Archaeologists May Have Discovered Kohen Gadol’s Bell

Israel National News

Archaeologists have discovered a rare gold bell with a small loop at its end. The finding was made during an archaeological excavation in the City of David National Park (near the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem) by the Israel Antiquities Authority in cooperation with the Israel Nature and Parks Authority and the Ir David Foundation.

The directors of the excavation on behalf of the Antiquities Authority, archaeologists Eli Shukron and Professor Ronny Reich of Haifa University, said after the finding, “The bell looked as if it was sewn on the garment worn by a man of high authority in Jerusalem at the end of the Second Temple period.

“The bell was exposed in the city’s main drainage channel of that period, between the layers of dirt that had been piled on the floor of the channel,” they continued. “This drainage channel was built and hewn west to the Western Wall of the Temple Mount and drained the rainfall in the different parts of the city, through the City of David and the Shiloah Pool to the Kidron valley.”

The excavation area, above the drain, is located in the main street of Jerusalem which rose from the Shiloah Pool in the City of David. In this street an interchange was built through which people entered the Temple Mount. The remains of this interchange are what is known today as Robinson’s Arch. Archaeologists believe that the eminent man walked the streets of Jerusalem in the area of Robinson’s Arch and lost the golden bell which fell off his outfit into the drain beneath the street.

Jewish sources say that the high priests who served in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem used to hang golden bells on the edges of their coats. The book of Exodus (Shemot), for example, contains a description of the coat of Aaron the high priest in which it is said that coat contains, “bells of gold.”

While it is unknown if the bell belonged to one of the high priests, archaeologists have not ruled out the possibility.

9 Comments

  • The Guy with the Dog

    That doesn’t look like a pomegranite at all. It looks like a clam. Maybe it’s a clamegranite.

  • CIREL LIPSKIER

    THE HIGH PRIESTS WORE THEIR GOLDEN GARMENTS O N L Y DURING THE SERVICE IN THE BAIS HAMIKDOSH. THEY VESTED AND DEVESTED OUT OF AND INTO THEIR OWN CLOTHING UPON ENTERING AND LEAVING.

  • i like the bell

    to #2 and #5: there were alternating gold bells and fabric pomegranates. To #3, you are right, but maybe it was from the meeting with alexaner the great? He recognized the Kohen gadol as the man he envisioned before going to war, because he was dressed in his Bigdei kehunah, and as a result he didn’t destroy Yerushalayim but agreed that all babies born that year should be named Alexander. Any Alexanders or senders reading this? You were named such because of this story!

  • AA

    Mrs. Lipskier, that’s not quite correct. Rambam writes that the kohen gadol had to stay in Yerushalayim, and the Gemara states that he was allowed to wear the bigdei kehunah in “the Mikdash” – which Rambam elsewhere defines as Yerushalayim. So he might well have worn the me’il while walking in the street where this bell was found.

  • Baruch

    He couldn’t walk in any street because he was wearing lots of shaatnez in the bigdei kehuna! The garnments can’t be worn out of avodah.