Most scholars today agree that a temple had existed on the Temple Mount by the time of the
Babylonian siege of Jerusalem (587 BCE), but the identity of its builder and its construction date are strongly debated. Because of the religious and political sensitivities involved, no archaeological excavations and only limited surface surveys of the Temple Mount have been conducted since
Charles Warren's expedition of 1867–1870. As of today, there is no solid archaeological evidence for the existence of Solomon's Temple, and the building is not mentioned in surviving extra-biblical accounts, save for perhaps a single fragmented ostracon that mentions a "
house of Yahweh" without any further specification. These views are shared by the archaeologist
Amihai Mazar, who underlines how the description of the Temple in the Bible, albeit exaggerated, is substantially in line with the architectural descriptions already present in the Levant in the second millennium BCE.
Yosef Garfinkel and Madeleine Mumcuoglu argue that the discovery of a 9th century BCE temple at
Motza, a secondary administrative site in the
Kingdom of Judah, implies that there must have been a central temple in the kingdom’s capital. Fabio Porzia and
Corinne Bonnet, reflecting on the archaeological parallels between the way Solomon's temple is described and comparable examples of similar temples from around the ancient Near East, demur and conclude that "a gap [...] exists between the biblical accounts which place the temple in the 10th century and the historical considerations which tend towards the 8th and 7th centuries." This has been challenged by Fabio Porzia and
Corinne Bonnet who wrote that the context and location of the temple mentioned is not known. A thumb-sized
ivory pomegranate (which came to light in 1979) measuring in height and bearing an ancient Hebrew inscription "Sacred donation for the priests in the House of ---h,]", was believed to have adorned a sceptre used by the
high priest in Solomon's Temple. It was considered the most important item of biblical antiquities in the
Israel Museum's collection. In 2004, however, experts from the Israel Museum reported the inscription to be a
forgery, though the ivory pomegranate itself was dated to the 14th or 13th century BCE. This was based on the report's claim that three incised letters in the inscription stopped short of an ancient break, as they would have if carved after the ancient break was made. Since then, it has been proven that one of the letters was indeed carved prior to the ancient break, and the status of the other two letters are in question. Some paleographers and others have continued to insist that the inscription is ancient, some dispute this, so the authenticity of this writing is still the object of discussion. Another artifact, the
Jehoash Inscription, which first came to notice in 2003, contains a 15-line description of King Jehoash's ninth-century BCE restoration of the Temple. Its authenticity was called into question by a report by the Israel Antiquities Authority, which said that the surface patina contained microfossils of
foraminifera. As these fossils do not dissolve in water, they cannot occur in a calcium carbonate patina, leading initial investigators to conclude that the patina must be an artificial chemical mix applied to the stone by forgers. As of late 2012, the academic community is split on whether the tablet is authentic or not. Commenting on a 2012 report by geologists arguing for the authenticity of the inscription, in October 2012,
Hershel Shanks (who believes the inscription is genuine) wrote the current situation was that most Hebrew language scholars believe that the inscription is a forgery and geologists that it is genuine, and thus "Because we rely on experts, and because there is an apparently irresolvable conflict of experts in this case,
BAR has taken no position with respect to the authenticity of the Jehoash Inscription." The historian
Flavius Josephus, writing centuries later in 1st century CE, says that "Solomon began to build the temple in the fourth year of his reign, on the second month, which the Macedonians call Artemisius, and the Hebrews
Jar, five hundred and ninety two years after the
exodus out of Egypt, but after one thousand and twenty years from
Abraham's coming out of
Mesopotamia into
Canaan and after the deluge one thousand four hundred and forty years; and from
Adam, the first man who was created, until Solomon built the temple, there had past in all three thousand one hundred and two years." In
Against Apion, Josephus mentions that according to the
annals of the
Phoenician city-state of
Tyre, Solomon's Temple was built on the 12th year of
Hiram I of Tyre and 143 years and 8 months before the Tyrians founded
Carthage. The foundation date of Carthage is usually dated to 814 BCE, thus, according to Josephus, the construction of the Temple should be dated to circa 958/9 BCE,
Temple Mount Sifting Project • By 2006, the
Temple Mount Sifting Project had recovered numerous artifacts dating from the 8th to 7th centuries BCE from soil removed in 1999 by the
Jerusalem Waqf from the
Solomon's Stables area of the Temple Mount. These include stone weights for weighing silver and a First Temple period
bulla, or seal impression.
Objects found next to the Temple Mount • In 2018 and a few years previously, two First Temple period stone weights used for weighing half-
shekel Temple donations were found during excavations under
Robinson's Arch at the foot of the Temple Mount. The tiny artifacts, inscribed with the word
beka, which is known from related contexts in the
Hebrew Bible, were used to weigh silver pieces on a
scale, possibly at the very spot where they were unearthed.
Other •
Leen Ritmeyer has suggested that one of the steps leading to the
Dome of the Rock is actually the top of a remaining stone course of the western wall of the pre-Herodian Temple Mount platform, which may be dated to the First Temple period. • In 2007, artifacts dating to the 8th to 6th centuries BCE were described as being possibly the first physical evidence of human activity at the Temple Mount during the First Temple period. The findings included animal bones,
juglet and ceramic bowl fragments, as well as the rim of a storage jar. == In Islam ==