Discovery could contradict 2 Kings biblical account of invaders tearing down city's walls "on all sides"

In the City of David National Park, Israeli archeologists have unearthed a section of Jerusalem's city wall constructed during the First Temple period, which the invading Babylonian army was thought to have completely destroyed during the 586 BCE occupation.

According to the directors of the excavation, Dr Filip Vukosavović of the Ancient Jerusalem Research Center and Dr Joe Uziel and Ortal Chalaf on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority: "The city wall protected Jerusalem from a number of attacks during the reign of the kings of Judah, until the arrival of the Babylonians who managed to break through it and conquer the city... However, not everything was destroyed, and parts of the walls, which stood and protected the city for decades and more, remain standing to this day."

The newly revealed section of the wall appears to connect two separate pieces that were excavated in the 1960s and 1970s - by British archeologist Kathleen Kenyon and Israeli archeologist Yigal Shiloh, respectively. 

While most scholars did not assess that the remains should have been considered part of the city wall, the newly unearthed part has not only challenged that assumption but may have also thrown into doubt the biblical account of the Babylonians tearing down the entirety of Jerusalem's protective walls.

By connecting the dots on the map, there is now an almost continuous 200-meter (656-foot) fortified wall on the eastern slope of the City of David facing the Kidron Valley. This new section was uncovered during excavations in 2020, reported The Times of Israel (TOI).

Other findings excavated in a building adjacent to the wall include jars bearing rosette-stamped handles, a Babylonian stamp seal made of stone and a stamp seal impression made of clay.