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Dr. Joseph R. Cathey
Adjunct Professor
Dallas Baptist University
July 2005
In the past few months, Israel has taken a
decidedly hands-on approach in rooting out forgeries. We now know that the James
Ossuary was the proverbial “tip of the iceberg” in the spate of modern
forgeries. The Israel Exploration Journal has taken the initiative in
what one hopes to be an ongoing series in seeking to determine the authenticity
of some exciting artifacts. I have written a short piece on the IEJ
article entitled “The
Ivory Pomegranate.” My essay reflects on an article written by eight
reputable scholars with an eclectic background in both physical science (e.g.,
chemistry, geology, forensic science) and Syro-Palestinian
archaeology/epigraphy. In this article, the authors examine the perennial
popular Ivory Pomegranate to ascertain its authenticity. Scholars such as
Lemaire, Avigad, Bar-Matthews, Goren, and Millard have been at the forefront of
ascertaining the provenance of Israeli antiquities. However, I believe that
academia can no longer afford to provenance an antiquity solely on epigraphy.
The critical methodology presented in this article should be the standard for
how we do antiquity authentication. Detractors will claim that the expense of
this methodology is exorbitant. Yet, the damage done to museums (e.g., loss of
capital in paying for these forgeries not to mention reputation) and to those
who authenticate these antiquities demands that we rethink our evaluation of
artifacts. The authors of the article argue that while the pomegranate itself is
ancient, the inscription is a clever modern forgery. Chemical and epigraphical
analysis reveal that “the inscription and the patina-like material on the
inscription and around it are a recent forgery” (19).
Similar investigations into two Iron Age
ostraca from the Moussaieff collection have revealed that they too are a recent
forgery. I have written a small essay entitled “Exposing
Iron Age Forgeries” in which I again congratulate Goren, Bar-Matthews,
Ayalon, and Schilman for their examination. The authors give an unstintingly
well-detailed explanation of their critical methodology as well as how the
forgery was accomplished. They argue that “the micromorphologic, petrographic,
and isotopic examination of the two ostraca indicate without a doubt that these
are modern forgeries” (32).
Upon reflection of these two essays, one is
struck with two immediate observations. First, forgeries in the Middle East are
carried out at different levels. For instance, the Ivory Pomegranate forgery was
carried out with precise science and quite possibly in a laboratory. The forger
was obviously skilled in physical chemistry and possibly in epigraphy. This
combination made it difficult for scholastic epigraphers to ascertain the
falseness of the antiquity. However, the two ostraca were forged either hastily
or by one with limited experience in chemical composition. The authors state,
“It should be noted that the forgery technique is not very sophisticated and
that expert laboratories can readily notice the presence of the irrelevant
materials (paraffin and lime)” (32). Yet even in this instance, one needs not
only date the find epigraphically but also with the help of modern chemical
analysis. Second, unfortunately with the advent of collectors, museums, and
other interested parties, the influx of capital makes it imperative that
scientists play an increasingly dominant role in determining the age of an
antiquity. I am not arguing against traditional critical methodology (e.g.
epigraphy and palaeography) of unprovenanced antiquities. A marriage between
chemical/geological and epigraphical/palaeographical analysis will take more
time and capital to accomplish what takes less time today. The articles in
IEJ demonstrate that this methodology is as close to “forgery proof” as the
academy can ascribe to in the current climate.
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