‘Miracle’ Hoard of Hasmonean Coins Discovered During Hanukkah in Jordan Valley Dig
In what they called an “archaeological Hanukkah miracle,” a University of Haifa team discovered on Friday, December 27, a rare hoard of some 160 coins, dating from the Hasmonean period, during a dig in the Jordan Valley, the university said Sunday.
The coins were discovered in what is thought to have been a roadside station, on what was then a main road along Nahal Tirzah that ascended to the Alexandrion Fortress, also known as Sarbata, north of Jericho in what is now Judea and Samaria.
The coins were dated by experts to the reign of “King Alexander Jannaeus, whose Hebrew name was Jonathan.” “He reigned from 104–76 BCE. He was the son of Johanan Hyrcanus, [and] the grandson of Simon the Hasmonean (brother of Judah Maccabee),” the statement said, noting that the Alexandrion Fortress, near where the coins were discovered, was built by Jannaeus.
Judah Maccabee was the famous leader of the Maccabean revolt against the Seleucid Empire and Hellenistic influence on Jewish life, which broke out in 167 BC, and ultimately led to the cleansing of the Temple in Jerusalem and the later establishment of the Hanukkah holiday, currently being celebrated. (TOI / VFI News)
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