Bible and archaeology news
While working in a garden in the Jezreel Valley community of Moshav Yogev in Israel, landscaper Dekel Ben-Shitrit uncovered an exceptional piece of jewelry in the dirt: an ancient ring engraved with the image of a figure. After posting a picture of the ring on Facebook, he was advised by his neighbor, Dr. Dror Ben-Yosef, the director of the Israel Nature and Parks Authority’s Lower Galilee Education Center, to bring the find to the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA).
Dr. Yana Tchekhanovetz, an IAA archaeologist who is an expert on the Byzantine period, examined the ring.
“This special ring is amazingly well preserved and will contribute a great deal to science,” Tchekhanovetz explained in an IAA press release. “On the ring is the image of a bald man with a staff next to him. On preliminary examination, this seems to be St. Nicholas holding a bishop’s crook—his hallmark.”
So what was the St. Nicholas ring doing in the Jezreel Valley? Tchekhanovetz believes the ring, which dates to the 12th–15th centuries C.E., might have belonged to a Christian pilgrim traveling through the Holy Land. In popular imagination, St. Nicholas often conjures an image of a jolly old man with a white beard who climbs down chimneys on Christmas Eve—Santa Claus. In the Eastern Christian world, St. Nicholas is celebrated as the patron saint of travelers. Because of this association, the image of St. Nicholas was often carried by sailors and pilgrims. St. Nicholas was also known for his generosity and bravery.
IAA archaeologist Yotam Tepper, who specializes in Roman roads, is not surprised that the pilgrim to whom the St. Nicholas ring belonged was passing through Moshav Yogev.
“We know that the main Roman road from Legio to Mount Tabor passed next to Moshav Yogev, and the road must also have been used throughout the centuries by Christian pilgrims on their way to the sites on Mount Tabor, Nazareth and around the Sea of Galilee,” said Tepper.
The IAA praised Ben-Shitrit for turning in the rare St. Nicholas ring. Nir Distelfeld, an anti-theft inspector, commented: “We thank Ben-Shitrit for handing over this special artifact to the Israel Antiquities Authority, and we encourage others to do the same. When they do, they enrich and deepen archaeological understanding of the past that belongs to all of us.”
Amanda Laughead is an intern at the Biblical Archaeology Society.
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Fantastic find! & thanks to the finder – ‘the past that belongs to us all’, exactly, archeology enriches our lives! I always wonder about the original owner; how was it lost, were they upset, 100s of years ago, it’s incredible to think about it.
I agree, your act was a picture of significant Grace, I am humbled by your example, and—Thank You.
Thank you Dekel Ben-Shitrit for sharing your find to the world. It’s people like you who help with the pieces of history.