Posted on 09/01/15
| News Source: VIN
Jerusalem - Archaeologists who recently unearthed a pyramid-shaped staircase abutting the 2,000 year-old Second Temple stepped street in the City of David are speculating that the structure might be the “Stone of Claims,” a podium used to address pedestrian traffic oft mentioned in the Mishnah and Talmud.
The structure was revealed as part of an archaeological dig in the Jerusalem Walls National Park along with dozens of pieces of pottery and stone vessels which date back to somewhere around the 4th decade of the first century CE, the Second Temple era.
Archaeologists Nahshon Szanton and Dr. Joe Uziel, who are heading up the dig on behalf of the Israel Antiques Authority called the structure “unique” and an “enigma” in that it abuts the street and would have been “clearly visible from afar by passers-by making their way to the Temple.”
In a statement, Szanton and Dr. Uziel cited ancient text references that a “Stone of Claims” existed in Jerusalem, saying, “‘Our Rabbis taught: There was a Stone of Claims in Jerusalem: whoever lost an article repaired thither, and whoever found an article did likewise. The latter stood and proclaimed, and the former submitted his identification marks and received it back. And in reference to this we learnt: Go forth and see whether the Stone of Claims is covered’ (Bava Metzia 28:B).”