Is the “Brother of Jesus” Inscription on the James Ossuary a Forgery?
The burial box of James, the brother of Jesus
This Bible History Daily feature was originally published in 2015.—Ed.

Although the famous “James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus” inscription on an ancient ossuary (bone box) has been authenticated by two world-class paleographers, not everyone is convinced that the inscription is authentic.
The purported ossuary (bone box) of James, the brother of Jesus, is back in the news, as questions concerning its authenticity continue to plague the world-famous relic. The James Ossuary, as it’s come to be known, is a limestone bone box that bears an Aramaic inscription reading “James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus.” Controversy—including charges of forgery—has surrounded this ossuary since the Biblical Archaeology Review first reported on the artifact in 2002. The saga of the James Ossuary culminated in 2012 with the acquittal of Israeli antiquities collector (and owner of the ossuary) Oded Golan in a seven-year “forgery trial of the century,” but the story isn’t over yet. In “Predilections—Is the ‘Brother of Jesus’ Inscription a Forgery?” in the September/October 2015 issue of BAR, Hershel Shanks reviews the latest argument against the authenticity of the inscription.
The antiquity of the 20-inch-long James Ossuary itself is not questioned—it dates between the first century B.C.E. and 70 C.E., a period when the practice of ossilegium (the collection of the bones of a deceased person) was prevalent among the Jewish population. It is the inscription on the James Ossuary—a mere 20 letters written in Aramaic—that has incited years of debate. If real, the inscription would be the earliest written reference to Jesus. Because the ossuary was purchased with an unknown provenance from an antiquities dealer, the authenticity of the “brother of Jesus” inscription needed to be verified by experts.

The Aramaic inscription on the so-called James Ossuary reads “James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus.” Drawing by Ada Yardeni.
The inscription, reading “James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus” has been authenticated by two eminent paleographers (specialists in dating, interpreting and authenticating inscriptions): André Lemaire of the Sorbonne and Ada Yardeni of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 2003, however, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) appointed a committee of scholars to study the “brother of Jesus” inscription and report its findings. The committee concluded that the inscription was a forgery.
According to Dutch scholar Pieter van der Horst, who published an analysis of the IAA committee’s report in his new book,1 the IAA “appointed almost exclusively committee members who had already expressed outspoken opinions to the effect that the inscription was a forgery.” Van der Horst observes that the committee members didn’t abide by the IAA guideline “to arrive at the truth based on pure research only—without taking into account any other related factors regarding the collector, current gossip, rumors or prejudices,” nor did they follow the directive that each scholar “should work in his own discipline.”
The “forgery trial of the century” charging five people of running a massive forgery ring lasted seven years and included 138 witnesses, more than 400 exhibits and over 12,000 pages of testimony. Three paleographers were called to testify: André Lemaire, Ada Yardeni and Christopher Rollston, now of the George Washington University. When Rollston took the stand, he refused to give an opinion on the authenticity of the “brother of Jesus” inscription because he did not specialize in Second Temple inscriptions (the time of the ossuary).
“I only talk about what I am sure of,” Rollston said in court. “That is not my field.”
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The trial concluded with the acquittal of antiquities dealer and James Ossuary owner Oded Golan and the other defendants on all charges of forgery (though Golan was convicted of minor charges, including trading in antiquities without a license).
“I thought that this was the end of the matter until the Easter season in 2015, when I watched an hour-long TV program on CNN regarding the ossuary and its ‘brother of Jesus’ inscription,” writes Shanks in his BAR article. “Only one scholar addressed the question of the authenticity of the inscription—the same Christopher Rollston who could not express an opinion at the trial. Now he was prepared to opine on the authenticity of the inscription—for all of 33 seconds.”
What is Rollston’s reasoning for why the “brother of Jesus” inscription is a forgery? Is his judgment based on his predilection against unprovenanced inscriptions, as Shanks suggests? Learn more by reading the full article “Predilections—Is the ‘Brother of Jesus’ Inscription a Forgery?” by Hershel Shanks in the September/October 2015 issue of BAR.
BAS Library Members: Read the full article “Predilections—Is the ‘Brother of Jesus’ Inscription a Forgery?” by Hershel Shanks in the September/October 2015 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review.
Not a BAS Library or All-Access Member yet? Join today.
This Bible History Daily feature was originally published on August 31, 2015.
For more on the “forgery trial of the century,” visit the BAS Library to see a collection of BAR articles highlighting the various scholarly and scientific arguments that have been made both for and against the authenticity of the James Ossuary, the Yehoash tablet and other ancient artifacts.
Notes
1. Pieter W. van der Horst, Saxa Judaica Loquuntur: Lessons from Early Jewish Inscriptions, Biblical Interpretation Series 134 (Leiden: Brill, 2015), pp. 67–87.
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100 % Phony….. Just how many “Brother of” or “Sister of” obits have shown up in antiquity????
Does the inscription read James Or Jacob? The King James bible renamed Jacob to James.
If it takes several experts to say it is the real thing.and several experts to say it not the real thing, well, that makes the so called forger a better expert then all of them.
I don’t think so!!. No I don’t think so
James is the English translation of the Hebrew name Jacob (I assume Jacob in English is just a change a pronunciation without translation?). And it’s in Aramaic so that’s another translation I’m not qualified to speak to (my name is James, that’s how I know about the other one) suffice to say though that the experts who examined it would have been able to, and since Israel spent around 10 years trying to discredit the box I’m sure they would have pointed it out if it was the wrong name.
In Spanish, Yaaqov is Diego. and Santiago is St James. Go figure.
In Spanish too, Isabela is Elisabeth (otherwise Elishevaa Aaron’s wife I would think ) not Izevel -wife of Ahab. The antiquities industry (industry, just that) in Israel, is unfortunately teeming with charlatans.
It wouldn’t read “Jesus” either, in Aramaic His Name is Y’Shua, and Hebrew is Yahwshwa, so it would read Yaaqob achi Yahwshwa. Not “James, brother of Jesus.” Jesus is from Latin, not English or Hebrew.
In Latin “Jesus” was written “Iesus” from the Greek “Iēsous” which in turn is “Yeshua” (spelled
ישוע) in Aramaic & Hebrew . In English the name is JOSHUA.
if the inscription says jesus or james it is a forgery… James comes from king james who fostered the KJ version;
the brother of our Messiah was named Yaacov you say jacob, and ‘issous”jesus’ comes from “issue of Zeus” and has nothing to do with scripture or the congregation [it is the headway to the great deception, i.e. changing names, times, holy days etc… daniel 7]
Messiah’s name is the same name as was translated Joshua, please, actually look at the book of Joshua and see the hebrew spelling of the name to break free from the false moniker forced clandestinely upon us…Yahushua is his name, remember Messiah comes in the fathers name Yahuah is the fathers name Yahushua means Yahuah savesredeems/rescues etc…
this will help you in your search for the truth…
http://cozmiqpylosopher.blogspot.com/2012/08/preface-illuminate-human-eliminate.html
also; the top comment is my most recent research post…
please enjoy and share if you find it acurate and enlightening
It is surprising is the the Holy scriptures were written through inspiration of the holy Spirit but today’s deniers of the holy Spirit or neither Spirit filled would champion the cause. No wonder the ditch is the outcome. Simple using the heavenly standards this is true and you will discover. James or Jacob the elder in the congregation was proud to be a brother of Jesus and good testimony to speak to generation to come through his bones . Bishop Cephas Mangi, D.D
Um, it says “Ya’akov bar-Yosef akhui diYeshua”. As this is ancient Israel, I would expect the English translation to be “James, son of Joseph, brother of Joshua”. “Jesus” is Greek.
Or Latin. What do I know about “Jesus”.