It is a knife forged from gold, said to be able to slice the Gordian Knot.
Cuneform is the name of the Sumerian wedge-shaped form of writing
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It was first used to make wedge-shaped symbols on clay tablets.
During the early period of European colonization, the Biblical lands of Tarshish and Ophir, or Tarsis and Ofir, as they were called, held the imagination of European explorers. Not only was it believed that the "lost tribes" of Israel were to be found in these lands, but also untold wealth. To these kingdoms King Solomon and King Hiram of Tyre sent ships for trade that "brought from Ophir great plenty of almug trees, and precious stones," (I Kings 10:11). Concerning Tarshish it is written: "Fro the king's ships went to Tarshish with the servants of Hiram: every three years once came the shop sof Tarshish bringing gold and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacock." (II Chronicles 9:21) In Samuel Purchas's well-known travel compendium Purchas His Pilgrim, he devotes the entire first chapter to a discussion of Tarshish and Ophir. In particular, he argues strenously that it is beloved Britain and not Spain that deserved the title as the modern Tarshish and Ophir. Curiously, in Careri's journal of his visit to the Philippines, he mentions that he would not go into the argument raging in Europe at that time over whether the Philippines was originally populated by the descendants of Biblical Tarshish. In modern times, scholars have attempted to relate Tarshish and Ophir with a number of areas, none of which include the Philippines. However, things were different in Europe prior to the discovery of the Philippines. There, they believed that Tarsis and Ofir were some lands far to the east of biblical Israel. Their reasoning was actually quite logical. King Solomon built the port from which ships departed for Tarsis and Ofir at Ezion-Geber on the coast of the Red Sea. The return journey took about three years, so obviously the location must be somewhere far to the East. In modern times, some scholars have tried to suggest that Solomon's navy circumnavigated Africa to reach the Mediterranean, but the seafaring Europeans of those times would not consider such nonsense. Tarsis and Ofir were unknown lands beyond the Golden Chersonese of Ptolemy. Their discovery would undoubtedly bring untold wealth and great fame in the minds of the people of those times. But what, one may ask, has this to do with the Philippines? The truth is that the search for Tarsis and Ofir was directly related to the "discovery" of these islands by Magellan!
I believe it was stylus writing. The device was called a stylus.
Ophir is a country of uncertain location from which gold and precious stones and trees were brought for Solomon. I Kings 10:11.
Edward Hargraves named the Bathurst goldfields Ophir after the Biblical city named Ophir, which was famous for its wealth. Ophir was said to have supplied King Solomon with gold, silver and other riches on a regular basis.
At that stage, there was nothing else in Ophir. There is also nothing there now. It was just a bushy, hilly region, without shops or any facilities.
Although it is not specifically recorded, it is highly probable that gold had already been found at Ophir, which was given its name later by Edward Hargraves. When Hargarves sought to meet the Government's challenge and offer of rewards to anyone finding payable gold in NSW, he enlisted the assistance of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister led Hargraves directly to where gold was found, at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir".
In May 1851 after prospector Edward Hargraves claimed he discovered payable gold at Ophir near Orange.
Australia's first gold field was the one where the first payable gold was discovered in 1851 - that is Ophir, at Summerhill Creek, near Bathurst in NSW.
Ophir is a locality, rather than a town, in New South Wales. It lies about an hour's journey by road northwest of the inland city of Bathurst, just west of the Blue Mountains. The nearest city to Ophir is Orange, which lies southwest of Ophir, about 27 km by road. Other close localities are Lewis Ponds Creek and Summerhill Creek.Ophir was the first goldfield found in Australia, and was named by Edward Hargraves who has been credited with being the one who first found payable gold in New South Wales (in actuality, it was two men he employed who found the gold). Hargraves named it Ophir after the famed city of gold in the Bible. For awhile it was a thriving township, supporting thousands of gold prospectors, but many let quickly to try their luck at the more profitable goldfields in Victoria, which were discovered just a few months after the Ophir goldfields. Now there is nothing to be found but remnants from the first settlers.
If you want to go panning or fossicking in the Ophir fields today, you do need a licence. However, there are some tour operators who guide you to controlled "diggings" where, for a small fee, you can fossick for a day.
The gold rush in Australia started in May 1851 after it was announced that there had been the first strike of payable gold near Ophir (near Bathurst) in NSW.
The gold was mined from Ophir, thought to have been in what is now known as Yemen. these mines were still in existence in the 9th century BC.
Ophir Gottlieb is 6'.
Ophir Award was created in 1982.