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Ancient Coin Takes Off To The Stars With Israeli Astronaut

IAA Director Eli Eskosido (left) presents Israeli astronaut Eytan Stibbe with an ancient coin for guardianship while on his trip to space. (Yoli Schwartz/IAA)

When the second Israeli to go into space, Eytan Stibbe, heads off to the International Space Station at the end of the year, he’ll take a small article meant to bring him luck: a 1,900-year-old Jewish coin recently unearthed in the Judean Desert.

Stibbe recently visited the Israel Antiquities Authority Dead Sea Scrolls laboratory in Jerusalem, where he was shown ancient scroll fragments from the Book of Enoch discovered together with other biblical texts in the Judean Desert caves.


At the end of his visit, Israel Antiquities Authority Director Eli Eskosido presented Stibbe with an ancient coin for guardianship while on his trip to space. The coin dates to the second Jewish revolt against the Romans, known as the Bar Kokhba Revolt, bearing the name of its leader, Shimon Bar Kochba.

The 1,900-year-old coin from the time of the Bar Kochba Revolt bearing part of the name of its leader and a palm tree. (Clara Amit/Israel Antiquities Authority)
The other side of the ancient coin showcases a vine leaf and an inscription dating it. (Clara Amit/Israel Antiquities Authority)

Both sides of the coin bear Jewish symbols typical of the Second Temple period: One has a palm tree with the inscription “Shimon,” of which only two letters are discernable, and the other a vine leaf with the inscription “Year Two of the liberty of Israel.”

The coin was recently discovered in a cave in the Judean Desert known as the Cave of Horror alongside other coins used by rebels, fragments of ancient biblical scrolls, a 6,000-year-old skeleton of a young child and the oldest woven basket known to mankind.

“As part of ‘Rakia’ mission to the International Space Station, I will be taking with me a bag filled with items that have a special meaning to me. It was clear to me that one of these items will be a symbol of Jewish history,” Stibbe said.

“I saw the coin, minted with the palm tree and vine leaf, that for me represent the connection to the land, the love of the country, and the desire of the population of Israel in those years for independence.”

Ancient Coin Takes Off To The Stars With Israeli Astronaut appeared first on Israel21C.

Edited by Judith Isacoff and Kristen Butler



The post Ancient Coin Takes Off To The Stars With Israeli Astronaut appeared first on Zenger News.

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