Biblical Archeology Information on Mesha Stele

Moabite Royal Inscription and Narrative

The Mesha Stele (Moabite Stone), found at Dhiban in 1868 and dated to c. 840 BCE, is a royal inscription of King Mesha of Moab that recounts victories over Israel and building projects; it provides an independent, non‑Israelite narrative that parallels and sometimes diverges from biblical accounts.

Textual Parallels, Language, and Ideology

Written in Moabite (a Canaanite dialect) in a Phoenician script, the stele mentions Omri and Israel and contains the earliest certain extrabiblical references to Yahweh in a regional inscription, making it central for comparative historiography.

Impact on Regional History

The Mesha inscription anchors Moabite political claims, documents inter‑state conflict in the Iron Age Levant, and is a cornerstone for reconstructing 9th‑century BCE geopolitics and religious language outside Israel and Judah.

Sources

Mesha Stele editions; Clermont‑Ganneau records

Mesha Stele (Louvre) publication

Other Information About Mesha Stele

Clermont‑Ganneau editions; modern translations and commentaries in epigraphic corpora.

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