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This type of ancient seal was also known as a bulla in Latin. It consisted of two blank lead disks that would have been hammered together with a string between them. Opening the letter would cause obvious damage to the bulla, which was intended to discourage unauthorized people from breaking the seal.
One side of a lead seal from the days of the Crusades bears the image of a bearded St. Sabas holding a cross
The other side of the seal bears an inscription identifying it as "the seal of the Laura of the Holy Sabas."
The 800-year-old seal was probably once fixed to a document delivered to the farm from a sprawling cliffside monastery in the Judean Desert that was founded by St. Sabas ("Mar Saba" in Aramaic) and once housed hundreds of monks.
originally posted by: Astyanax
a reply to: WanDash
Everybody knows that the Crusaders had a huge shortwave radio network, which they used to broadcast market data and coded instructions to the agents of their international financial network. Every Templar outpost was equipped with a transceiver, and a roster of specially-trained knights were instructed in its use. The knight on the seal would have been one of them, hence the headphones.
Of course, all this was top secret and only the higher orders of the Order really understood what was going on. The junior knights who operated the radios were spun a story about angelic couriers carrying messages back and forth, who delivered their reports through the strange, glowing, obviously holy devices the knights were shown and taught to use.
The seal is really a sort of ID carried by the radio operators, which let them into the closely-guarded vaults and chambers where the radio equipment was hidden away.
originally posted by: Jennyfrenzy
a reply to: lostbook
It's beautiful! Nice find!
One side of a lead seal from the days of the Crusades bears the image of a bearded St. Sabas holding a cross
The other side of the seal bears an inscription identifying it as "the seal of the Laura of the Holy Sabas."
The 800-year-old seal was probably once fixed to a document delivered to the farm from a sprawling cliffside monastery in the Judean Desert that was founded by St. Sabas ("Mar Saba" in Aramaic) and once housed hundreds of monks.
originally posted by: Astyanax
a reply to: AngryCymraeg
Look at the 'cross' in the background of the seal. Close inspection reveals it to be a cruciform antenna of the type often used by ham radio operators nowadays.
originally posted by: Astyanax
a reply to: AngryCymraeg
Look at the 'cross' in the background of the seal. Close inspection reveals it to be a cruciform antenna of the type often used by ham radio operators nowadays.
The Crusaders were Christian. Chances are that there was bound to be a cross somewhere on it.