The Phoenician arrowheads or Phoenician javelin heads are a well-known group of almost 70 Phoenician inscribed bronze arrowheads from the 11th century BC onwards.[1]
The first known inscription was the Ruweiseh arrowhead; it is the only one found in situ. The other arrowheads are of unknown origin, having first appeared on the antiquities markets.[2]
The inscriptions are thought to be personal names.[3]
They are known as KAI 20–22.
Because of their early date, the arrowheads are important in the modern understanding of the history of the Phoenician language; in particular, the 1953 discovery of the three al-Khader arrowheads is said to have "initiated a new stage in the study of alphabetic origins".[4] It has become conventional to refer to the written script as "Proto-Canaanite" until the mid-11th century BC, the point at which "Phoenician" is first attested on the arrowheads.[5] Frank Moore Cross and Józef Milik wrote in 1954 that "[t]he el-Khadr javelin-heads provide the missing link between the latest of the Proto-Canaanite epigraphs, and the earliest of the Phoenician inscriptions".[6][7][8][9]
The discovery in 1953 of three arrowheads from 'El-Khadr inscribed with three identical inscriptions of the late 12th century B.C. initiated a new stage in the study of alphabetic origins (Cross and Milik 1954: 5–15; Cross and Milik 1956: 15–23). The brief texts of the arrowheads provided secure readings of alphabetic signs at precisely the period of transition from the older pictographic (ProtoCanaanite or Old Canaanite) script to the Early Linear (Phoenician) alphabet.
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The precise relationship between the Old Canaanite alphabet and the Early Linear Phoenician script remained uncertain until 1953, when a group of inscribed arrowheads was found near Bethlehem at 'El-Khadr. These inscriptions, from the end of the twelfth century (ca. 1100) B.C., proved to be missing links in the history of the alphabet… The ' El – Khadr arrowheads come precisely from the time when the Old Canaanite pictographs were evolving into the Early Linear Phoenician alphabet. We were fortunate that each contained virtually the same short inscription…