

Shiloh Pottery Shard - Bronze and Iron Ages
A fragment of fired clay from Tel Shiloh, shaped on a potter's wheel during the Bronze and Iron Ages (3300–586 BCE). Someone formed this vessel, fired it in a kiln, and used it in the hill country of Ephraim thousands of years ago. The break is ancient. The clay is original. The hand behind it was real.
There is a reason the earliest fragments are the most prized. The deeper an excavation goes, the less survives; clay that has endured three thousand years of conquest, fire, and rebuilding is far scarcer than the pottery of later centuries. A Bronze and Iron Age shard is among the rarest pieces Shiloh yields, and only a small number can be offered.
Shiloh was ancient Israel's first capital. "The whole congregation of the children of Israel assembled together at Shiloh, and set up the tabernacle of the congregation there" (Joshua 18:1). For 369 years, according to the Talmud (Zevachim 118b), the Tabernacle stood at Shiloh. It was here that Hannah prayed for a son and dedicated Samuel to God: "For this child I prayed" (1 Samuel 1:27).
Pottery from these centuries belongs to the world of the Judges and the kings of Israel and Judah. When Jeremiah wanted to shake Jerusalem awake, he pointed to this very place: "Go now to My place which was in Shiloh, where I set My name at the first" (Jeremiah 7:12). This shard comes from those layers of history.
Each shard is individually selected and documented. No two fragments are alike, so the piece you receive will have its own shape, texture, and story: a genuine artifact from the city where the Ark of the Covenant rested.
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Shiloh Pottery Shard - Bronze and Iron Ages
A fragment of fired clay from Tel Shiloh, shaped on a potter's wheel during the Bronze and Iron Ages (3300–586 BCE). Someone formed this vessel, fired it in a kiln, and used it in the hill country of Ephraim thousands of years ago. The break is ancient. The clay is original. The hand behind it was real.
There is a reason the earliest fragments are the most prized. The deeper an excavation goes, the less survives; clay that has endured three thousand years of conquest, fire, and rebuilding is far scarcer than the pottery of later centuries. A Bronze and Iron Age shard is among the rarest pieces Shiloh yields, and only a small number can be offered.
Shiloh was ancient Israel's first capital. "The whole congregation of the children of Israel assembled together at Shiloh, and set up the tabernacle of the congregation there" (Joshua 18:1). For 369 years, according to the Talmud (Zevachim 118b), the Tabernacle stood at Shiloh. It was here that Hannah prayed for a son and dedicated Samuel to God: "For this child I prayed" (1 Samuel 1:27).
Pottery from these centuries belongs to the world of the Judges and the kings of Israel and Judah. When Jeremiah wanted to shake Jerusalem awake, he pointed to this very place: "Go now to My place which was in Shiloh, where I set My name at the first" (Jeremiah 7:12). This shard comes from those layers of history.
Each shard is individually selected and documented. No two fragments are alike, so the piece you receive will have its own shape, texture, and story: a genuine artifact from the city where the Ark of the Covenant rested.
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