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‘Atiqot 106 (2022)
ISBN 2948-040X
“Jerusalem Ivories”: Iron Age Decorated Ivory Panels from Building 100, Giv‘ati Parking Lot Excavations, and Their Cultural Setting
(pp. 57–74)
Reli Avisar, Yiftah Shalev, Harel Shochat, Yuval Gadot and Ido Koch
Keywords: Nimrud, Khorsabad, Assyria, craft, art, furniture, trade
This preliminary report presents an assemblage of ivory items found in the precincts of the City of David National Park in Jerusalem. Such prestigious ivory items have only been found in prominent cities, such as Late Bronze Age Megiddo and Iron Age Samaria, where they originated in buildings recognized as part of palatial complexes. These items are the first of their kind to be found in Jerusalem, revealing the wealth of Jerusalem’s elite on the eve of the city’s destruction in 586 BCE. The findings shed light on the cultural and economic role of the city’s elite in the “global” network that connected royal courts and their agents across the ancient Near East.