Ancient Mosaic Floor Found Near Kibbutz Bet Qamain, Israel

It’s Byzantine and it’s spectacular:

A magnificent 1,500-year-old mosaic floor has been uncovered by archeologists  near Kibbutz Beit Kama in the south, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced  Sunday.

The mosaic was the most outstanding find in a Byzantine-era village unearthed  in the Negev during a survey conducted prior to construction of a highway.

The village, which thrived from the 4th through 6th centuries C.E.,  encompassed about six dunams – or an acre and a half – and was discovered under  the fields of the kibbutz. Among the finds was a public building measuring 12  meters by 8.5 meters (about 40 feet by 26 feet) containing the mosaic floor.  Archaeologists assume the building was a public one due to its size and relative  opulence.

The colorful mosaic includes geometric motifs and features amphorae – wine  containers— in the corners, as well as a pair of peacocks and a pair of doves  pecking at grapes on grapevines. The combination of so many motifs in one mosaic  is unusual, say Israel Antiquities Authority officials.

The building also features a system of water channels, pipes and water pools.

The site, situated on an ancient road that led north from Be’er Sheva, apparently included a large estate with a church, residential buildings, storerooms, a large water cistern, a public building and agricultural fields equipped with irrigation pools. One building appears to have served as a hostel for travelers passing through the area, according to the Israel Antiquities Authority…

The official IAA press release with more photos is here.

 

Judean Temple Discovered Near Jerusalem

The Bible Places Blog has the news:

A Judean temple from the 10th-9th centuries BC has been discovered four miles northwest of ancient Jerusalem. The structure has massive walls, faces east, and contained a cache of sacred vessels. The site of Tel Motza may be the town of Mozah mentioned in the city list of Joshua 18:26 and some believe the Emmaus mentioned in Luke 24 was located nearby.

moza

Location of Moza in relation to Jerusalem.      Map from Google Earth.

Archaeologists have dated the building to the Iron Age IIA, a period dated by most scholars to 980–830 BC, contemporary with the reigns of Solomon, Rehoboam, Asa, and Jehoshaphat. Each of these kings was faulted for not “destroying the high places” (1 Kgs 11:7; 14:23; 15:14; 22:43). Few such illicit worship sites are known from the land of Israel; the best preserved ones were excavated at Dan and Arad.

According to Anna Eirikh, Dr. Hamoudi Khalaily and Shua Kisilevitz, directors of the excavation on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “The ritual building at Tel Motza is an unusual and striking find, in light of the fact that there are hardly any remains of ritual buildings of the period in Judaea at the time of the First Temple. The uniqueness of the structure is even more remarkable because of the vicinity of the site’s proximity to the capital city of Jerusalem, which acted as the Kingdom’s main sacred center at the time.”

The site was excavated as part of road construction works on Highway 1, the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem road.

The press release of the Israel Antiquities Authority is here and six high-resolution photos are available from this link. The story is reported by the Jerusalem Post, Arutz-7, and other sites.

6

Aerial view of excavation site. Photograph: Skyview, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

1

Figurines of bearded men. Photograph: Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

5

Figurine of horse. Photograph: Clara Amit, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

Video: The Israel Antiquities Authority

An interesting video from the Israel Antiquities Authority. The past is yet to come…


 

HTDr Jim West

 

1400 Year Old Olive Press Excavated

Israel National News has the flash report:

The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced, Tuesday, that a press for the production of olive oil was discovered last week in Modi’in, about halfway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, during an archaeological excavation in advance of expansion of the city’s Keyser neighborhood by the Construction and Housing Ministry. A statement by the IAA called the press the grandest and most complete one found so far.

Archaeologist Hagit Torgë, who is directing the dig, said the press, which was used to produce industrial quantities of oil for food and light, about 1,400 years ago, “was preserved surprisingly intact with all its components.”

HT

 

Second Temple Era Seal Unveiled

The Israel Antiquities Authority unveiled a rare ancient seal on Christmas Day during a special press conference:

The Israel Antiquities Authority held a special press conference in Jerusalem’s City of David on Sunday to unveil a rare coin from the Second Temple era.

The cartouche – or seal – never seen by the public before, is the size of the modern New Israeli Shekel coin and bears the Aramaic inscriptions “it is pure” and a two-letter abbreviation for the name of God.

It was discovered near the Robinson’s Arch at the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount. Archeologists say the soil layer above the Herodian road where the seal was found was dated to the first century BCE.

Archaeologist Eli Shukron of the Antiquities Authority, and Professor Ronny Reich of Haifa University, who oversaw the excavation, explained to reporters the significance of the coin.

“This is the first time an object of this kind has been found. It is direct archaeological evidence of Jewish activity on the Temple Mount during the Second Temple era,” they said.

“Products being brought to the temple had to be stamped pure – which is what this seal was used for,” they added.

Such seals are mentioned in the Mishna and discussed in the Talmud – but the cartouche unveiled today does not match any of the four inscriptions included in extant texts.

“What we know is brought down from the surviving literature,” the archeologists said. “Here archeology has brought us something new.”

Minister of Culture Limor Livnat and Minister of Education Gideon Saar joined dozens of students for the unveiling.

Saar said, “The seal shows the deep connection of Israel to the City of David. It is important excavations like these that demonstrate our bond to Jerusalem. Everything uncovered here strengthens us.”

In addition to the seal other artifacts were discovered dating to Second Temple period, and some to the days of the Hasmoneans – such as oil lamps, cooking pots made of clay, a jug containing oils and perfumes, as well as coins of the Hasmonean kings such as Alexander Jannaeus and John Hyrcanus.

A great find! And more:

The Israel Antiquities Authority full press release is here.

UPDATE:

Archaeologists Uncover Ancient Markings in Jerusalem

Associated Press:

Jerusalem – Mysterious stone carvings made thousands of years ago and recently uncovered in an excavation underneath Jerusalem have archaeologists stumped.

Israeli diggers who uncovered a complex of rooms carved into the bedrock in the oldest section of the city recently found the markings: Three “V” shapes cut next to each other into the limestone floor of one of the rooms, about 2 inches (5 centimeters) deep and 20 inches (50 centimeters) long. There were no finds to offer any clues pointing to the identity of who made them or what purpose they served.

The archaeologists in charge of the dig know so little that they have been unable even to posit a theory about their nature, said Eli Shukron, one of the two directors of the dig.

“The markings are very strange, and very intriguing. I’ve never seen anything like them,” Shukron said.

The shapes were found in a dig known as the City of David, a politically sensitive excavation conducted by Israeli government archaeologists and funded by a nationalist Jewish group under the Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan in east Jerusalem. The rooms were unearthed as part of the excavation of fortifications around the ancient city’s only natural water source, the Gihon spring.

It is possible, the dig’s archaeologists say, that when the markings were made at least 2,800 years ago the shapes might have accommodated some kind of wooden structure that stood inside them, or they might have served some other purpose on their own. They might have had a ritual function or one that was entirely mundane. Archaeologists faced by a curious artifact can usually at least venture a guess about its nature, but in this case no one, including outside experts consulted by Shukron and the dig’s co-director, archaeologists with decades of experience between them, has any idea.

There appears to be at least one other ancient marking of the same type at the site. A century-old map of an expedition led by the British explorer Montague Parker, who searched for the lost treasures of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem between 1909 and 1911, includes the shape of a “V” drawn in an underground channel not far away. Modern archaeologists haven’t excavated that area yet.

Ceramic shards found in the rooms indicate they were last used around 800 B.C., with Jerusalem under the rule of Judean kings, the dig’s archaeologists say. At around that time, the rooms appear to have been filled with rubble to support the construction of a defensive wall.

It is unclear, however, whether they were built in the time of those kings or centuries earlier by the Canaanite residents who predated them.

The purpose of the complex is part of the riddle. The straight lines of its walls and level floors are evidence of careful engineering, and it was located close to the most important site in the city, the spring, suggesting it might have had an important function.

A unique find in a room beside the one with the markings — a stone like a modern grave marker, which was left upright when the room was filled in — might offer a clue. Such stones were used in the ancient Middle East as a focal point for ritual or a memorial for dead ancestors, the archaeologists say, and it is likely a remnant of the pagan religions which the city’s Israelite prophets tried to eradicate. It is the first such stone to be found intact in Jerusalem excavations.

But the ritual stone does not necessarily mean the whole complex was a temple. It might simply have marked a corner devoted to religious practice in a building whose purpose was commonplace.

With the experts unable to come up with a theory about the markings, the City of David dig posted a photo on its Facebook page and solicited suggestions. The results ranged from the thought-provoking — “a system for wood panels that held some other item,” or molds into which molten metal would could have been poured — to the fanciful: ancient Hebrew or Egyptian characters, or a “symbol for water, particularly as it was near a spring.”

The City of David dig, where the carvings were found, is the most high-profile and politically contentious excavation in the Holy Land. Named for the biblical monarch thought to have ruled from the spot 3,000 years ago, the dig is located in what today is east Jerusalem, which was captured by Israel in 1967. Palestinians claim that part of the city as the capital of a future state…

 

Scholars Slam Bill to Change Makeup of Israel Antiquities Authority


Haaretz reports on the politics presently plaguing the appointment of a Chairman to the Israel Antiquities Authority:

Culture Minister Limor Livnat previously asked Prof. Oded Abramsky, a neurologist at Jerusalem’s Hadassah University Hospital and member of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, to serve as chairman of the board of the Israel Antiquities Authority, Haaretz has learned.

Livnat turned to Abramsky after rejecting three historians and archaeologists from among the academy’s ranks who were nominated by Prof. Ruth Arnon, the academy’s president. After this idea proved impractical – possibly because Abramsky refused, though that remains unclear – Livnat submitted a bill to let her appoint someone who isn’t an academy member as the authority’s chairman.

This is impossible under current law.

The bill, which the Knesset Education Committee is set to discuss on Sunday, would allow any “senior researcher in the field of history or archaeology” to be chairman of the board, even if they are not an academy member. It would also allow the two representatives of academia on the board to be chosen from the faculty of the colleges, rather than from only the country’s five universities. The board sets policy for the authority and approves its budget.

Now, the academy has given the committee a position paper attacking the bill…

… The academy document said 12 of its approximately 100 members are historians or archaeologists, and another half dozen work in related fields – hardly making up a “limited list of candidates.”

The document said Livnat submitted her bill after rejecting the academy’s three nominees – Prof. Yoel Rak, an anthropologist from Tel Aviv University; Prof. Margalit Finkelberg, a classicist from Tel Aviv University; and Prof. Yoram Tsafrir, an archaeologist from Hebrew University – rather than exploring further options within the academy.

The document charged that the bill would undermine “perceptions of the scientific and national stature of the Antiquities Authority.” This view has been echoed by the heads of the country’s four university archaeology institutes, by the chairman of the Israel Archaeological Council and by the authority’s incumbent chairman.

One source said the “red flag” from Livnat’s standpoint was apparently Arnon’s nomination of Tsafrir. He is the only archaeologist in the academy, but he is also an avowed leftist who has spoken out against Elad, the organization that runs Jerusalem’s City of David national park and works to settle Jews in East Jerusalem. Recently, he opposed a planned construction project over an archaeological site in the Western Wall Plaza.

Livnat’s spokesman said she would respond to all “politically motivated” attacks on the bill at tomorrow’s Knesset session.

However, he added, the rule that the Antiquities Authority chairman must be a member of the academy applies…

Ancient Byzantine Anchor Discovered in Israel

Speaking of accidental archaeological discoveries:

Two lifeguards found an ancient 600-pound metal anchor off the coast of Bat Yam, next to Tel Aviv, leading to the discovery of two others.

Arutz Sheva reports:

The anchor dates back to the Byzantine period of approximately 1,500 years ago and measured at 2.1 meters (nearly seven feet) long. It was found buried in the sand only 100 feet from shore.

The lifeguards originally thought the anchor was modern but after realizing it may be an archeological find, Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) officials examined it and certified it as ancient find.

Further explorations in the area uncovered an identical anchor and a stone anchor, much older.

IAA maritime archeologist Dror Felner said that the discoveries raise the possibility that boats anchored in the area, a fact unknown in the past. Another possibility is that the anchors were from boats that were out at sea and sought refuge from sudden storms.

He said the metal anchor apparently has not been used and may have been stored in ships as a reserve.

The well-preserved state of the anchors was attributed to their apparently having been buried deep in the oxygen-free environment in the sand until recently having reached closer to the surface.

HT

Ancient Games

Notes Prof Aren Maeir:

The IAA has just put up a page with a collection of game boards and game pieces, from various periods and cultures…

Check it out. It’s in Hebrew. Some really fascinating games recovered archaeologically.

The Damascus Gate Restoration

Dr Jim West by way of Joseph Lauer, from the Israel Antiquities Authority:

After extensive conservation work on the largest and most impressive of Jerusalem’s gates, which took nearly a year to complete, visitors there can now enjoy the gate in all its splendor just as the public experienced it for hundreds of years, until the ‘crown’ was damaged in the battles of 1967

The conservation of the gate was carried out as part of the Jerusalem City Wall Conservation Project, in cooperation with the Jerusalem Development Authority, the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Prime Minister’s Office

For hundreds of years, when visitors arrived in Jerusalem and entered the city by way of Damascus Gate – the largest and most magnificent of Jerusalem’s gates – they glanced up and saw the large ‘crown’ that the sultan Suleiman the Magnificent built atop the gate in 1538 CE.

But in 1967 the gate sustained serious damage and the crown was destroyed during the fighting in the Six Day War. Now, the Jerusalem Development Authority, in cooperation with the Israel Antiquities Authority and with funding provided by the Prime Minister’s Office, is concluding a comprehensive project of rehabilitating Damascus Gate, during which the gate was cleaned of the effects from the ravages of time and its ornamentation was restored, including the magnificent ‘crown’ at the top of the gate.

There are some more before and after photos here.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 569 other followers