Looters' arrest uncovers 2,000-year-old workshop near Jerusalem biblical pilgrimage path

Uncovering a 2,000-year-old stone vessel workshop that once served pilgrims, Israeli authorities caught antiquity thieves red-handed in Jerusalem cave.


Looters' arrest uncovers 2,000-year-old workshop near Jerusalem biblical pilgrimage path
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The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced the discovery Feb. 16. 

In a press release shared with Fox News Digital, authorities said the workshop was found in an underground cave on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem.

Officials arrived at the cave one night after carefully tracking the robbers - and caught them in the act.

The suspects were caught red-handed with quarry tools and a metal detector. The five suspects were arrested and confessed to the charges against them, according to officials.

"They will soon be indicted both for damage to and for illegal excavation of an antiquities site - offenses punishable by law, for which the proscribed penalty is up to five years in prison," the IAA release stated.

But what began as a theft investigation quickly turned into a major archaeological discovery.

"To their amazement, they discovered hundreds of unique stone vessel fragments," the statement said.

"It seems that the vessels produced here were marketed in the streets of Jerusalem to both the city's residents and to visitors making a pilgrimage during the Second Temple period," the IAA said.

"Ancient sources describe a revolution in the field of purity and impurity during this period, in which there was widespread strictness in the laws of impurity and purity that affected every person," said the release.

The vessels were used for multiple purposes, including drinking and storing grain, said Eitan Klein, the deputy director of the Theft Prevention Unit at the Israel Antiquities Authority.

Klein told Fox News Digital the evidence suggests the workshop once operated at a large scale.

"This was probably an industrial-scale workshop that produced vessels for the large Jewish population and pilgrims who arrived in Jerusalem in those days," he said.

In the press release, Klein said the discovery of the workshop is "particularly important, because now a broad picture of the region is emerging."

In a statement, Israeli Minister of Heritage Amichai Eliyahu described the cave as "not merely an archaeological site, but a window into a world preserved deep within the ground, waiting for us."

"Attempts by our enemies to loot antiquities are not crimes of financial theft, but efforts to steal our identity," said Eliyahu.

"We will not allow this, and will continue to act decisively to preserve and safeguard what has always been ours, and always will be."

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