Archive of a Garrison Under Siege
The Lachish ostraca are ink inscriptions on potsherds from a Judahite garrison at Lachish, written in late Iron Age Hebrew (c. 590s BCE) and preserved as administrative and military correspondence immediately before the Babylonian conquest.
Content, Dating, and Military Picture
The texts record signal fires, troop movements, and urgent messages between officers, offering a near‑real‑time window into Judah’s final years and correlating with destruction layers dated to Nebuchadnezzar’s campaign.
Why Scholars Value Them
As contemporaneous, local documents they illuminate communication networks, command structure, and civilian anxieties at the fall of Judah—essential evidence for reconstructing the social and military reality behind biblical narratives.
Sources
Ussishkin; Torczyner editions; excavation reports
Lachish excavation reports (Ussishkin)
Other Information About Lachish Letters
Ussishkin D.; Torczyner editions; Dever W. G. (2001). What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?