Ekron Royal Dedicatory Inscription
| Ekron inscription | |
|---|---|
The inscription in its current location | |
| Material | Limestone |
| Size | H: 39; W: 60; D: 26 cm |
| Writing | Phoenician alphabet |
| Created | first half of the 7th century BCE |
| Discovered | 1996 |
| Present location | Israel Museum |
| Identification | IAA 1997-2912 |
The Ekron Royal Dedicatory Inscription, or simply the Ekron inscription, is a royal dedication inscription found in its primary context, in the ruins of a temple during the 1996 excavations of Ekron, Israel. It is known as KAI 286.
It is incised on a rectangular-shaped limestone block with five lines and 71 characters, and mentions Ekron, thus confirming the identification of the site, as well as five of its rulers, including Ikausu (Achish), son of Padi, who built the sanctuary. Padi and Ikausu are known as kings of Ekron from the late 8th- and 7th-century Neo-Assyrian Royal Annals. King Padi is mentioned in connection to events from the years 701 and 699 BC, King Ikausu about 673 and 667 BC, placing the date of the inscription firmly in the first half of the 7th century BC, and most likely in the second quarter of that century.
It is the first connected body of text to be identified as "Philistine", based on Ekron's identification as a Philistine city in the Bible (see Joshua 13:3 and 1 Samuel 6:17). However, it is written in a northern Canaanite dialect similar to Phoenician and Old Byblian, such that its discoverers referred to it as "something of an enigma".