When a Judean king sealed a document, hot clay took the stamp of his ring; the papyrus rotted long ago, but fire hardened the clay. This one, sifted from excavation debris a stone's throw from where the palace stood, carries a winged sun and the king's own name and title. Because it came from a supervised, documented dig — not the antiquities market — it is the first seal impression of an Israelite or Judean king with an unimpeachable pedigree.
- What it is
- A fingernail-sized clay seal impression reading “Belonging to Hezekiah [son of] Ahaz, king of Judah”
- Date of artifact
- c. 727–698 BC
- Discovered
- Ophel excavations, just south of the Temple Mount, Jerusalem, 2009 (Eilat Mazar's team (identified 2015))
- Where it is now
- Hebrew University / Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem
- Related to
- King Hezekiah of Judah
- Scripture
- 2 Kings 18–20
What this find showsHezekiah son of Ahaz reigned as king of Judah and ran a literate royal administration from Jerusalem, exactly as Kings describes.
What it does not proveA seal attests the man and his office — not his reforms, his prayers, or his healing, which are claims of a different kind.
Sources & further reading