · Old Testament era

Ketef Hinnom Silver Scrolls

The unrolled Ketef Hinnom silver strips with faint incised Hebrew letters
Ketef Hinnom Silver Scrolls, Public domain — source

Two rolled slips of silver, each smaller than a cigarette butt, lay in a family tomb sealed before Jerusalem fell to Babylon. Unrolled with enormous care and read under magnification, they carry blessing formulas — including lines essentially matching “The LORD bless you and keep you; the LORD make his face shine upon you.” They pre-date the Dead Sea Scrolls by about four centuries: the oldest physical objects on earth carrying words that also stand in the Bible.

What it is
Two tiny rolled silver amulets incised with palaeo-Hebrew text, worn on the body
Date of artifact
late 7th – early 6th century BC
Discovered
an intact burial repository at Ketef Hinnom, overlooking the Hinnom Valley, Jerusalem, 1979 (Gabriel Barkay's excavation)
Where it is now
Israel Museum, Jerusalem
Related to
The priestly blessing — the oldest known citation of words also found in the Bible
Scripture
Numbers 6:24–26
What this find showsThe priestly blessing was known, treasured, and worn against the skin in Jerusalem before the exile — biblical wording was already circulating in the First Temple period.
What it does not proveTwo amulet texts show that these words existed early — not that the whole Torah, or even the whole book of Numbers, existed in its present form that early.
Contested: A minority of scholars has argued for a later (post-exilic) date; detailed imaging studies support the pre-exilic dating, which is now the majority position.
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