11 March 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

Will the Siloam Inscription be returned to Israel?

During the visit of Israeli President Isaac Herzog to Turkey, the claim that he wanted the Siloam Inscription, one of the most important inscriptions in Hebrew history, to be returned to Israel came to the fore.

The newspaper Zman Yisrael, which is published in Israel, inflamed the discussions by bringing the Siloam Inscription back to Israel on the agenda.

Zman Yisrael reported that the 2600-year-old Siloam Inscription would be given to Israel, based on the words of an Israeli official. Turkish officials did not make any statement about this news.

The agreement was discussed during the landmark visit of Israel’s President Isaac Herzog to Turkey earlier this week, a senior Israeli official said The Times of Israel (ToI). In return, Israel offered to send Turkey a historical and religiously significant item that is held in an Israeli museum.

There was no confirmation from Turkey regarding this speech.



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



The Siloam Inscription, which was found near Jerusalem in 1880 and brought to the Istanbul Museum-i Hümayun (Istanbul Archaeological Museums), is a very important document in terms of Jewish history.

The Siloam Inscription is a 2,700-year-old Hebrew text describing the Pool of Siloam and the City of David.

Can the Siloam Inscription of such importance be returned to Israel?

Should cultural assets be found and exhibited in the place where they were born?

the Siloam Inscription
The Siloam Inscription

Ömer Erbil, Siloam inscription is state property, it is impossible to give it away! The article he wrote in the title also included the following information.

Why is Israel so insistent on the work? What does the Siloam Inscription say? Is this work stolen by us? First of all, this artifact was found in 1880 when Jerusalem was an Ottoman territory at that time. It was brought to the Imperial Museum of the period, the Museum-i Hümayun, that is, the Istanbul Archeology Museum. In Jerusalem, the same-Silvan fountain was found in an underground channel made where the water came out of the rock. It is estimated to be 2700 years old. This inscription, the oldest Hebrew script written in Phoenician script, was inscribed on the rock on the left, near the exit of the canal. The inscription consists of six lines of varying lengths. This inscription described the construction of the tunnel and how the workers worked. Israel does not let go of this inscription, as it proves the experiences of King Hezekiah mentioned in the Torah and the historical ties of the Jews with Jerusalem.

Government-owned

Since the artifact is not stolen and is under protection in the Istanbul Archeology Museum in our country, it is within the scope of the Law on the Protection of Cultural Heritage No. 2863 and it is state property according to the 5th article of the said law, it does not seem possible to give it to another country. Article 32 of the law numbered 2863 prohibits the removal of cultural assets out of our country for purposes other than an exhibition. Opposition to this article is sentenced in Article 68 to a prison sentence of five to twelve years and a judicial fine of five thousand days. While these binding laws exist, it is not possible to transfer artifacts to another country. It was registered as property of the Ottoman Empire and under legal status belongs to the Republic of Turkey.

There was no state named Israel when artifact came to İstanbul

Moreover, Turkey always returns the stolen artifacts to the countries of origin. His works were given unconditionally to countries such as Iraq and Syria. Cooperation with Peru has also been initiated for the Peruvian artifacts, which were recently caught in the warehouse of international smuggler Aydın Dikmen. There is no legal basis for the return of the artifact, which is the property of the state and found on its own soil decades before the establishment of the State of Israel.

The Siloam Inscription

The inscription reads: “… this is the story of the tunnel, while [the hewers lifted] their axes toward their counterparts, and while three cubits more were to (be hewn?), was heard the voice of a man calling to his counterpart, (for) there was [a crack?] in the rock, on the right, and on the left. And on the day of [the final barrier’s] piercing, the stonecutters struck each man towards his counterpart, ax against ax, and water flowed from the source to the pool for 1,200 cubits and 100 cubits was the height of the rock, over the head of the stonecutters …”

Related Articles

Egypt dig unearths 41 mln-year-old Whale in desert -Tutcetus rayanensis-

12 August 2023

12 August 2023

Paleontologists in Egypt announced the discovery of a new species of extinct whale that inhabited the sea covering present-day Egypt...

A Remarkable Underground City Discovered Beneath Historic Yazd Homes in Central Iran

26 January 2025

26 January 2025

A remarkable ‘underground city’ was discovered under five historical houses in the ancient town of Abarkuh in Yazd province in...

New insights into Scotland’s ‘bodies in the bog’

31 March 2022

31 March 2022

Fourteen bodies were found at Cramond near Edinburgh in 1975. New research suggests that two of the remains of these...

200,000-year-old ‘mammoth graveyard’ found in the southwest UK

19 December 2021

19 December 2021

Researchers have unearthed a mammoth “graveyard” filled with the bony remains of five individuals, including an infant, two juveniles, and...

Monte Sierpe: Peru’s Mysterious ‘Band of Holes’ May Have Been an Ancient Marketplace

11 November 2025

11 November 2025

High in the arid foothills of southern Peru, thousands of mysterious holes carved into a rocky ridge have puzzled archaeologists...

Archaeologists Find Stunning Evidence of a Megalithic Network Hidden in Indonesia

30 November 2025

30 November 2025

A new wave of archaeological research at Mount Tangkil is reshaping academic understanding of West Java’s ancient landscapes. Recent investigations...

Bronze Age Settlement and Neolithic Relics Found at Skaņkalne Hillfort in Latvia

9 August 2025

9 August 2025

Archaeologists have uncovered remarkable evidence of ancient human habitation during the latest excavations at Skaņkalne Hillfort, offering fresh insights into...

3,000-Year-Old Cave Paintings Discovered in Itatiaia National Park in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

13 April 2025

13 April 2025

In a stunning revelation, a dedicated team of researchers from the National Museum, in collaboration with the Federal University of...

From Caves to Mounds: The Enigmatic Burial Practices of the Southern Jê in Brazil

25 February 2025

25 February 2025

A groundbreaking study published in the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology sheds light on the enigmatic burial practices of the Southern...

Two new fragments of the Fasti Ostienses, a kind of chronicle engraved on marble slabs, have been found in the Ostia Antica Archaeological Park

19 August 2023

19 August 2023

Two new fragments of the Fasti Ostienses have been discovered in the Ostia Antica Archaeological Park, following investigations carried out...

Madinat al-Zāhira: The Enigmatic Palace-City Lost for 1,000 Years, Revealed by New LiDAR Evidence in Córdoba

14 January 2026

14 January 2026

For more than a thousand years, the precise location of Madinat al-Zāhira, the enigmatic palace-city founded by Almanzor (al-Mansur Ibn...

Freshwater and marine shells used as ornaments 30,000 years ago discovered in Spain

7 June 2023

7 June 2023

In Malaga’s Cueva de Ardales, up to 13 freshwater and marine shells that were carefully transformed by humans between 25,000...

Receding waters in Lake Van reveal rock-cut Urartian port

22 September 2022

22 September 2022

Located in the eastern province of Van in Turkey, the falling water level of Lake Van, with the decrease in...

7500-year-old cursed city of Iran

17 March 2023

17 March 2023

Sialk Hills, located in the southwestern part of Kashan city in Iran, was known among the locals as a ‘cursed...

Archaeologists have found a fort that the Romans built to protect their silver mines, complete with wooden spikes

23 February 2023

23 February 2023

Archaeologists have discovered wooden defenses surrounding an ancient Roman military base for the first time in Bad Ems, western Germany....