Tablet Inscribed With 9 Commandments Sold for $5M

That's more than double Sotheby's estimate
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 11, 2024 2:00 PM CST
Updated Dec 18, 2024 1:55 PM CST
Tablet Bearing All but One Commandment to Be Sold
The oldest complete tablet of the Ten Commandments, weighing 115-pounds and approximately 1,500 years old, is displayed at Sotheby's, in New York, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, where it is to be offered for auction in a single lot sale, Dec, 18, 2024.   (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
UPDATE Dec 18, 2024 1:55 PM CST

A stone tablet inscribed with nine of the Ten Commandments sold at auction for $5 million on Wednesday, more than double Sotheby's presale estimate. The 115-pound slab with Paleo-Hebrew writing fetched a high price despite some doubts about its provenance, AFP reports. Sotheby's said it dated from 300 to 800 AD, though some skeptics said it could be a forgery. The tablet omits the commandment, "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vain." It includes another commandment about worshiping at Mount Gerizim, a holy site for Samaritans. Sotheby's, which started bidding at $1 million, had predicted that it would sell for up to $2 million.

Dec 11, 2024 2:00 PM CST

The oldest known stone tablet inscribed with the Ten Commandments, dating from 300 to 800 AD, will be sold in New York this month, Sotheby's auction house said. The 115-pound, two-foot-tall marble slab inscribed with the commandments in Paleo-Hebrew script will be auctioned on Dec. 18. The tablet was unearthed during railroad excavations along the southern coast of Israel in 1913 and was at first not recognized as a historically significant artifact. It was used as a paving stone at a local home "with the inscription facing upwards and exposed to foot traffic" until 1943 when it was sold to a scholar who grasped its significance, Sotheby's said.

The text inscribed on the slab follows the Biblical verses familiar to Christian and Jewish traditions but omits the third commandment against taking the name of the Lord in vain, reports the AP. It includes a new directive to worship on Mount Gerizim, a holy site specific to the Samaritans, Sotheby's said. The auction house calls it "an extraordinary treasure from antiquity, inscribed with the moral code that underpins Western civilization." Sotheby's estimates the tablet will be auctioned for $1 million to $2 million.

(More Ten Commandments stories.)

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