openPR Logo
Press release

Archaeological Sensation in Austria

03-13-2008 09:40 PM CET | Arts & Culture

Press release from: University of Vienna

Scientists from the University of Vienna unearth the earliest evidence of Jewish inhabitants in Austria

Archaeologists from the Institute of Prehistory and Early History of the University of Vienna have found an amulet inscribed with a Jewish prayer in a Roman child's grave dating back to the 3rd century CE at a burial ground in the Austrian town of Halbturn. The 2.2-centimeter-long gold scroll represents the earliest sign of Jewish inhabitants in present-day Austria.

This amulet shows that people of Jewish faith lived in what is today Austria since the Roman Empire. Up to now, the earliest evidence of a Jewish presence within the borders of Austria has been letters from the 9th century CE. In the areas of the Roman province of Pannonia that are now part of Hungary, Croatia and Serbia, gravestones and small finds attest to Jewish inhabitants even in antiquity. Jews have been settling in all parts of the ancient world at the latest since the 3rd century BCE. Particularly following the second Jewish Revolt against the Roman Empire, the victorious Romans sold large numbers of Jews as slaves to all corners of the empire. This, coupled with voluntary migration, is how Jews also might have come to present-day Austria.

CHILD'S GRAVE
The one or two year old child, which presumably wore the silver amulet capsule around its neck, was buried in one of around 300 graves in a Roman cemetery which dates back to the 2nd to 5th century CE and is situated next to a Roman estate ("villa rustica"). This estate was an agricultural enterprise that provided food for the surrounding Roman towns (Carnuntum, Györ, Sopron).

The gravesite, discovered in 1986 in the region of Seewinkel, around 20 kilometres from Carnuntum, was completely excavated between 1988 and 2002 by a team led by Falko Daim, who is now General Director of the Roman-German Central Museum of Mainz, with the financial backing of the Austrian Science Fund FWF and the Austrian state of Burgenland. All in all, more than 10,000 individual finds were assessed, most notably pieces of glass, shards of ceramic and metal finds. The gold amulet, whose inscription was incomprehensible at first, was only discovered in 2006 by Nives Doneus from the Institute for Prehistory and Early History of the University of Vienna.

THE INSCRIPTION ON THE AMULET IS A JEWISH PRAYER
Suma Istrahl adwne elwh adwn a
Hear, O Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord is one.

GREEK SCRIPT, HEBREW LANGUAGE
Greek is common with amulet inscriptions, although Latin and Hebrew and amulet inscriptions are known. In this case, the scribe's hand is definitely familiar with Greek. However, the inscription is Greek in appearance only, for the text itself is nothing other than a Greek transcription of the common Jewish prayer from the Old Testament (Deuteronomy, 6:4): "Hear, O Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord is one."

AMULET TO PROTECT AGAINST DEMONS
Other non-Jewish amulets have been found in Carnuntum. One gold- and three silver-plated amulets with magical texts were found in a stone sarcophagus unearthed west of the camp of the Roman legion, including one beseeching Artemis to intervene against the migraine demon, Antaura. Amulets have also been found in Vindobona and the Hungarian part of Pannonia. What is different about the Halbturn gold amulet is its Jewish inscription. It uses the confession to the center of Jewish faith and not magic formulae.

The gold-plated artefact from Halbturn can be viewed from 11 April 2008 onwards as part of the "The Amber Road - Evolution of a Trade Route" exhibition in the Burgenland State Museum in Eisenstadt.


Printable photo download available under Media Service at www.univie.ac.at/175

Contact:
Dr. Falko Daim
(Then Head of Project at the University of Vienna)
General Director of the Roman-German Central Museum
Research Institute for Prehistory and Early History
55116 Mainz, Ernst-Ludwig-Platz 2
Germany
T +49-6131-9124 116
M. +49-160-969 429 99
E daim@rgzm.de

Alexandra Frey
Public Relations
University of Vienna
1010 Vienna, Dr.-Karl-Lueger-Ring 1
Austria
T +43-1-4277-175 31
E alexandra.frey@univie.ac.at


Distribution:
PR&D - Public Relations for Research & Education
Campus Vienna Biocenter 2
1030 Vienna, Austria
T +43 / 1 / 505 70 44
E contact@prd.at

The University of Vienna is the oldest university in the German-speaking cultural area and one of the largest in Central Europe. At present, about 71,000 students are enrolled at the University of Vienna, in more than 130 courses. With close to 8,000 employees, 6,000 of which are scientists and academics, the University of Vienna is also the largest teaching and research institution in Austria.

This release was published on openPR.

Permanent link to this press release:

Copy
Please set a link in the press area of your homepage to this press release on openPR. openPR disclaims liability for any content contained in this release.

You can edit or delete your press release Archaeological Sensation in Austria here

News-ID: 39707 • Views:

More Releases from University of Vienna

UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA: HONORARY DOCTORATE FOR ERIC J. HOBSBAWM
Vienna, 8 April 2008 - On 15 April 2008, the Rector of the University of Vienna, Georg Winckler, will present an honorary doctorate to the renowned historian Eric J. Hobsbawm. Since the 1960s, Hobsbawm has been producing works of outstanding value for historical and cultural research. His first-hand experience of major historical events, the international nature of both his life and work, and his skills as a researcher and author

More Releases for Jewish

The Jewish University of Colorado goes global
The Jewish University of Colorado (JUC) may be small, with about 4,000 students, but it is once again setting standards for the future. While other universities run by faith-based organizations only welcome members of their own faith, the Jewish University of Colorado is open to students from around the world. There is only one exception: antisemites and antizionists have no chance of admission. To all others, JUC is open, tuition-free,
Largest Messianic Jewish Denomination has a new Supreme Leader
The 1.7 million strong Messianic Jewish Fellowship International™ (part of the old-apostolic Christian Church International™) has a new Supreme Leader, Samuel I. He was appointed by the central committee of the messianic religious denomination as the first Jew holding this important office. Since Old-Apostolic Christians and Messianic Jews share the same believes, despite different traditions, both are part of the world’s largest grassroots denomination. His Eminence Samuel I. is an old-apostolic theologian
Spring in Vienna, royal chaos and a jewish preacher
The project “Royal Chaos” departs from the Gestalt psychological term “supersummativity”, which is, the concept that the total is more than the sum of its parts. Cognition and perception are based on complex relationships that are impossible to explain just by analyzing individual parts. By weaving different layers of images together, the project creates a multi-dimensional experience through moving form and color that allows the pictures to come alive. Thus,
Bilzin Sumberg Attorney Sacha A. Boegem To Serve On Greater Miami Jewish Federat …
Miami, FL – October 2, 2013 – Sacha A. Boegem, an attorney in Bilzin Sumberg Baena Price & Axelrod LLP's Litigation Group, was selected to serve on the 2013-2014 Jewish Community Relations Council, the advocacy and public affairs arm of the Greater Miami Jewish Federation. In this role, Mr. Boegem will advocate regularly in Washington, D.C. and Tallahassee on behalf of public policies of importance to the local community that
Jewish Holidays Meet Social Media
Online Synagogue Tweets Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Services for 1st Time and Video-Streams for 4th Year These Rabbis Encourage “Chatting” During Services CINCINNATI (September 20, 2011) – Last year 14,000 computers were logged in to celebrate the Jewish High Holidays with the first and largest contemporary online synagogue, OurJewishCommunity.org. For the upcoming holidays this year, (Rosh Hashanah Sept. 28-29, Yom Kippur Oct. 7-8), thousands more are expected. For the first
Horowitz releases second CD of modern Jewish music
Singer, songwriter and musician, Sue Horowitz, is a quickly rising star in the modern Jewish music scene and she’s just released her latest CD entitled “In The Water.” The CD was co-produced in Nashville, TN by Grammy-nominated producer, engineer and musician Mark Niemiec, and well-known Jewish rocker Dan Nichols. Horowitz took the Jewish music market by storm with the release of her first CD, “Eleven Doors Open.” That CD was produced