Near São Bartolomeu de Messines, in the surroundings of Silves, a marble plaque bearing a Hebrew inscription was identified during the excavation of a Roman villa in the area of Cortes. The stone preserves the name Yehiel, followed by additional letters that have not yet been fully deciphered. Based on its form and content, archaeologists have proposed that it is a funerary inscription.
Within the same debris layer in which the plaque was found, red deer antlers were recovered and radiocarbon dated to around 390 CE. This dating places the inscription at least prior to that moment. The find is now cited as one of the earliest archaeological pieces associated with Jewish presence in the southwestern Iberian Peninsula, within a rural Roman context.
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Sources & Bibliography
- FRIEDRICH SCHILLER UNIVERSITY JENA. Oldest Jewish archaeological evidence on the Iberian Peninsula. Publisher: ScienceDaily. Ano: 25 May 2012
- FRIEDRICH SCHILLER UNIVERSITY JENA. Oldest Jewish archaeological evidence on the Iberian Peninsula. Publisher: Phys.org. Ano: 25 May 2012
- SUL INFORMAÇÃO. Mais antigo achado arqueológico judaico da Península Ibérica encontrado perto de Messines. Publisher: Sul Informação. Ano: 25 May 2012
- SUL INFORMAÇÃO. Oldest Jewish archaeological find in the Iberian Peninsula found near Messines. Publisher: Sul Informação. Ano: 25 May 2012
- MAPCARTA. Cortes. São Bartolomeu de Messines, Silves, Faro District. Publisher: Mapcarta. Ano: n.d
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