LMLK seal

{{Short description|Ancient Hebrew seal stamped on Judahite jars}}

File:LMLK-stamps ancient-and-modern.jpg atop LMLK-bearing Israeli postage stamps, 2006]]

The LMLK seal appears on the handles of several large storage jars from the Kingdom of Judah, where it was first issued during the reign of Hezekiah around 700 BCE. Seals bearing these four Hebrew letters have been discovered primarily on unearthed artifacts in and around Jerusalem, with some in northern Israel. Several complete jars were found {{Langx|la|in situ|label=none}} at the ancient city of Lachish, where they were buried underneath a destruction layer caused by Sennacherib, who reigned over the Neo-Assyrian Empire from 705 BCE to 681 BCE.Ussishkin (2004), The Renewed Archaeological Excavations at Lachish, p. 89 ("As the work of the renewed excavations developed it became clear that the destruction of Level III must be assigned to Sennacherib's attack in 701 BCE."). While none of the original stamp seals have been found, some 2,000 impressions made by at least 21 seal types have been published.[http://www.lmlk.com/research/ LMLK Research website] The iconography of the two- and four-winged symbols are representative of royal symbols whose meaning "was tailored in each kingdom to the local religion and ideology".Na'aman, Nadav. "The lmlk seal impressions reconsidered." Tel Aviv 43.1 (2016): 115.{{what|date=March 2024}}

Text

File:Lmlk-seal impression-h2d-gg22 2003-02-21.jpg

LMLK—lamedh, mem, lamedh, kaph—is vocalized in the Hebrew language as {{Transliteration|he|lamelekh}} ({{Langx|phn|𐤋𐤌𐤋𐤊}} {{Transliteration|phn|lāmed-mēm-lāmed-kāp}}), which can be translated as:

  • "[belonging] to the king" (of Judah)
  • "[belonging] to King" (name of a person or deity)
  • "[belonging] to the government" (of Judah)
  • "[to be sent] to the king"

As a prepositional prefix, the lāmed ({{Langx|phn|𐤋|label=none}}) has either a genitive or dative function, and the "to" in each of the above readings can also be read as "for" or "of". The other three letters form the word {{lang|he|melekh}}; as shown above, its translation can refer to a specific king, to any king, or to the king's government.{{Cite web |title=King Seal Artifacts Attest to Hebron's Jewish History |url=http://hebron.org.il/history/693 |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=the Jewish Community of Hebron |language=en}}

A number of jars say "lmlk Ziph", "lmlk Hebron", "lmlk Socoh", and "lmlk mmst" (whose identification is unknown). These jars were all manufactured in a single site in the Shephelah, possibly at Lachish, under the authority of the king (alluded to in 1 Chronicles 4:23, thus 'lmlk' means 'belonging to the king'), and from there they were sent to each one of the four administrative regions, as indicated by the name of the localities on the jars: Ziph, Hebron, Socoh, and MMST).Naʼaman, Nadav. Ancient Israel and Its Neighbors: Interaction and Counteraction. Vol. 1. Eisenbrauns, 2005, 173–174.

Discovery sites

File:Lmlk sites map.gif

Though most of these stamped jar handles have been found in the territory of the Kingdom of Judah (71 sites in the land allotted to Judah, Benjamin, and Simeon), some have also been found in the territory of the Kingdom of Israel (four sites in the northwest region).{{Cite web |title=LMLK Seals |url=https://www.antiquities.org.il/t/item_en.aspx?indicator=153&shalemid=702&CurrentPageKey=23_1 |access-date=2024-02-10 |website=www.antiquities.org.il}} Over 2,000 stamped jar handles have been found. The 20 sites where the most specimens have been found are:{{Cite book|last1=Garfinkel|first1=Yosef|title=In the Footsteps of King David|last2=Ganor|first2=Saar|last3=Hasel|first3=Michael|publisher=Thames and Hudson|year=2018|isbn=978-0-500-05201-3|editor-last=Meiron|editor-first=Eyal|location=United Kingdom|pages=174}}

Usage theories

File:LMLK seal (Hebron). Israel Museum, Jerusalem (2).JPG on display at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, 2013]]

Beginning with the editio princeps by Charles Warren in 1870, a diverse assortment of theories has been promulgated to explain their function.{{cn|date=October 2020}} Since the landmark excavations at Lachish by David Ussishkin during the 1970s,Published in Ussishkin, "The Renewed Archaeological Excavations at Lachish." which established the date of the seals to the reign of Hezekiah, the number of feasible explanations has narrowed down to these (all associated with Hezekiah.{{cn|date=May 2019}}

  • Military rations collected as an emergency during a short period (several months to a few years at most) preceding the Assyrian invasion by Sennacherib
  • Government taxes collected throughout the majority of Hezekiah's reign (either 14 or 26 years depending on chronological interpretations) as a long-term economic buildup until the Assyrian invasion by Sennacherib
  • Religious tithes collected throughout Hezekiah's 29-year reign in response to his worship reformation following his accession (completely irrespective of the Assyrian invasion by Sennacherib){{cn|date=October 2020}}

In support of the first two theories are the inscriptions, which can be read as the names of four places; in support of the third theory are the geographic statistics, which do not associate any of the four words to a particular place or region other than the entire southern kingdom of Judah. Furthermore, approximately 10–20 percent of the excavated jars and jar handles were stamped.{{cn|date=October 2020}}

Depending on which of the above theories are preferred, several other aspects of the operation need interpretation:

  • The people who performed the stamping were either government officials working directly for King Hezekiah or Levites and/or priests associated with Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem.
  • The icons symbolize either royal stature or a religious nature ({{bibleref|Deuteronomy|32:11–12}}, {{bibleref|Ruth|2:12}}, {{bibleref|Psalm|36:7}}, {{bibleref|Psalm|57:1}}, {{bibleref|Psalm|61:4}}, {{bibleref|Psalm|91:4}}, and {{bibleref|Malachi|4:2}}).
  • The super-inscription, LMLK, denotes the Judean government or a specific, divine being (consider its application to the Israelite YHWH as in {{bibleref|Psalm|10:16}}, {{bibleref|Isaiah|6:5}}, and {{bibleref|Zechariah|14:9}}).
  • The sub-inscriptions (Hebron, MMST, Socoh, and Ziph) record either 4 places or 4 votive statements.

Engraving styles indicate at least two, possibly five, people made the seals. The 21 types can be grouped together in five or six sets, but they may have been created or utilized in pairs based on quantities of their impressions found so far.{{cn|date=October 2020}}

Researchers frequently use a lowercase "x" as a wildcard character when referring to a series such as x4C instead of using an uppercase "G", "H", "M", "S", or "Z" for the first letter designator. Likewise, an "x" can be used for the second letter designator when referring to all seals with the same word, such as H2x in lieu of H2D, H2T, and H2U.

Thus far, significant quantities of x4C, x4L, and x2U stamps have been excavated from below the destruction layer caused by the Assyrian conquest of Sennacherib, but only a single specimen each of the G2T and M2D stamps (excavated from Jerusalem, which was not destroyed by Sennacherib). This suggests that 12 of the 21 seals were made prior to the attack, and the remaining 9 afterwards. The first significant evidence to support this datum came from the landmark excavations at Timnah led by George L. Kelm and Amihai Mazar.Mazar and Panitz-Cohen, Timnah (Tel Batash) II.

Additional impressions

File:LMLK seal (Hebron). Israel Museum, Jerusalem.JPG) on a jar at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, 2013]]

File:Lmlk Seals - Hecht Museum, Israel 1.JPG in Haifa, 2010]]

File:Lmlk Seals - Hecht Museum, Israel 2.JPG in Haifa, 2010]]

Several hundred seal impressions made on the same type of jar handle have been found in the same contexts as the LMLK stamps. Over 50 types have been documented, and most of them have a 2-line inscription divided by two somewhat parallel lines. Some have an icon in addition to the inscription; others are strictly anepigraphic (Vaughn 1999).

= Incisions =

In addition to the seals, which were stamped in the wet clay before being fired in a kiln, certain other marks were incised on these jar handles:

  • Concentric circles (usually two—sometimes only one; sometimes applied to unstamped handles but it is uncertain whether they were ever incised on unstamped jars)
  • Plus marks (resembling "+" or "t" or "X")
  • Hole marks (resembling the central anchor dot of the concentric circles)
  • Drag marks (probably attempts to cancel or obliterate the LMLK stamp)

Hundreds of the handles with the circles have been found, but only a few of the plus, hole, and drag marks. Several LMLK stamps may have had additional inscriptions incised over them containing marks resembling the letters "I V" (hence "Ivy incisions"); however, one or more of these handles may just contain stray Drag marks resembling the letters "I V" with no literate semantics intended.{{what|date=March 2024}}{{cn|date=March 2024}}

Israeli postage stamps

In 1948, Israel's postal authority chose the Z2U seal design for the first series of postage stamps to include the name of the renascent state. Five multicolored values (3, 5, 10, 20, and 65-mil denominations; Scott catalog numbers 10-4) were printed in sheets of 300 (six panes of 50). Otte Wallish designed the stamps, which have distinctive tabs written in Hebrew declaring: Flying Scroll: "LMLK" Seal Stamped on the Wine and Oil Jugs Given as Tax to the King. Israel released the stamps on September 26, 1948 in time for the October 4 observance of Rosh Hashanah 5709, the Jewish New Year, and thereby inaugurated its annual series of holiday stamps.

Reconstructive drawings

Types of LMLK seals according to George M. Grena's typology:{{Cite web |last=Grena |first=George M. |date=February 23, 2002 |title=LMLK – Typologies |url=http://www.lmlk.com/research/lmlk_typo.htm |access-date=June 30, 2024}}

border="0" cellpadding="1"

|File:Lmlk-seal type-h2t 2005-01-03.gif

File:Lmlk-seal type-m2t 2005-01-03.gifalign="center" |(reserved
for S2T;
not known
if any
existed)
File:Lmlk-seal type-z2t 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-g2t 2005-01-03.gif
align="center" |(reserved
for H2DR;
not known
if any
existed)
align="center" |(reserved
for M2DR;
not known
if any
existed)
File:Lmlk-seal type-s2dr 2005-01-03.gifalign="center" |(reserved
for Z2DR;
not known
if any
existed)
File:Lmlk-seal type-h2d 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-m2d 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-s2dw 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-z2d 2005-01-03.gif
File:Lmlk-seal type-h2u 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-m2u 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-s2u 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-z2u 2005-01-03.gif
File:Lmlk-seal type-h4l 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-m4l 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-s4l 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-z4l 2005-01-03.gif
File:Lmlk-seal type-h4c 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-m4c 2005-01-03.gifalign="center" |(reserved
for S4C;
not known
if any
existed)
File:Lmlk-seal type-z4ci 2005-01-03.gifFile:Lmlk-seal type-z4cy 2005-01-03.gif

See also

References

{{reflist}}

=Bibliography=

  • {{cite book |year=2001 |title=Timnah (Tel Batash) II, the Finds from the First Millennium BCE, Text. Qedem 42, Monographs of the Institute of Archaeology |location=Jerusalem, Israel |publisher=The Hebrew University}}
  • {{cite book | author=Ussishkin, David | year=2004 | title=The Renewed Archaeological Excavations at Lachish (1973 – 1994) Volumes 1 and 4 | location=Tel Aviv, Israel | publisher=Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University }}
  • {{cite book | author=Vaughn, Andrew G. | year=1999 | title=Theology, History, and Archaeology in the Chronicler's Account of Hezekiah | publisher=Scholars Press; Atlanta, Georgia | isbn=0-7885-0594-7}}
  • {{cite journal |author=Warren, Charles |year=1870 |title=Phoenician inscription on jar handles |journal=Palestine Region Exploration Quarterly |volume=2 |issue=September 30 |pages=372}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lmlk Seal}}

Category:8th-century BC inscriptions

Category:8th century BC in the Kingdom of Judah

Category:Archaeological sites in Israel

Category:Seals (insignia)

Category:Cylinder and impression seals in archaeology

Category:Hezekiah

Category:Tel Lachish

Category:Israelite and Jewish archaeological artifacts