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The Renewed Excavations – 2005
The 2005 exploratory season at Tel Kabri was directed
by Assaf Yasur-Landau of the Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology,
Tel Aviv University, and Eric H. Cline of The George Washington University,
Washington, D.C. A team of archaeologists and students excavated a total
of 12 squares in three separate areas, working from July 3-28, 2005.
Area Supervisors were Aaron Burke of UCLA, Celia Bergoffen of the Fashion
Institute of Technology (NY), Michal Bieniada of Pultusk High School
of Humanities (Poland), and Nurith Goshen of Tel Aviv University. Team
members included approximately 40 archaeologists and students from the
USA, Israel, Poland, the UK, France, Australia, and Croatia.
The
2005 preliminary and exploratory season at Tel Kabri met with success
beyond the expectations of the excavation directors, enabling the team
to establish that enough remains of the palace are still extant to merit
a multi-year renewal of the excavations at the site. The most important
accomplishments during the season included the following:
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The
Middle Bronze (MB) IIB palace was found to be considerably larger
than originally estimated by the previous excavators (3000-4000 sq.
m. rather than 2000 sq. m.), extending further to the north, east
and west. It may extend further to the south as well, but no excavations
in that direction were carried out this season.
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Destruction
deposits, including restorable local pottery, burnt organic material,
and imported Cypriot pottery, were discovered which may provide further
chronological data for the date of the violent destruction of the
palace in the final phase of its existence.
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New evidence was found for an earlier MB IIA public structure or palace
lying immediately below the MB IIB palace. This is one of the very
few examples of palatial remains from this period in Israel and is
of great potential interest.
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Interesting finds included the first gold object ever discovered at
the site as well as a possible libation installation with numerous
intact and restorable vessels.
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Conservation and protective measures were begun in an effort to prevent
further damage to the remains uncovered more than a decade ago by
the previous excavators.
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Fig.
1a. Middle Bronze Age Palace in Area D-West: Hall 611 (foreground)
and Room 740 (left background) |
Introduction
Tel Kabri (Fig. 1a-b)
provides a unique opportunity to retrieve critical data concerning both
the role of Bronze Age Minoan artisans and Iron Age Greek mercenaries
in the political and cultural systems of the Levant. Rescue excavations
conducted between 1986-1993, led by the late Prof. Aharon Kempinski and
Prof. Wolf-Dietrich Niemeier, partially uncovered the remains of both
a Middle Bronze Age palace with Minoan-style fresco paintings and an Iron
Age fortress in which Greek mercenaries were stationed (see the final
publication in Kempinski 2002).
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Fig.
1b. Extent of the MB IIB palace, with excavation areas marked. |
Initial Objectives
Four general objectives were defined at the outset of
the season:
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To further establish the extent of the Middle Bronze Age palace (Fig.
1a, b) and locate its residential and service units.
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To locate additional areas within the palace with intact plaster floors
and plastered walls that may hint at the origin of the Minoan-style
frescoes found by previous excavators, including miniature scenes.
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To
c ollect data for dating the frescoes and the destruction of the palace.
These data (radiocarbon samples and date-bearing artifacts) have the
potential to assist in establishing a clear correlation between the
Aegean and the Levant during the critical period of transition between
the Middle and Late Bronze Ages.
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To prevent further damage to the site and initiate long-term conservation
of the remains of the palace, particularly its frescoes.
Excavation Areas and Results of Excavation
Area D-South (Fig. 2) is located a few meters to the north
of the earlier Area F excavated by A. Kempinski and W.-D. Niemeier (identified
as the southern part of area D in the final publication of the 1986-1993
excavations). The area was defined by Kempinski and Niemeier as possibly
being cultic in nature. Along the southern balk in this area the team
uncovered a great collapse of mudbrick covering a corner of a large wall
(Wall 16008). This corner may be a continuation of wall 1510 and the entrance
to unit 1550 which was excavated by Kempinski and Niemeier (Oren 2002:
61, 66-67). If correct, the fact that this wall ends with a corner (the
entrance to a room?) disqualifies it from being the northeastern closing
wall of the palace, as previously suggested by Kempinski and Niemeier
(Oren 2002: 69 fig. 4.73), and suggests instead that the palace complex
continues further to the northeast. The collapse both above and by this
wall included burnt mudbricks -- possible evidence for the fiery end of
the palace -- as well as some fragments of burnt organic material. There
is also some evidence for metalworking in the area, including a fragment
of a crucible, as well as some slag, small pieces of bronze sheet, and
a small gold lunette. Pottery recovered from this area consisted primarily
of fragmentary storage jars.
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| Figs. 2a-b Area D-South: General
view and massive wall 17006. |
To
the east of this collapse (and running into the eastern balk in this
area), an open space was bordered by the corner of a massively-built
stone structure (Wall 17006), constructed of field boulders with a possible
mudbrick superstructure (Fig. 2b). Its construction technique differs
from the walls of the palace, yet it resembles a segment of a 4.5 m.
thick wall excavated by the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) ca. 20
m. to its north during a salvage operation several years ago (Shalem
2001). In our opinion, both structures may belong to the same feature
-- either a wall-and-tower complex guarding the entrance to the palace,
or as suggested by E. Oren (pers. com.), parts of a prominent monumental
building located adjacent to the entrance to the palace. Further excavation
will reveal more of this massive stone structure and clarify its nature.
Area D-North is located to the north of the earlier Area D excavated
by Kempinski and Niemeier, in an area that they thought contained the
northern closing wall of the palace and in which a geophysical survey
had suggested the presence of walls following the same orientation as
that of the MB IIB palace walls. Excavating between avocado trees in
this area, we uncovered conclusive evidence that the palace continues
further to the northeast than the previous excavators had suspected.
Thick plastered floors were discovered in both Squares 41 and 51, the
latter (51008) in a very good state of preservation (Fig. 3a ). Square
42 yielded the remains of a possible massive wall (Wall 42009) with
a rubble core, damaged when it was robbed in antiquity. A single finely-cut
stone orthostat, on which can be seen the remains of a white plaster
coating, was found in situ next to this stone structure. Twelve olive
pits found here may provide C14 dates for the destruction of the palace
in its final phase. The surfaces of both Squares 41 and 51 yielded pottery
located immediately below (and sealed by) mudbrick destruction deposits.
This pottery consisted mainly of storage jars, some of which are possibly
restorable, but also included imported (and diagnostic) Cypriot ware
(Fig. 4), both handmade and wheelmade.
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| Figs. 3a-c. Area D-North:
Plaster floor in sq. 51, earlier wall in
sq. 41, and deposit of pottery in sq, 42. |
The
excavation in this area provided further support for Kempinski and Niemeier’s
notion of a very large MB IIA public structure or palace preceding the
palace of the MB IIB period (Oren 2002: 68). Excavation below the floors
of the MB IIB palace in Squares 41 and 42 uncovered a well-laid stone
wall (Wall 41013; Fig. 3b) accompanied by a thick plaster floor (41012).
Both the building technique of the wall and its elevation are similar
to walls surrounding Units 1569, 1586, and 1705 belonging to Stratum
4 of the previous excavations, which dates to the MB IIA period (Oren
2002: 55-56). In addition, a large deposit of restorable pottery was
discovered within a large storage jar with a perforated base (possibly
a libation installation) in Square 42, including a small holemouth pithos,
a dipper juglet, and the lower part of a Tell el-Yahudiya juglet (Fig.
3c). It is unclear whether this deposit should be dated to the MB IIA
or MB IIB period.
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| Figs. 4a-b. Area D-North: A
spouted Krater and a Cypriot vessel. |
Area
D-West is located at the eastern edge of the Palace, just to the northwest
of the large Ceremonial Hall 611 exposed during Kempinski and Niemeier’s
earlier excavations. The main objective of our excavation in this area
was to fully uncover Room 740, hypothesized to be a throne room by Kempinski
and Niemeier, who left the excavation of the room uncompleted. We also
hoped to see whether we could locate the northwestern closing wall of
the palace here. Room 740, with direct access from the ceremonial hall
611 and therefore one of the most important rooms so far uncovered within
the palace, was found to have massive intact walls and a thick plaster
floor (Fig. 5b). Our excavations revealed the southwestern wall of Room
740 (Wall 80004) in Square 81, complete with intact mudbricks placed
on a stone socle and still covered with an in situ thin layer of wall
plaster. This was left for immediate conservation and thus the face
of the wall plaster has not yet been examined for possible paint or
other decorative features. This wall is extraordinarily wide -- at least
4 m. -- and can be seen running through Square 80 to the northwest as
well, yet it may well be an interior wall of the palace, serving as
an entrance to a very large unit, just as the monumental wall 677 found
nearby by Kempinski and Niemeier forms an inner wall around Ceremonial
Hall 611. The northwest wall of Room 740 was also uncovered during our
excavations (Wall 673=91012) and was found to be another wide wall,
measuring 3.5 m across (Fig. 5a). A few stones of this same wall appear
as wall 673 in the preliminary report for 1992-1993. However, even this
wall is unlikely to be the northwestern closing wall of the palace,
as thick mudbrick debris found to the north may hint at an additional
large room waiting to be excavated.
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| Figs. 5a-b. Room 740 and
surrounding walls in Area D-West. |
Conservation of Remains Uncovered by the Previous Excavation
The remains uncovered by the previous excavations have
suffered tremendously over the past decade. For instance, the geotextile
which has covered the floor of Ceremonial Hall 611 (with its famous Minoan
fresco painting) for the last 13 years has become adhered to the plaster
surface in several places. In order to prevent further damage to these
uniquely-important remains, we removed the dense vegetation growing over
the northern and western parts of the area excavated by Kempinski and
Niemeier, including many bushes that had planted their roots firmly into
the plaster floors (Fig. 6a). The area was then re-fenced. Photographs
were taken in order to document the damage to the walls and floors during
the period of more than ten years between the end of the previous excavation
and today, as well as to aid in devising a conservation plan for the future.
The site was visited by an IAA conservation team who advised us regarding
further immediate measures needed for the prevention of additional damage.
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| Figs. 6a-b. Dense vegetation
covering the MB II B Palace (left) and placement of clean sand in
Room 607(right). |
Before
ending the season, we also provided first aid to the better-preserved
plaster floors uncovered during the previous excavations, which had
not been previously protected. Therefore, the floors of Rooms 740 and
607 were first covered with clean sand (to prevent adhesion), then with
a coat of isolating geotextile, and finally with a layer of earth (Fig.
6b). These measures will protect the floors throughout the next winter,
after which time additional measures will be needed. In addition, we
have arranged for the entire excavated area to be sprayed for weeds
throughout the upcoming year.
Who's Who at
Kabri 2005
Directors:
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Assaf Yasur-Landau, The Sonia
and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University (Tel
Aviv). |
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Eric H. Cline, The George
Washington University (Washington, D.C.) |
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Area Supervisors:
Aaron Burke, UCLA (CA)
| Celia Bergoffen, The Fashion Institute
of Technology (NY) |
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Michal Bieniada, Pultusk High School
of Humanities (Poland) (with team
member Miri Cohen)
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Nurith Goshen, Tel Aviv University (Tel
Aviv)
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| Gilad Jaffe, Tel Aviv University (Tel Aviv)
Kabri 2005 excavating team administrator
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| Inbal Samet, Tel Aviv University (Tel Aviv),
participated in the dig, and is in large part responsible for the
final text of this website |
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