The archaeology of Israel is the study of the archaeology of the present-day Israel, stretching from prehistory through three millennia of documented history. The ancient Land of Israel was a geographical bridge between the political and cultural centers of Mesopotamia and Egypt.
Despite the importance of the country to three major religions, serious
archaeological research only began in the 15th century. The first major work on the antiquities of Israel was Adriaan Reland's Palestina ex monumentis veteribus, published in 1709. Edward Robinson,
an American theologian who visited the country in 1838, published the
first topographical studies. Lady Hester Stanhope performed the first
modern excavation at Ashkelon in 1815. A Frenchman, Louis Felicien de Saucy, embarked on early "modern" excavations in 1850.
In discussing the state of archaeology in Israel in his time, David Ussishkin commented in the 1980s that the designation "Israeli archeology"
no longer represents a single uniform methodological approach; rather,
its scope covers numerous different archaeological schools, disciplines,
concepts, and methods currently in existence in Israel.
Archaeological time periods
Paleolithic period
Lower paleolithic
The beginning of the Lower Paleolithic
in Israel is defined by the earliest archaeological finds available.
Occasionally, when new, more ancient, sites are discovered, the
boundaries of this period are redefined. Currently the most ancient site
in Israel, and one of the earliest outside of Africa, is Ubeidiya, in the Jordan Valley. Its age is estimated to be between 1.55 and 1.2 million years BP. Many stone tools of the Acheulean culture have been discovered there. Among the other sites from this period is the site at Daughters of Jacob Bridge, which has been dated to 790,000 BP, using Paleomagnetism. Some of the earliest evidence of the use of fire and of wooden tools have been discovered on this site.
It has been estimated that the people who had left the remains
discovered on the two aforementioned sites belonged to the species Homo erectus, although the human fossils
found were too few and incomplete to make a positive identification
possible. An additional site from the early Lower Paleolithic is the
Ruhama Swamp in the northern Negev, which contains remains from the Oldowan culture.
Most of the sites from this period belong to the Acheulean culture, and on many of them remains of elephant bones have been found, together with tools made of flint and of basalt. Additional important sites are Revadim, Tabun Cave in Nahal Me'arot Nature Reserve, a site near the city of Holon, and a site located near kibbutz Evron.
At the end of the Lower Paleolithic, between 400,000 and 250,000 BP, the Acheulo-Yabrudian complex has emerged. The site near Lake Ram, in the Golan Heights, where the Venus of Berekhat Ram was discovered, probably belongs to this cultural horizon.
This statue is considered, by some, to be the earliest artistic
representation of the human form. One of the human fossils from this
period is the Galilee Skull - part of a skull discovered by Francis Turville-Petre in Mugharet el-Zuttiyeh, in Nahal Amud - which is considered today to be the skull of a Homo heidelbergensis or of an early Homo Sapiens. Notable Acheulo-Yabrudian sites are Tabun Cave and Qesem Cave.
Middle paleolithic
This period has been dated to the years 250,000 - 45,000 BP. Fossils of Neanderthals and of Homo-Sapiens from this period have been discovered in Israel. The Homo-Sapiens remains found in Israel are the oldest anatomically modern human
remains that were discovered outside of Africa. It is yet unclear
whether Neanderthals and Homo-Sapiens populations coexisted side by
side, in this area, or replaced each other as the global climate shifted, as was common during the Pleistocene. Both used the same style of stone tools, identified as the Mousterian culture.
Remains of this culture have been discovered all over Israel, in dozens
of cave sites and open sites. Judging by the size and content of these
sites it seems the population living in the area of today's Israel in
that period was small. Groups were small and they subsisted on hunting, consuming the carcasses of dead animals and gathering plants.
Their preferred game was the Mountain gazelle, the Persian fallow deer and the Aurochs.
In cave sites that had been used as seasonal dwellings in that period
dozens of buried human skeletons have been uncovered. The most famous
ancient Homo-Sapiens skeletons are the ones discovered in Es Skhul cave in Nahal Me'arot and in Me'arat Kedumim (Kedumim Cave) in Lower Galilee; the most notable Neanderthal skeletons are from Tabun Cave in Nahal Me'arot, from Kebara Cave, near Zikhron Ya'akov, and from Amud Cave in Nahal Amud. Other important sites are Misliyah Cave and Sephunim Cave in the Carmel and several open sites in the Golan, in the Negev and in the Coastal plain.
Upper paleolithic
This
period in Israel has been dated to between 45,000 BC and 20,500 BC, and
its sites are associated with two cultural horizons: the Aurignacian culture
and the Akhmerian culture. Some technological advancements were made in
this period, including the introduction of new techniques for
manufacturing flint tools, the invention of the bow and arrow, and the manufacturing of stone tools intended for grinding food and preparing dyes. Humans began making tools from animal bones and the use of seashells for decoration became widespread. Parts of skeletons were discovered in various sites, but no cemeteries from this period were ever found. It seems that during this era the Neanderthals disappeared, from Israel, as they were going extinct throughout the Middle East and Europe, at the time.
Epipaleolithic period
In
this era, bridging between the mobile bands of hunter-gatherers of the
Paleolithic and the agricultural villages of the Neolithic, 3 different
cultures existed in Israel: the Kebaran culture, dated to 18,000 - 12,500 BC, the Kebaran Geometric culture, dated to 12,500 - 10,500 BC and the Natufian culture, dated to 12,500 - 9,500 BC.
Neolithic period
The Neolithic period appears to have begun when the peoples of the Natufian culture, which spread across present-day Syria, Israel and Lebanon, began to practice agriculture. This Neolithic Revolution has been linked to the cold period known as the Younger Dryas. This agriculture in the Levant is the earliest known to have been practiced. The Neolithic period in this region is dated 8500–4300 BCE and the Chalcolithic 4300–3300 BCE. The term "Natufian" was coined by Dorothy Garrod
in 1928, after identifying an archaeological sequence at Wadi al-Natuf
which included a Late Levallois-Mousterian layer and a stratified
deposit, the Mesolithic of Palestine, which contained charcoal traces
and a microlithic flint tool industry. Natufian sites in Israel include Ain Mallaha, el-Wad, Ein Gev, Hayonim cave, Nahal Oren and Kfar HaHoresh.
Chalcolithic period
Definition
Our understanding of the Chalcolithic period in Israel and in the Levant is still far from perfect. It seems that Chalcolitic cultures appeared in the northern Jordan Valley around 4,800 BC, and in the southern parts of this valley, and, particularly, in Teleilat el-Ghassul,
around 4,500 BC. Though no direct evidence to this effect is currently
available, it is possible that Chalcolithic civilizations have spread
from the northern parts of Israel to its southern parts, over the course
of several centuries, during the first half of the 5th millennium BC.
Judging by evidence from the material culture, there seems to be no
direct link between the Late Neolithic cultures and the early
Chalcholithic cultures that replaced them, in this region. The Chalcolithic period ended in Israel around 3,500 BC, with the rise of the Early Bronze civilization.
Chief among the Chalcolithic cultures of the Levant is the Ghassulian
culture of the mid to late Chalcolithic. It might have been preceded by
the Bsorian culture. The Ghassulian culture itself is made of several
subcultures, one of which is the Beersheba culture.
Subsistence
Hundreds of Chalcolithic sites have been discovered in Israel. Their subsistence was based on farming crops - chiefly wheat, barley and lentils - and on livestock: sheep, goats, pigs and cattle. The livestock was also used for producing wool and dairy products. This is evident from the many butter churns,
made of clay, and also from the large number of animal figurines that
have been discovered on Chalcolithic sites. People of the Chalcolithic
period were also the first, in Israel, to grow cultivated fruit bearing
trees, such as date palms, olive trees and pomegranates.
Industry and material culture
The Ghassulians were the first, in Israel, to smelt and work copper. Settlements of the Beersheba culture, a late Ghassulian subculture, specialized in different types of industry. Bir Abu Matar produced copper and copper tools, artifacts and jewelry. Copper ore, imported from Wadi Feynan or from Timna,
was ground and then cooked in ovens. It was then smelted in special
furnaces made of compacted earth mixed with straw. The molten metal was
collected in special clay bowls and cast into earthen molds that were
shattered after the metal had cooled. The people of Bir Tzafad
specialized in ivory carving.
People of the Chalcolithic era also produced a multitude of stone (flint) tools, chief among which were fan scrapers, used mainly for working leather. Bone tools - such as picks, needles, combs and sickles - were also in use.
Ghassulian Art
Elaborate,
multicolored, wall paintings, done on plaster, that were probably
associated with Ghassulian religious practices, were discovered in the
later Chalcolithic layers of Teleilat el-Ghassul - the layers associated
with the Ghassulian culture. The painters employed elaborate
techniques, including the use of rulers to draw straight lines, and
produced works of high accuracy. Periodically, a new layer of plaster
would be applied to the wall, and covered in fresh paintings. Over 20
such layers were discovered on the walls of one of the houses.
The Ghassulians also produced ivory statuettes, often of naked
women or of bearded men, or using other motifs, for instance - birds.
These statuettes had holes at the top, and were probably meant to be
suspended by a string. They include motifs found in artifacts from pre-dinastic Upper Egypt (Amratian and Gerzean cultures).
Trade
People of the Chalcolithic engaged in extensive trade. Copper ore for the Ghassulian copper industry was imported from Timna of from Wadi Feynan, in today's Jordan. Basalt
artifacts (sets of large, finely-crafted, basalt bowls) that were
probably used in religious rituals were imported from the north, from
the Golan or from the Houran.
These sets of exquisite artifacts also indicate an early phase of
social stratification in Chalcolithic societies, since they were only
found in several of the houses, whereas in others similar sets made of
clay were discovered. Ivory for making ivory statuettes was brought from Africa, marine shells - from the Mediterranean coastline, from the Red Sea and from the Nile Valley. The settlements also traded with each other.
Bronze Age / Canaanite period
The Bronze Age is the period 3300–1200 BCE when objects made of bronze were in use. Many writers have linked the history of the Levant from the Bronze Age onwards to events described in the Bible. The Bronze Age and Iron Age together are sometimes called the "Biblical period". The periods of the Bronze Age include the following:
- Early Bronze Age I (EB I) 3330–3050 BCE
- Early Bronze Age II–III (EB II–III) 3050–2300 BCE
- Early Bronze Age IV/Middle Bronze Age I (EB IV/MB I) 2300–2000 BCE
- Middle Bronze Age IIA (MB IIA) 2000–1750 BCE
- Middle Bronze Age IIB (MB IIB) 1800–1550 BCE
- Late Bronze Age I–II (LB I–II) 1550–1200 BCE
The Late Bronze Age is characterized by individual city-states, which from time to time were dominated by Egypt until the last invasion by Merneptah in 1207 BCE. The Amarna Letters
are an example of a specific period during the Late Bronze Age when the
vassal kings of the Levant corresponded with their overlords in Egypt.
Iron Age/Israelite period
The Iron Age in the Levant begins in about 1200 BCE, following the Late Bronze Age Collapse, when iron tools came into use. It is also known as the Israelite period. The rich and diverse archaeological findings attest to strong international links and trade relations.
In this period both the archaeological evidence and the narrative
evidence from the Bible become richer and much writing has attempted to
make links between them. A chronology includes:
- Iron Age I (IA I) 1200–1000 BCE
- Iron Age IIA (IA IIA) 1000–925 BCE
- Iron Age IIB-C (IA IIB-C) 925–586 BCE
- Iron Age III 586–539 BCE (Neo-Babylonian period)
The traditional view, personified in such archaeologists as Albright and Wright, faithfully accepted the biblical events as history, but has since been questioned by "Biblical minimalists" such as Niels Peter Lemche, Thomas L. Thompson and Philip R. Davies. Israel Finkelstein suggests that the empire of David and Solomon
(United Monarchy) never existed and Judah was not in a position to
support an extended state until the start of the 8th century.
Finkelstein accepts the existence of King David and Solomon but doubts
their chronology, significance and influence as described in the Bible. Without claiming that everything in the Bible is historically accurate, some non-supernatural story elements appear to correspond with physical artifacts and other archaeological findings. Inscriptions such as the Tel Dan Stele and the Mesha Stele can be traced to a non-Hebrew cultural origin.
Origins of the Ancient Israelites – the Tel Aviv School
Following the collapse of many cities and civilizations in the eastern Mediterranean Basin at the end of the Bronze Age, certain local nomadic groups in eastern Canaan began settling in the mountainous regions of that land (the mountain ranges on both sides of the Jordan River, of which the western part is known today as Judea and Samaria, or the West Bank). In this period the Sea Peoples invaded the countries along the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, creating the Philistine city states along the seacoast of southwestern Canaan. Egypt
lost its control of the land in the 12th century BC – the exact date is
currently being disputed, and this issue is closely linked to the Low Chronology / High Chronology dispute.
According to Israel Finkelstein, this tendency of nomads
to settle down, or of sedentary populations to become nomadic, when
circumstances make it worth their while, is typical of many Mid-Eastern
populations which retain the knowledge of both ways of life and can
switch between them fairly easily. This happens on a small scale, but
can also happen on a large scale, when regional political and economical
circumstances change dramatically. According to Finkelstein, this
process of settlement on a large scale in the mountain-ranges of Canaan
had already happened twice before, in the Bronze Age, during periods
when the urban civilization was in decline. The numbers of settlers were
smaller in those previous two instances, and the settlement-systems
they created ended up dissipating instead of coalescing into more mature
political entities, as was the case with the settlers of the early Iron
Age.
In the early stages of this process, settlements had the form of
nomadic tent-camps: a ring of stone houses surrounding an inner yard
where the livestock
was kept. Gradually, as the settlement evolved, that space was filled
up with houses. The composition of animal bones found in successive archaeological layers also displays change over time, reflecting the change in lifestyle - nomadic societies raise many sheep and goats and very little cattle. As the settlement process progressed, the percentage of cattle bones found in animal bone deposits increased dramatically. Another characteristic of the early Israelite settlements is the absence of pig
bones in excavated sites, which seems to be the earliest evidence of
the development of an "Israelite national identity", though it is, so
far, not quite conclusive.
At the height of this process, in the 10th century BC, the population of the areas that would become the early Kingdom of Israel and the early Kingdom of Judea (before these kingdoms began spreading into the surrounding lowlands) numbered around 45,000. In the 11th century BC Shiloh
probably served as a religious center and might have held some
political power in the region. In the mid to late 10th century BC an
early Israelite state formation emerged (possibly the one referred to in
the Old Testament as the Kingdom of Saul).
It has been suggested by Finkelstein
that this early Israelite state - and not David's 'unified kingdom',
which he sees as a "literary construct" - had been the target of the
campaign of Shoshenq I
to Canaan, in the middle of the second half of the 10th century BC.
There is evidence of a large scale abandonment of settlements in the
heartland of the Kingdom of Saul, as described in the Old Testament, around that time - in the land of the Tribe of Benjamin, just north of Judah, the area of Gibeah.
This attack by Shoshenq I on the Israelite kingdom was, most likely, a
response to this kingdom's attempts to expand into the lowlands of
Canaan (as evidenced by a series of destruction events of Canaanite
cities in the north of Israel around that time), and a part of this Paraoh's effort to take control over Canaan.
The kingdom of Judah was relatively small - maybe 5,000 people in
the 10th century BC - and had been a vassal of Israel at least since
the early 9th century, when the powerful Omride dynasty had taken over that kingdom, and until Israel's destruction by the Assyrians
in the late 8th century BC. The Old Testament is mostly a Judean
creation, though it incorporates many traditions (and, possibly, texts)
from the Kingdom of Israel. As such, it describes the history of these
two kingdoms, in the Iron Age, from a strictly Judean theological
perspective and its historical account is biased, though it becomes
relatively reliable from the 9th century onward.
The Kingdoms of Israel And Judah
Hellenistic period
Many
are the archaeological sites in Israel that have yet to be excavated.
However, many of the same sites have been surveyed by archaeologists on
behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority. One such site dating back to the Hellenistic period is Horvat Geres (Arabic: Khirbet Jurish) near Tzur Hadassah.
Roman period
The Psalms Scroll of the Dead Sea Scrolls with transcription
The Roman period covers the dates 63 BCE to 330 CE, from Pompey the Great's incorporation of the region into the Roman Republic until Rome's adoption of Christianity as the imperial religion. The Roman period itself features several stages:
- Early Roman period (including the Herodian period) 63 BCE to 70 CE
- Middle Roman period: 70–135 CE (Jewish-Roman wars period); 135–200 CE (Mishnaic period)
- Late Roman period 200–330 CE (Talmudic period)
The end of the middle Roman period marks the end of the predominantly Jewish culture of Judea, but also the beginning of Rabbinic Judaism through Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakai in the city of Yavne. Therefore, the late Roman period is also called the Yavne Period.
Prominent archaeological sites from the Roman period include:
Byzantine period
The Byzantine
period is dated 330–638 CE, from Rome's adoption of Christianity to the
Muslim conquest of Palestine. The transition from the Roman to
Byzantine period coincided with the growth of extensive imperial funding
to construct Christian religious institutions in the area, often by
transforming the older pagan buildings.
A third of the 40,000 objects recovered annually from archaeological
digs in Israel attest to the ancient Christian presence in the area.
Findings from the Byzantine period include:
- Byzantine-period church in Jerusalem hills
- Byzantine-period street in Jerusalem
- 1,400-year-old wine press
Notable sites
Ashkelon
Archaeological excavation in Ashkelon began in 1985, led by Lawrence Stager The site contains 50 feet (15 m) of accumulated rubble from successive Canaanite, Philistine,
Phoenician, Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Islamic, and
Crusader occupation. Major findings include shaft graves of
pre-Phoenician Canaanites, a Bronze Age vault and ramparts, and a silvered bronze statuette of a bull calf, assumed to be of the Canaanite period.
Beit Alfa
One of the earliest digs by Israeli archaeologists, Beit Alfa is the site of an ancient Byzantine-era synagogue, constructed in the 5th century CE, with a three-paneled mosaic floor. An Aramaic inscription states that the mosaic was made at the time of Justin (apparently Justin I),
who ruled from 518 to 527 CE. The mosaic is one of the most important
discovered in Israel. Each of its three panels depicts a scene—the Holy Ark, the zodiac, and the story of the sacrifice of Isaac. The zodiac has the names of the twelve signs in Hebrew. In the center is Helios, the sun god, being whisked away in his chariot by four galloping horses. The four women in the corners of the mosaic represent the four seasons.
Carmel Caves
Misliya cave, southwest of Mt. Carmel, has been excavated by teams of anthropologists and archaeologists from the Archaeology Department of the University of Haifa and Tel Aviv University
since 2001. In 2007, they unearthed artifacts indicative of what could
be the earliest known prehistoric man. The teams uncovered hand-held
stone tools and blades as well as animal bones, dating to 250,000 years
ago, at the time of the Mousterian culture of Neanderthals in Europe.
In January 2018 it was announced that a fragment of an early modern
human jawbone with eight teeth found at Misliya cave, Israel, have been
dated to around 185,000 (between 177,000 and 194,000 years ago (95%
CI)).
This is (as of 2018) the third oldest dated early modern human remain found outside of Africa after Jebel Irhoud from Morocco dated at around 315,000 and Dali Man from China dated at around 260,000 years ago. Layers dating from between 250,000 and 140,000 years ago in the same cave contained tools of the Levallois
type which could put the date of the first migration even earlier if
the tools can be associated with the modern human jawbone finds.
Mamshit
Mamshit, the Nabatean
city of Memphis (also known as Kurnub in Arabic), was declared a world
heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005. The archaeological excavation at
Mamshit uncovered the largest hoard of coins ever found in Israel:
10,500 silver coins in a bronze jar, dating to the 3rd century CE. Among the Nabatean cities found in the Negev (Avdat, Haluza, Shivta)
Mamshit is the smallest (10 acres), but the best preserved and
restored. Entire streets have survived intact, and numerous Nabatean
buildings with open rooms, courtyards, and terraces have been restored.
Most of the buildings were built in the late Nabatean period, in the 2nd
century CE, after the Nabatean kingdom was annexed to Rome in 106 CE.
Old Acre
Declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001, Acre's
Old City has been the site of extensive archaeological excavation since
the 1990s. The major find has been an underground passageway leading to
a 13th-century fortress of the Knights Templar.
The excavated remains of the Crusader town, dating from 1104 to 1291
CE, are well preserved, and are on display above and below the current
street level.
Tel Rehov
Tel Rehov is an important Bronze and Iron Age archaeological site approximately five kilometers south of Beit She'an
and three kilometers west of the Jordan River. The site represents one
of the largest ancient city mounds in Israel, its surface area
comprising 120,000 m² in size, divided into an "Upper City" (40,000 m²)
and a "Lower City" (80,000 m²). Archaeological excavations have been
conducted at Rehov since 1997, under the directorship of Amihai Mazar.
The first eight seasons of excavations revealed successive occupational
layers from the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age I (12th – 11th centuries
BCE).
The Iron Age II levels of the site have emerged as a vitally important
component in the current debate regarding the chronology of the United Monarchy of Israel. In September 2007, 30 intact beehives dated to the mid-10th to early 9th century BCE were found. The beehives are evidence of an advanced honey-producing beekeeping (apiculture)
industry 3,000 years ago in the city, then thought to have a population
of about 2,000. The beehives, made of straw and unbaked clay, were
found in orderly rows of 100 hives. Organic material (wheat found next
to the beehives) was dated using carbon-14 radiocarbon dating at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. Also found alongside the hives was an altar decorated with fertility figurines.
Tel Be'er Sheva
A UNESCO World Heritage site since 2005, Tel Be'er Sheva is an archaeological site in southern Israel, believed to be the remains of the biblical town of Be'er Sheva. Archaeological finds indicate that the site was inhabited from the Chalcolithic period, around 4000 BCE, to the 16th century CE. This was probably due to the abundance of underground water, as evidenced by the numerous wells
in the area. Excavated by Yohanan Aharoni and Ze'ev Herzog of Tel Aviv
University, the settlement itself is dated to the early Israelite
period. Probably populated in the 12th century BCE, the first fortified settlement dates to 1000 BCE. The city was likely destroyed by Sennacherib
in 700 BCE, and after a habitation hiatus of three hundred years, there
is evidence of remains from the Persian, Hellenistic, Roman and Early
Arab periods. Major finds include an elaborate water system and a huge cistern carved out of the rock beneath the town, and a large horned altar
which was reconstructed using several well-dressed stones found in
secondary use in the walls of a later building. The altar attests to the
existence of a temple or cult center in the city which was probably dismantled during the reforms of King Hezekiah.
Tel Megiddo
A UNESCO World Heritage site since 2005, Tel Megiddo
comprises twenty-six stratified layers of the ruins of ancient cities
in a strategic location at the head of a pass through the Carmel Ridge, which overlooks the Valley of Jezreel
from the west. Megiddo has been excavated three times. The first
excavations were carried out between 1903 and 1905 and a second
expedition was carried out in 1925. During these excavation it was
discovered that there were twenty levels of habitation, and many of the
remains uncovered are preserved at the Rockefeller Museum in Jerusalem and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
Yigael Yadin conducted a few small excavations in the 1960s. Since
1994, Megiddo been the subject of biannual excavation campaigns
conducted by The Megiddo Expedition of Tel Aviv University, directed by
Israel Finkelstein and David Ussishkin,
together with a consortium of international universities. A major find
from digs conducted between 1927 and 1934 were the Megiddo Stables – two
tripartite structures measuring 21 meters by 11 meters, believed to
have been ancient stables capable of housing nearly 500 horses.
Beit She'arim
Beit She'arim is an archaeological site of a Jewish town and necropolis, near the town of Kiryat Tiv'on, 20 km east of Haifa in the southern foothills of the Lower Galilee. Beth She'arim was excavated by Benjamin Mazar and Nahman Avigad
in the 1930s and 1950s. Most of the remains date from the 2nd to 4th
century CE and include the remains of a large number of individuals
buried in the more than twenty catacombs of the necropolis. Together
with the images on walls and sarcophagi, the inscriptions show that this was a Jewish necropolis.
Gath
Tell es-Safi/Gath is one of the largest pre-Classical sites in Israel, situated approximately halfway between Jerusalem and Ashkelon, on the border between coastal plain and the Judean foothills (Shephelah).
The site was settled from Prehistoric to Modern times, and was of
particular importance during the Bronze and Iron Ages, and during the
Crusader period. The site is identified as Canaanite and Philistine Gath, and during the Iron Age was one of the five main cities (the Pentapolis) of the Philistines. The site was excavated briefly in 1899 by the British archaeologists Frederick Jones Bliss and Robert Alexander Stewart Macalister, and since 1996, by a team from Bar-Ilan University directed by Aren Maeir.
Among the noteworthy finds from the ongoing excavations are the
impressive late 9th-century BCE destruction level (Stratum A3),
apparently evidence of the destruction of Gath by Hazael of Aram (see II Kings 12:18), a unique siege
system relating to this event that surrounds the site (the earliest
known siege system in the world), a 10th/9th-century BCE inscription
written in archaic alphabetic script, mentioning two names of Indo-European nature, somewhat reminiscent of the etymological origins of the name Goliath,
and a large stone altar with two "horns" from the 9th-century BCE
destruction level – which while very similar to the biblical description
of the altar in the Tabernacle (in Exodus 30), has only two horns (as opposed to four in other known examples), perhaps indicating a unique type of Philistine altar, perhaps influenced from Cypriot, and perhaps Minoan, culture.
Gezer
Tel Gezer is an archaeological site which sits on the western flank of the Shephelah, overlooking the coastal plain of Israel, near the junction between Via Maris and the trunk road leading to Jerusalem. The tel consists of two mounds with a saddle between them, spanning roughly 30 acres (120,000 m2).
A dozen inscribed boundary stones found in the vicinity verify the
identification of the mound as Gezer, making it the first positively
identified Biblical city. Gezer is mentioned in several ancient sources,
including the Hebrew Bible and the Amarna letters. The biblical references describe it as one of Solomon's royal store cities. R.A.S. Macalister excavated Gezer from 1902 to 1909 with a one-year hiatus in 1906. Major findings include a soft limestone tablet, named the Gezer calendar, which describes the agricultural chores associated with each month of the year. The calendar is written in paleo-Hebrew script,
and is one of the oldest known examples of Hebrew writing, dating to
the 10th century BCE. Also found was a six-chambered gate similar to
those found at Hazor and Megiddo, and ten monumental megaliths.
Masada
A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2001, Masada is the site of ancient palaces and fortifications in the Southern District (Israel) on top of an isolated rock plateau, or large mesa, on the eastern edge of the Judean Desert overlooking the Dead Sea. According to Josephus, a 1st-century Jewish-Roman historian, Herod the Great
fortified Masada between 37 and 31 BCE as a refuge for himself in the
event of a revolt. Josephus also writes that in 66 CE, at the beginning
of the First Jewish-Roman War against the Roman Empire, a group of
Judaic extremist rebels called the Sicarii took Masada from the Roman garrison stationed there.
The site of Masada was identified in 1842 and extensively excavated
between 1963 and 1965 by an expedition led by Israeli archaeologist
Yigael Yadin. Due to the remoteness from human habitation and the arid
environment, the site has remained largely untouched by humans or nature
during the past two millennia. Many of the ancient buildings have been
restored, as have the wall-paintings of Herod's two main palaces, and
the Roman-style bathhouses that he built. A synagogue thought to have
been used by the Jewish rebels has also been identified and restored. Inside the synagogue, an ostracon bearing the inscription me'aser kohen ("tithe for the priest") was found, as were fragments of two scrolls.
Also found were eleven small ostraca, each bearing a single name. One
reads "ben Yair" and could be short for Eleazar ben Yair, the commander
of the fortress. Excavations also uncovered the remains of 28 skeletons. Carbon dating of textiles found in the cave indicate they are contemporaneous with the period of the Revolt. The remnants of a Byzantine church dating from the 5th and 6th centuries CE, have also been excavated on the top of Masada.
Tel Arad
Tel Arad is located west of the Dead Sea, about ten kilometers west of modern Arad. Excavations at the site conducted by Israeli archaeologist Yohanan Aharoni in 1962 have unearthed an extensive early Bronze Age settlement that was completely deserted and destroyed by 2700 BCE.
The site was then apparently deserted until a new settlement was
founded on the southeastern ridge of the ancient city during the Iron
Age II. The major find was a garrison-town known as 'The Citadel', constructed in the time of King David and Solomon. A Judean temple, the earliest ever to be discovered in an excavation, dates back to the mid-10th century BCE. An inscription found on the site by Aharoni mentions a 'House of YHWH', which William G. Dever suggests may have referred to the temple at Arad or the temple at Jerusalem. The Arad temple was probably demolished around 700 CE, which is before the date of the inscription.
Tel Dan
Tel Dan,
previously named Tell el-Qadi, is a mound where a city once stood,
located at the northern tip of modern-day Israel. Finds at the site date
back to the Neolithic era circa 4500 BCE, and include 0.8 meter wide
walls and pottery shards. The most important find is the Tel Dan Stele, a black basalt stele, whose fragments were discovered in 1993 and 1994. The stele was erected by an Aramaean
king and contains an Aramaic inscription to commemorate his victory
over the ancient Hebrews. It has generated much excitement because the
inscription includes the letters 'ביתדוד', Hebrew for "house of David".
Proponents of that reading argue that it is the first time that the
name "David" has been recognized at any archaeological site, lending
evidence for the Bible account of David's kingdom. Others read the
Hebrew letters 'דוד' as "beloved," "uncle" "kettle," or "a god named
Dod," (all of which are possible readings of vowel-less Hebrew), and
argue this is not a reference to Biblical David.
Tel Hazor
A UNESCO World Heritage site since 2005, Tel Hazor
has been excavated repeatedly since 1955. Other findings include an
ancient Canaanite city, which experienced a catastrophic fire in the
sometime in the 13th century BCE. The date and causes of the violent
destruction of Canaanite Hazor have been an important issue ever since
the first excavations of the site. One school of thought, represented by
Yigael Yadin,
Yohanan Aharoni and Amnon Ben-Tor, dates the destruction to the later
half of the 13th century, tying it to biblical descriptions in Joshua
which hold the Israelites responsible for the event. The second school
of thought, represented by Olga Tufnell, Kathleen Kenyon, P. Beck, Moshe Kochavi and Israel Finkelstein,
tends to support an earlier date in the first half of the 13th century,
in which case there is no necessary connection between the destruction
of Hazor and the process of settlement by Israelite Tribes in Cannan.
Other findings at the site include a distinctive six chambered gate
dating to the Early Iron Age, as well as pottery and administrative
buildings dating to either the 10th century and King Solomon or, on a
lowered chronology, to the Omrides of the 9th century.
Sepphoris
Excavations in Sepphoris, in the central Galilee region, six kilometers north-northwest of Nazareth,
have uncovered a rich and diverse historical and architectural legacy
that includes Assyrian, Hellenistic, Judean, Babylonian, Roman,
Byzantine, Islamic, Crusader, Arabic and Ottoman influences. The site is
especially rich in mosaics belonging to different periods. Major
findings include the remains of a 6th-century synagogue, evidence of an
interesting fusion of Jewish and pagan beliefs. A Roman villa, considered the centerpiece of the discoveries, which dates to the year 200 CE, was destroyed in the Galilee earthquake of 363 CE. The mosaic floor was discovered in August 1987 during an expedition led by Eric and Carol Meyers, of Duke University digging with Ehud Netzer, a locally trained archaeologist from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. It depicts Dionysus, the god of wine, socializing with Pan and Hercules in several of the 15 panels. In its center is a lifelike image of a young lady, possibly Venus, which has been named "The Mona Lisa of the Galilee."
Additional finds include a Roman theater on the northern slope of the
hill, and the remains of a 5th-century public building, with a large and
intricate mosaic floor.
Gesher Bnot Ya'akov
Bnot Ya'akov Bridge is a 780,000-year-old site on the banks of the Jordan river in northern Israel currently excavated by Naama Goren-Inbar of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
First discovered in the 1930s, Bnot Ya'akov had been the site of
several excavations that provided archaeologists with crucial
information about how and when Homo erectus moved out of Africa, most likely through the Levantine corridor
that includes Israel. "One of the rarest prehistoric sites in the
world," it featured a remarkable level of organic preservation that
archaeologists had not encountered at any other contemporary site in Europe or Asia. In 2000, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) charged the Sea of Galilee
Drainage Authority (KDA) with causing "serious and irreversible damage"
to the site. While the KDA had procured permission from the IAA to work
in a limited area to alleviate the regular flooding of farmland in the
adjacent Hula Valley under the supervision of an IAA inspector, bulldozers entered the site at night, damaging fossil remains, manmade stone artifacts, and organic material.
Ain Mallaha
Ain Mallaha, a Natufian
village, colonized in three phases 12,000 to 9600 BCE, contains the
earliest known archaeological evidence of dog domestication: the burial
of a human being with a dog.
Qesem cave
In Qesem cave, 400,000 years old teeth very similar to modern human teeth were found.
Archaeological institutions
During
the last hundred years of Ottoman rule in Palestine, European
archaeologists active in the region tended to be Christian, backed by
the dominant European powers of the time and the Churches. With the
transition from Ottoman to British rule over the land, the pursuit of
archaeology became less political and religious in nature and instead
took on a more purely historical and scientific character. After World
War I (1914–1918) and the establishment of the British Mandate,
archaeological institutions tended increasingly to be concentrated in
the city of Jerusalem.
In 1913–1914 the Society for the Reclamation of Antiquities was established by the Yishuv's
intellectual elite. Among its founder were Avraham Yaakov Brawer, David
Yellin and Aharon Meir Mazie. The Society changed its name to the
Jewish Palestine Exploration Society in 1920 and later to the Israel
Exploration Society.
The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem began operating in 1921, after R. A. Stewart Macalister and Duncan Mackenzie
of the Palestine Exploration Fund appealed to the British government
for the establishment of a local antiquities authority. Macalister and
Mackenzie expressed concern over the dangers posed to archaeological
sites on account of the battles being fought throughout the land.
Mackenzie was also wary of fellahin raiding archaeological sites and stealing artifacts.
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Institute of Archaeology was
founded in 1926. In 1934 Hebrew University opened its Department of
Archaeology, which it considers "the birthplace of Israeli archaeology." The Tel Aviv University Institute of Archaeology was established in 1969.
After the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, the British Mandatory Department of Antiquities, housed at the Rockefeller Museum,
became the Department of Antiquities of the State of Israel. In 1990
the Department of Antiquities became the Israel Antiquities Authority,
an autonomous government authority charged with responsibility for all
the country's antiquities and authorized to excavate, preserve, conserve
and administrate antiquities as necessary.
Notable Israeli archaeologists
- Eleazar Sukenik (1889–1953)
- Benjamin Mazar (1906–1995), a founding father of Israeli archaeology
- Yigael Yadin (1917–1984)
- Amir Drori (1937–2005), founder of the Israel Antiquities Authority in 1990
New technologies
Israeli
archaeologists have developed a method of detecting objects buried
dozens of meters underground using a combination of seven technologies,
among them echomagnetic soundings, radio transmissions and temperature
measurements, able to distinguish between relevant and irrelevant
objects such as pipes in the ground.
Politicisation of archaeology
Archaeological research and preservation efforts have been exploited by both Palestinians and Israelis for partisan ends. Rather than attempting to understand "the natural process of demolition,
eradication, rebuilding, evasion, and ideological reinterpretation that
has permitted ancient rulers and modern groups to claim exclusive
possession," archaeologists have instead become active participants in
the battle over partisan memory, with the result that archaeology, a
seemingly objective science, has exacerbated the ongoing nationalist
dispute. Silberman concludes: "The digging continues. Claims and
counterclaims about exclusive historical 'ownership' weave together the
random acts of violence of bifurcated collective memory." Adam and
Moodley conclude their investigation into this issue by writing that,
"Both sides remain prisoners of their mythologized past."
As an example of this process, an archaeological tunnel running the length of the western side of the Temple Mount, as it is known to Jews, or the Haram al-Sharif, as it is known to Muslims,
became a serious point of contestation in 1996. The tunnel had been in
place for about a dozen years, but open conflict broke out after the
government of Benjamin Netanyahu decided to open a new entrance to the tunnel from the Via Dolorosa in the Muslim quarter of the Old City. Palestinians and the Islamic Waqf
authorities were outraged that the decision was taken without prior
consultation. They claimed that the work threatened the foundations of
the compound and those of houses in the Muslim quarter and that it was
actually aimed at tunnelling under the holy compound complex to find
remains of Solomon's Temple,
similar to previous accusations in the 1980s. As a result of the rumor,
Arabs rioted in Jerusalem and then spread to the West Bank, leading to
the deaths of 86 Palestinians and 15 Israeli soldiers.
Damage to sites
From 1948–1967, the Jordanian authorities and military forces engaged in what was described as "calculated destruction" in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City. In a letter to the United Nations, Yosef Tekoa, Israel's representative to the UN, protested Jordan's "policy of wanton vandalism, desecration and violation," in which all the synagogues in the Old City apart from one were blown up or used as stables. A road was cut through the ancient historic Jewish graveyard on the Mount of Olives,
and tens of thousands of tombstones, some dating from as early as 1
BCE, were torn out, broken or used as flagstones, steps and building
materials in Jordanian military installations.
The Old City of Jerusalem and its walls were added to the List of World Heritage in Danger in 1982, after it was nominated for inclusion by Jordan.
Noting the "severe destruction followed by a rapid urbanization,"
UNESCO determined that the site met "the criteria proposed for the
inscription of properties on the List of World Heritage in Danger as
they apply to both 'ascertained danger' and 'potential danger'."
Work carried out by the Islamic Waqf since the late 1990s to
convert two ancient underground structures into a new mosque on the
Temple Mount damaged archaeological artifacts in the area of Solomon's Stables and the Huldah Gates.
From October 1999 to January 2000, the Waqf authorities in Jerusalem
opened an emergency exit to the newly renovated underground mosque, in
the process digging a pit measuring 18,000 square feet (1,672 m2) and 36 feet (11 m) deep. The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) expressed concern over the damage sustained to Muslim-period structures within the compound. Jon Seligman, a Jerusalem District archaeologist told Archaeology
magazine that, "It was clear to the IAA that an emergency exit [at the
Marwani Mosque] was necessary, but in the best situation, salvage archaeology would have been performed first."
Seligman said that the lack of archaeological supervision "has meant a
great loss to all of humanity. It was an archaeological crime."
Artifacts from the First Temple Period (c. 960 – 586 BC) were destroyed when the thousands of tons of ancient fill from the site were dumped in the Kidron Valley and Jerusalem's municipal garbage dump, making it impossible to conduct archaeological examination.
The 2011 annual report of the Israeli State Comptroller
criticized Waqf renovations on the Temple Mount, which were carried out
without permits and employed mechanical tools that caused damage to
archaeological relics.
In 2012, Bedouin gold-diggers irreversibly damaged the walls of a
2,000-year-old well located under a Crusader structure at Be'er Limon,
near Beit Shemesh.