Ancient Arabic inscription found in Jerusalem dated to 910 CE






An Israel Antiquities Authority worker holds a fragment of a ... 

AP
Wed Feb 17, 9:07 AM ET
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An Israel Antiquities Authority worker holds a fragment of a marble plaque with an Arabic inscription dated to 910 CE, discovered in Jerusalem's Old City, and displayed Wednesday, Feb. 17. 2010. The fragment of a 1,100-year-old plaque is thought to have been made by an army veteran to express his thanks for a land grant from the caliph al-Muqtadir, who the inscription calls 'Emir of the Faithful.' Dating from a time when Jerusalem was ruled by the Muslim Abbasid empire, the plaque shows one way rulers rewarded their troops and ensured their loyalty.
(AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)




                                                      Archaeologist Annette Nagar of Israel's Antiquities Authority ... 

AP
Wed Feb 17, 9:08 AM ET
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Archaeologist Annette Nagar of Israel's Antiquities Authority stands at an excavation site holding a fragment of a marble plaque with an Arabic inscription dated to 910 CE discovered in Jerusalem's Old City, Wednesday, Feb. 17. 2010. The fragment of a 1,100-year-old plaque is thought to have been made by an army veteran to express his thanks for a land grant from the caliph al-Muqtadir, who the inscription calls 'Emir of the Faithful.' Dating from a time when Jerusalem was ruled by the Muslim Abbasid empire, the plaque shows one way rulers rewarded their troops and ensured their loyalty.
(AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)






Ancient Arabic inscription found in Jerusalem
Excavation director for the Israel Antiquities Authority Annette ... 

Reuters
Wed Feb 17, 10:28 AM ET
Excavation director for the Israel Antiquities Authority Annette Nagar holds a fragment of a marble plaque with an Arabic inscription discovered in the Old City of Jerusalem February 17, 2010. According to Professor Moshe Sharon of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the inscription, which is characteristic of the first centuries of the Islamic period, dates back to the year 910 BC.




                                                                Archaeologist Annette Nagar of Israel's Antiquities Authority ... 

AP
Wed Feb 17, 9:07 AM ET
4 of 9
Archaeologist Annette Nagar of Israel's Antiquities Authority holds a fragment of a marble plaque with an Arabic inscription dated to 910 CE, discovered in Jerusalem's Old City, Wednesday, Feb. 17. 2010. The fragment of a 1,100-year-old plaque is thought to have been made by an army veteran to express his thanks for a land grant from the caliph al-Muqtadir, who the inscription calls 'Emir of the Faithful.' Dating from a time when Jerusalem was ruled by the Muslim Abbasid empire, the plaque shows one way rulers rewarded their troops and ensured their loyalty.
(AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)






                            In this image distributed Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010 by Israel's ...

AP
Wed Feb 10, 8:24 AM ET
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In this image distributed Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010 by Israel's Antiquities Authority, an image of the Madaba map that was found in a Jordanian church is seen, with red marks placed in the area representing a recently excavated Byzantine street in Jerusalem's Old City. Archeologists say that the street provides unprecedented evidence of what life was like in Jerusalem in Byzantine times. Archeologists say the discovery of the street confirms that Madaba map was accurate.
(AP Photo/IAA, HO)




 

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