BIBLE HISTORY DAILY

Computer Program Learning to Read Paleo-Hebrew Letters

Bible and archaeology news

arad-ostracon

Tel Aviv University researchers are writing a computer program that can read Paleo-Hebrew letters inscribed on First Temple period ostraca. Shown here is an ostracon from the sanctuary within the Judahite fortress at Arad. The last line of the inscription contains the phrase “the house of Yahweh.” Photo: Israel Museum.

Researchers from Tel Aviv University (TAU) are developing a computer program that can read a script used by the Israelites over 2,600 years ago, Haaretz reports.

The project was begun by TAU Professor of Archaeology Israel Finkelstein and Professor of Physics Eliezer Piasetsky six years ago. Since then, the researchers have enlisted the help of epigraphy, archaeology and math experts along with TAU Ph.D. math students Arie Shaus, Shira Faigenbaum-Golovin and Barak Sober.

At the center of this ambitious project are First Temple period clay potsherds bearing inscriptions. During the First Temple period (c. 1000 to 586 B.C.E., when the Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem and razed the Temple), the Israelites often kept administrative and military records by writing on broken pottery pieces—known as ostraca—with ink. The Paleo-Hebrew script was used by the Israelites during this time.

Normally, an epigrapher, a specialist in deciphering and analyzing inscriptions, would transcribe an inscription to the best of his or her ability in drawings done by hand. These drawings are based on what the epigrapher sees and therefore hinge on an interpretive process.

By creating a computer program that can recognize and transcribe handwritten Paleo-Hebrew letters, the TAU researchers hope to reduce human error and reveal aspects of inscriptions that may not be visible to the naked eye.

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Working with 17 out of about 100 ostraca from the Iron Age fortress at Arad in the Negev desert, the researchers first took digital photos of the inscribed potsherds. Using parts of an advanced digital camera, Ph.D. students Shaus, Faigenbaum-Golovin and Sober built a camera that could take multi-spectral images of the ostraca, capturing light frequencies that the unaided human eye cannot see. This method of digital photography is similar to the digitization of the Dead Sea Scrolls, which was conducted in partnership with Google.

The students discovered that the digital photos made the fading inscriptions much clearer and readable and, moreover, shone a literal light on inscriptions that were previously not noticed.

Shaus, Faigenbaum-Golovin and Sober then wrote a software program using handwriting recognition algorithms to read the most used Paleo-Hebrew letters on the ostraca and to determine how many different hands wrote the inscriptions.

The researchers’ findings will be published soon, and, if successful, the computer program might be able to shed light on how widespread literacy was in the First Temple period.

“Was there a single scribe who took down all the orders for Eliashiv [commander at Arad] and the others in the fortress,” Finkelstein told Haaretz, “or were there many people who knew how to read and write? Was writing widespread or was it just a tool for the elites?”

If literacy was more widespread than previously thought, could this also offer clues as to when the Hebrew Bible’s texts were first written?

Whether the texts were written before the Babylonian conquest and exile of the Jews or later on, in the Persian or Hellenistic period, is a matter of scholarly debate. If more people were literate than previously thought during the First Temple period, it’s conceivable that some of the Biblical texts were written down before the exile of the Jews in 586 B.C.E., according to Finkelstein.

Read more in Haaretz.


Learn more about the development of writing in the Levant in the BAS Library:

Jonathan P. Siegel, “The Evolution of Two Hebrew Scripts,” Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 1979.

Frank Moore Cross, “Defusing Pseudo-Scholarship: Paleo-Hebrew vs. Old Hebrew: The Long and the Short of It,” Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 1997.

Christopher A. Rollston, “What’s the Oldest Hebrew Inscription?” Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 2012.

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Learn more about ancient inscriptions in Bible History Daily:

When Was the Hebrew Bible Written?
Ostraca with Hebrew inscriptions from Arad may provide clues

Ancient Military Correspondence: Send Wine

Three Takes on the Oldest Hebrew Inscription

Precursor to Paleo-Hebrew Script Discovered in Jerusalem

Ancient Aramaic Business Records

The Phoenician Alphabet in Archaeology by Josephine Quinn


 


12 Responses

  1. Yah Willing says:

    Yahuah is the Heavenly Father and Yahusha is the son. Zechariah 3:8 Yahusha is the sign.”I will bring forth my servant the BRANCH” Yod hei waw shin ayin was used. Messiahs name is Yahusha. Not yeshua,yahushua,jesus,etc

  2. […] images of 16 Hebrew inscriptions, which were written in ink on ostraca (broken pottery pieces), using a computer software program they developed. The ostraca, which date to 600 B.C.E., according to the researchers, were excavated from the […]

    1. Glenn B. Burt III says:

      Referencing the questions of the article, a dozen different scribes will not prove widespread literacy, nor will a single scribe prove it was limited. Information on the use of scribes, questions of employment practices, the preferences of the one dictating to the scribe (a favored worker vs random choice or availability) are only a few variables that need to be considered in assessing literacy’s entry and diffusion into the culture and people. Without considering multiple possibilities as well as providing hypothesis testing research designs that can prove and disprove them, one is only guessing unscientifically/irrationally. Field trained/educated opinions do not establish science, only authoritarian (rather than authoritative) views. What is being done to assess and prove or eliminate their hypotheses?

  3. Tyrell says:

    Thomas You the man bro thanks for telling them the true name of the father and the son I appreciate you.

  4. Thomas says:

    My understanding is that the “U” is pronounced “oo” or “uu” as in double-u (“W”), and Elohim is correctly Alahim (no “o”). Rendering YAHUAH ALAHIM and YAHUSHA MASHIAK respectfully.

  5. alans73 says:

    Can you PLEASE refrain from using “Yahweh” once and for all? The Tetragrammaton should be rendered as Yahoah, with the “vav” being pronounced as the “o” in Torah, menorah, Eloah (singular form of Elohim), and Yehoshu’a* (=Joshua, Christ’s REAL name). A DSS fragment has it spelled ‘Iaw in Greek (iota-alpha-omega), which is consistent with Yahoah; see http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/rs/rak/lxxjewpap/4QLevB.jpg. He is the “alpha and omega” — literally and figuratively. I appreciate your consideration, and I’m sure the Most High does as well!

    * “Jesus” is a transliteration of the Latin into English; it is NOT a translation! The Septuagint (LXX) rendered Joshua, the son of Nun, in Greek as ‘Iesous; the same was used for Christ’s name in the NT. In Hebrew, it is rendered Yehoshu’a, and in Aramaic, Yeshua. Reuben Alcalay, a famous Hebrew lexicographer, stated that Yehoshu’a is closely related to “Let there be…” So, let’s be intellectually honest and start using the proper English translation: Joshua. I know the firstborn of Creation and our Savior would appreciate it as we are to pray in His Name!

    P.S. James’s and Rukeeya, you’re both on the right track. Keep studying!

    1. Lil K says:

      Thanks Alan. I agree with you as in my extensive research I found His Name to be Yahuah and our Mesdiah’s Name is Yahushua. It is stated Yehoshua as in H3091 but we know the translators changed Yahu to Yeho. For our Messiah said, John 5:43, I have come in My Father’s Name…
      Shalom, Lil

  6. Abyyahu Yahsharahl says:

    yes James you are correct brother YAHUAH! NOT yahweh smh
    but some people choose to worship and believe idols

  7. James E. Lundberg says:

    that would be YAHUAH not YAHWEH.

  8. Helen Spalding says:

    An alphabet makes widespread literacy possible!

    1. Tom says:

      The correct name of our creator is YaHuWaH which means I am who exists. He is our Aluahim which means Mighty One. His Son’s name is YaHuWSHuWaH which means I am (YaHuWaH) who saves/delivers.

  9. rajasekar says:

    Beautiful.

Write a Reply or Comment

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12 Responses

  1. Yah Willing says:

    Yahuah is the Heavenly Father and Yahusha is the son. Zechariah 3:8 Yahusha is the sign.”I will bring forth my servant the BRANCH” Yod hei waw shin ayin was used. Messiahs name is Yahusha. Not yeshua,yahushua,jesus,etc

  2. […] images of 16 Hebrew inscriptions, which were written in ink on ostraca (broken pottery pieces), using a computer software program they developed. The ostraca, which date to 600 B.C.E., according to the researchers, were excavated from the […]

    1. Glenn B. Burt III says:

      Referencing the questions of the article, a dozen different scribes will not prove widespread literacy, nor will a single scribe prove it was limited. Information on the use of scribes, questions of employment practices, the preferences of the one dictating to the scribe (a favored worker vs random choice or availability) are only a few variables that need to be considered in assessing literacy’s entry and diffusion into the culture and people. Without considering multiple possibilities as well as providing hypothesis testing research designs that can prove and disprove them, one is only guessing unscientifically/irrationally. Field trained/educated opinions do not establish science, only authoritarian (rather than authoritative) views. What is being done to assess and prove or eliminate their hypotheses?

  3. Tyrell says:

    Thomas You the man bro thanks for telling them the true name of the father and the son I appreciate you.

  4. Thomas says:

    My understanding is that the “U” is pronounced “oo” or “uu” as in double-u (“W”), and Elohim is correctly Alahim (no “o”). Rendering YAHUAH ALAHIM and YAHUSHA MASHIAK respectfully.

  5. alans73 says:

    Can you PLEASE refrain from using “Yahweh” once and for all? The Tetragrammaton should be rendered as Yahoah, with the “vav” being pronounced as the “o” in Torah, menorah, Eloah (singular form of Elohim), and Yehoshu’a* (=Joshua, Christ’s REAL name). A DSS fragment has it spelled ‘Iaw in Greek (iota-alpha-omega), which is consistent with Yahoah; see http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/rs/rak/lxxjewpap/4QLevB.jpg. He is the “alpha and omega” — literally and figuratively. I appreciate your consideration, and I’m sure the Most High does as well!

    * “Jesus” is a transliteration of the Latin into English; it is NOT a translation! The Septuagint (LXX) rendered Joshua, the son of Nun, in Greek as ‘Iesous; the same was used for Christ’s name in the NT. In Hebrew, it is rendered Yehoshu’a, and in Aramaic, Yeshua. Reuben Alcalay, a famous Hebrew lexicographer, stated that Yehoshu’a is closely related to “Let there be…” So, let’s be intellectually honest and start using the proper English translation: Joshua. I know the firstborn of Creation and our Savior would appreciate it as we are to pray in His Name!

    P.S. James’s and Rukeeya, you’re both on the right track. Keep studying!

    1. Lil K says:

      Thanks Alan. I agree with you as in my extensive research I found His Name to be Yahuah and our Mesdiah’s Name is Yahushua. It is stated Yehoshua as in H3091 but we know the translators changed Yahu to Yeho. For our Messiah said, John 5:43, I have come in My Father’s Name…
      Shalom, Lil

  6. Abyyahu Yahsharahl says:

    yes James you are correct brother YAHUAH! NOT yahweh smh
    but some people choose to worship and believe idols

  7. James E. Lundberg says:

    that would be YAHUAH not YAHWEH.

  8. Helen Spalding says:

    An alphabet makes widespread literacy possible!

    1. Tom says:

      The correct name of our creator is YaHuWaH which means I am who exists. He is our Aluahim which means Mighty One. His Son’s name is YaHuWSHuWaH which means I am (YaHuWaH) who saves/delivers.

  9. rajasekar says:

    Beautiful.

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