Aweidah Gallery - Ancient Art
 
Rare Ancient Roman Limestone Purity Bowl,1st Century AD

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All Items: Antiques:Regional Art:Ancient World:Roman:Sculpture: Pre AD 1000: item # 1102400

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Rare Ancient Roman Limestone Purity Bowl,1st Century AD
Directly from Jerusalem, RARE, ancient Roman limestone bowl fragment, dated from the second temple period in Jerusalem, 1st Century AD.

They are presumably from a cave found as a workshop for these in the hills of Jerusalem.

This type of bowls were found in the burnt house of the Second temple period in old city of Jerusalem. The priests were required at all times to be ritually pure and since stone vessels (unlike metal and pottery) cannot be defiled they preferred their use. Bowls of this type were therefore manufactured in Jerusalem from local limestone.

This bowl (like most of the others found) was still unfinished, indicating that work may have ceased because of the war against Rome.

A fascinating piece of handwork with chisel marks and a poignant reminder of the 2nd Temple.

Measurements: Height: 7.5 cm - Width: 12.5 cm - Height on stand: 17.5 cm

The bowl is nicely displayed on a plexi-glass hand-made stand of high qualiy

Condition: Fragment, untouched as found

Found in Jerusalem, Israel

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The material culture of the Second Temple period was marked by the appearance of a different type of stone vessel, made of chalk (A soft Limestone). The presence of these vessels mainly in characteristically Jewish areas, such as Jerusalem, Judea and Galilee, their absence generally from non-Jewish areas, and their sudden disappearance after the destruction of the Second Temple and the Bar-Kokhba Revolt suggest that the stone vessel industry during the Second Temple period was a distinct Jewish phenomenon connected with Jerusalem and the Temple, Jewish religious law, and the Jewish population



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