2,700-year-old private toilet discovered in Jerusalem – New Zealand Herald

Posted: November 1, 2021 at 6:53 am

Travel

26 Oct, 2021 09:03 PM3 minutes to read

A rare ancient toilet in Jerusalem dating back more than 2,700 years, when private bathrooms were a luxury in the holy city. Photo / Yoli Schwartz, Israel Antiquities Authority via AP

Archaeological excavations in Jerusalem have revealed a 2,700-year-old toilet in an ancient, royal mansion.

The private toilet cubicle dated back to the end of the 7th century BCE and was unearthed in a building that overlooks the City of David archaeological site and the Temple Mount according to a press release from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA).

The bathroom itself was a rectangular shape, carved from stone and around one by two meters wide. Meanwhile, the loo itself, made from limestone, sat over a deep septic tank and was designed for the best sitting experience possible.

Considered a bare essential in any home today, IAA's excavation director Yaakov Billig said back in the day, only the wealthiest could afford to splash out with a private toilet cubicle.

"A private toilet cubicle was very rare in antiquity, and to date, only a few have been found, mostly in the City of David," said Billig in a statement.

"Only the rich could afford toilets. In fact, a thousand years later, the Mishnah and the Talmud discuss the various criteria that define a rich person, and Rabbi Yossi [suggests that] to be rich is [to have] a toilet near his table.'"

IAA director Eli Eskisiod said it was fascinating to consider how something so common today would be considered a luxury to people during the reign of the kings of Judah.

Leaving no stone unturned, the team also dug into the septic tank and found several animal bones and pottery.

The study of such objects and materials could help shed light on the diet, lifestyle and diseases of people living during this period.

Further afield from the toilet, archaeologists also found evidence of a garden that had ornamental trees, fruit trees ad aquatic plants. These findings supposedly add to the impression that a well-off family had resided at the estate.

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According to Billig, the estate may have been a residence of a king of Judah,

In March, dozens of pieces of a Dead Sea Scroll containing biblical text were discovered in the Judean Desert by archaeologists.

It had been around 60 years since the last fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls had been found, in a cave where Jewish rebels had hidden from the Roman Empire around 1,900 years earlier.

The team from IAA plan to present their findings at the conference taking place in Jerusalem this week called "Innovations in the Archaeology of Jerusalem and its Surroundings."

Continued here:

2,700-year-old private toilet discovered in Jerusalem - New Zealand Herald

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