Configuration The stele was found in three fragments, called A, B1 and B2. There is widespread agreement that all three belong to the same inscription, and that B1 and B2 belong together. There is less agreement over the fit between A and the combined B1/B2: Biran and Naveh placed B1/B2 to the left of A (the photograph at the top of this article). A few scholars have disputed this,
William Schniedewind proposing some minor adjustments to the same fit,
Gershon Galil placing B above A rather than beside it, and George Athas fitting it well below.
Dating Archaeologists and
epigraphers put the earliest possible date at about 870 BCE, whilst the latest possible date is "less clear", although according to Lawrence J. Mykytiuk it could "hardly have been much later than 750". However, some scholars (mainly associated with the
Copenhagen school) –
Niels Peter Lemche,
Thomas L. Thompson, and F. H. Cryer – have proposed still later datings.
Cracks and inscription Two biblical scholars, Cryer and
Lemche, analyzed the cracks and chisel marks around the fragment and also the lettering towards the edges of the fragments. From this they concluded that the text was in fact a modern forgery. Most scholars have ignored or rejected these judgments because the artifacts were recovered during controlled excavations. Matthew Suriano has defended the "seventy" reading, arguing that it is a symbolic trope in ancient near eastern military language, representing the defeat of all other claimants to power. Noting that Hazael was himself a usurper to the throne of Aram-Damascus, he argues that ancient Syria would have posited a number of other rivals for the throne and that Hazael's claim to have slain "seventy kings" is a reference to him defeating his rivals in succession to the throne of Aram-Damascus.
"House of David" Since 1993–1994, when the first fragment was discovered and published, the Tel Dan stele has been the object of great interest and debate among epigraphers and
biblical scholars. Its significance for the biblical version of Israel's past lies particularly in lines 8 and 9, which mention a "king of Israel" and possibly a "house of David". The latter reading is accepted by a majority of scholars, but not all. Dissenting scholars note that word dividers are employed elsewhere throughout the inscription, and one would expect to find one between
byt and
dwd in
bytdwd too if the intended reading was "House of David". They contend that reading
dwd as "David" is complicated since the word can also mean "uncle" (dōd) (a word with a rather wider meaning in ancient times than it has today), "beloved", or "kettle" (dūd). Lemche and Athas suggests that
bytdwd could be a place-name and Athas that it refers to Jerusalem (so that the author might be claiming to have killed the son of the king of Jerusalem, rather than the son of the king from the "house of David"). R.G. Lehmann and M. Reichel proposes interpreting the phrase as a reference to the name or epithet of a deity. According to
Anson Rainey the presence or absence of word dividers is normally inconsequential for interpretation. Word dividers as well as compound words are used elsewhere in the inscription and generally in West Semitic languages, so it is possible that the phrase was treated as a compound word combining a personal name with a relational noun. Mykytiuk argues that readings other than "House of David" are unlikely.
Yosef Garfinkel has been vocally critical of alternate translations, characterizing them as "suggestions that now seem ridiculous: The Hebrew
bytdwd should be read not as
the House of David, but as a place named
betdwd, in parallel to the well-known place-name
Ashdod. Other minimalist suggestions included
House of Uncle,
House of Kettle and
House of Beloved."
Francesca Stavrakopoulou states that even if the inscription refers to a "House of David" it testifies neither to the historicity of David nor to the existence of a 9th-century BCE united Israelite and Judahite kingdom. Stavrakopoulou specified that if the disputed rendering of "
bytdwd" can indeed be rendered as the above, it can still be referring to a small ruling family whose legendary founder was named "David" or "Beloved". This assessment she considered supported by the king of Israel being distinguished from it, showing there were many local and regional powers. Garfinkel argues that, combined with archaeological evidence unearthed at
Khirbet Qeiyafa, the inscription's reference to a "king of the house of David" constitutes primary evidence that David was a historical figure and the founder of a centralized
Iron Age II dynasty. ==See also==