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Mesha Stele

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The Mesha Stele, also known as the Moabite Stone, is an inscribed basalt monument dating to approximately 840 BC, commissioned by King Mesha of Moab. The inscription, written in Moabite, a Northwest Semitic language closely related to Hebrew and using a script similar to paleo-Hebrew, consists of 34 lines. It records Mesha’s military campaigns, construction projects, and religious devotion to the god Chemosh. Significantly, it contains references to Yahweh and to King Omri of the northern kingdom of Israel, establishing a significant historical parallel with the biblical account in 2 Kings 3.

The stele is roughly 60 cm wide and 60 cm thick, carved in durable black basalt. It provides one of the earliest extra-biblical attestations to figures and places mentioned in the Old Testament and offers a Moabite perspective on Israel-Moab relations in the 9th century BC.

Discovery of the Stele

The stone was shown by local Bedouins to a missionary, Frederick Augustus Klein in 1868, near Dhiban (in modern-day Jordan). A paper-mache impression (known as a “squeeze”) was made by a local Arab on behalf of a French archeologist, Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau, who was living in the French consulate in Jerusalem. There was significant interest in the stone from France, Britain and Prussia (the precursor of Germany) with discussions underway to purchase. In this context, and under pressure from the Ottoman rulers to give the stele to Germany, local Bedouins, in an act of defiance, smashed the stele into several pieces. The Frenchman Clermont-Ganneau acuiqred a number of the fragments and pieced them back together. The stele was transferred to the Louvre Museum in Paris in 1873 where it remains to this day.

Significance of the Stele

The stone is especially important because it mentions Yahweh as the God of Israel, as well the Omri, king of the Northern Kingdom of Israel. Omri reigned from 885 BC to 874 BC and conquered Moab. He was succeeded by his son Ahab, who died in 853 BC. At this time, Moab was under the power of the northern Kingdom of Israel, and was required to pay tribute (2 Kings 3:4)

  • King Mesha of Moab was a sheep breeder. He used to pay the king of Israel an annual tribute of 100,000 lambs and the wool of 100,000 rams.

The inscription of the stone tells of the anger of the Moabite god Chemosh and of how he assisted King Mesha to throw of the yoke of Israel after the death of King Ahab, restoring independence to the lands of Moab. Mesha brags brags about his battle with the men of Gad, as well as his conquest of Nebo, where he killed everyone in the town, 7000 men, boys, women, girls and slaves. This occurred somewhere around 840 BC and the account of the stele aligns with 2 Kings 3:5.

  • But after Ahab's death, the king of Moab rebelled against the king of Israel.

In 2022, using advances in imaging techniques and photography, André Lemaire and Jean‑Philippe Delorme published a paper suggesting that a difficult to read section (line 31) of the stone cited the “House of David”, making the stone one of the earliest non-biblical references to the dynasty of King David.


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