Site icon Metro Voice News

Newly discovered Mosaics tell two stories about Samson

samson

Samson carrying the Gaza gate.

Archaeologists have discovered mosaics featuring Samson and other Old Testament stories in the ancient Jewish village of Huqoq, which is located in Israel’s Lower Galilee.

Jodi Magness, an archaeologist and professor of early Judaism at the University of North Carolina, is seeking answers about the impact of early Christian rule on Jewish people. Some of the evidence is found in recently uncovered floors in an ancient synagogue from the time of Christian rule of the region.

The mosaic panels on the synagogue floor depict biblical stories, including Samson and the foxes from Judges 15:4 and Samson carrying the gates of Gaza in Judges 16:3. This summer, additional sections of those mosaic panels were exposed.

A newly discovered mosaic on the floor just inside the main entrance consists of a large panel with a Hebrew inscription contained inside a wreath. An Aramaic inscription lists the names of what appear to be the donors who funded the mosaic or the artists who created them. Other panels depict a tiger hunting an ibex, while another features a Philistine horseman and a dead Philistine soldier.

TOUR ISRAEL: Join us for the trip of a lifetime.

Magness said the discovery of the mosaic was unintentional. Every summer, her team uncovers more mosaics, never knowing what to expect. “But like other sciences, archeologists usually start with a goal of answering one or more research questions in the hopes that the remains that we dig up will help us to answer those questions,” she said.

Magness said she sought to answer questions about the fate of Jewish villages under early Christian rule through the excavation. The village of Huqoq existed during the Roman and Byzantine periods and beginning in the fourth century, the Roman Empire became Christian.

“Many of my colleagues in Israel think the Christian rule was oppressive to Jews and that many of these settlements declined and even disappeared during the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries,” she said. “And my impression from the archeology was always exactly the opposite, that these Jewish settlements continued to exist and even to flourish.”

Tiger chasing ibex. Decorative border panel in the Huqoq synagogue mosaic in Israel.
(Photo by Jim Haberman)

Magness said the findings have implications for understanding the fate of Jews and the fate of Jews after Christian rule, as well as relations between members of the two religions.

Other impressive mosaic finds at the site include:

With the conclusion of the current archaeological season, the site will now be turned over to the Isarel Antiquities Authority which will continue excavations. They will also begin plans to open the site up to the public.

–Dwight Widaman | Metro Voice

Exit mobile version