Epigraphic Evidence and Historical Reconstruction
Inscriptions—royal annals, ostraca, seal impressions, and dedicatory stelae—are among the most direct voices from the past. They provide names, titles, administrative records, and sometimes narrative claims that can be tied to archaeological strata. The corpus spans Egyptian and Assyrian annals, Aramaic and Phoenician inscriptions, and local Hebrew texts; each contributes linguistic, chronological, and institutional data that complement material culture. Epigraphy helps refine dating frameworks through paleography and provides concrete evidence for offices, place names, and political events that are otherwise invisible in the archaeological record.
Language Administration and Social Identity
Beyond chronology, inscriptions reveal how language and administration shaped social identity. Ostraca and seal impressions document everyday bureaucratic transactions—rations, orders, and correspondence—while monumental inscriptions project royal ideology. Bilingual inscriptions and loanwords show cultural contact and multilingualism in border zones. Epigraphic evidence therefore illuminates literacy, administrative reach, and the circulation of ideas, helping historians reconstruct how states and communities communicated and represented themselves.
Epigraphy Interpretation and Limitations
However, inscriptions are partial and often elite-focused. A royal stele tells us about a king’s claims, not necessarily about popular life. Context matters: an ostracon found in a storeroom has different implications than a stele in a temple. When combined with stratigraphy, ceramics, and survey data, epigraphy becomes a powerful tool for historical reconstruction—but scholars must always weigh the fragmentary and sometimes partisan nature of the evidence.
Sources
Kitchen, K. A. (2003). On the Reliability of the Old Testament. Eerdmans.; Millard, A. R. (1997). The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire. British School of Archaeology in Iraq.; Cross, F. M. (1973). Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic. Harvard University Press.
Tel Dan inscription publication; Samaria ostraca reports.
Other Information About Inscriptions and Epigraphy of the Biblical Lands
Millard, A. R. (1997). The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire. British School of Archaeology in Iraq.; Cross, F. M. (1973). Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic. Harvard University Press.; Kitchen, K. A. (2003). On the Reliability of the Old Testament. Eerdmans.
Inscriptions and Epigraphy of the Biblical Lands