Jim
Bramlett
(6 Oct 2006)
"Temple treasures found?"
Dear friends:
Fascinating, and profound. From IsraelNationalNews.com:
_______________________________
British Historian Claims to Have Found the Temple Treasures
By Gil Zohar
What happened to the 50 tons of gold, silver and sacred treasures looted from
Herod's Temple following the Roman legionnaires' sack of Jerusalem on Tisha
b'Av in the year 70 CE?
The Arch of Titus in Rome, erected shortly after the death of Titus who reigned
as emperor from 79 to 81, clearly depicts Roman soldiers bearing on their shoulders
the golden candelabrum, silver trumpets and bejewelled Table of the Divine Presence
which the Roman emperor Vespasian and his son Titus carted back to Rome as trophies
of war. Between 75 CE and the early 5th century, the treasure remained on public
display in the Temple of Peace in Rome's Forum. Many Jews believe – almost as
an article of faith – that the Temple artifacts remain there in Rome, secreted
away in vaults beneath the Vatican.
But in a newly published book, British historian Sean Kingsley, basing himself
on untapped historical texts and new archaeological sources, argues that the
treasures were removed from Rome after the Vandal invasion of 455 CE.
Kingsley, whose book, God's Gold: The Quest for the Lost Temple Treasure
of Jerusalem was released October 5 by John Murray, says that the loot was
first taken to Carthage in Tunisia, then to Hippo Regius in Algeria, and on
to Constantinople – today known as Istanbul, Turkey, before finally being returned
to the Holy Land in the mid 6th century. At that time, the treasures were ultimately
hidden in the Judean wilderness, beneath the remote Greek Orthodox Monastery
of St. Theodosius, 12 km east of Bethlehem.
It's a plausible argument that has almost messianic implications. If the Temple
treasures were retrieved, the discovery could help lead to the actual rebuilding
of the Temple, the resumption of biblical sacrifice – and the coming of the
Messiah. (Emphasis supplied.)
“One thing is for sure – it is not imprisoned deep in Vatican City. I am the
first person to prove that the Temple treasures no longer languish in Rome,”
says Kingsley, an expert on the East Mediterranean economy in Late Antiquity.
Kingsley’s sources include Josephus Flavius, the 1st-century Jewish general
turned renegade who chronicled the history of the failed Jewish revolt against
Rome. Kingsley also found evidence in, among others, the works of Procopius,
a court historian of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian, who died in 562, and from
Theophanes Confessor (c.760-817), a Christian monk from Constantinople.
In Chronographia, which spanned 284 to 813, Theophanes recorded that Geiseric
the Lame, king of the Germanic tribe of the Vandals, loaded the treasures that
"Titus had brought to Rome after the capture of Jerusalem" on a boat
and took them to his North African capital Carthage in 455. Although history
remembers the Vandal sack of Rome as extremely brutal (and their act made the
word 'vandalism' a term for any wantonly destructive act), in actuality Geiseric
honored his pledge to Pope Leo I not to make war on the people of Rome. The
Vandals did however take gold, silver and many other things of value away from
the city.
In the crusade of 533 to restore the lost Roman provinces of North Africa, the
Byzantine general Flavius Belisarius seized the treasure from a Vandal ship
fleeing the harbor of Hippo Regius, today known as Annaba or Bone, Algeria.
It was then shipped to Constantinople, the capital of Byzantium. In recognition
of Belisarius' great victory, the Emperor Justinian granted him a Roman triumph
(the last one ever given) upon his return to Constantinople. In the procession
were paraded the spoils of the Temple of Jerusalem which Belisarius had recovered.
In the 7th century, the Persians sacked Jerusalem, killing thousands of Christians,
and dragging the Patriarch Zacharias to Persia. Kingsley believes that his replacement,
Modestus, spirited away the treasures to their final hiding place in the Judean
Desert in 614. The Monastery of St. Theodosius, where Kingsley believes the
relics may be today, was founded in 476.
According to Kingsley, "The treasure resonates fiercely across modern politics.
Since the mid-1990s, a heated political wrangle has been simmering between the
Vatican and Israel, which has accused the papacy of imprisoning the treasure.
"The Temple treasure remains a deadly political tool in the volatile Arab-Israeli
conflict centered on the Temple Mount [the site of the Jewish Temple and the
Muslim Dome of the Rock].
"The treasure's final hiding place - in the modern West Bank ... deep in
Hamas territory - will rock world religions."