Mumbaqat

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Mumbaqat
Shown within Syria
Alternate name Tall Munbāqa, Ekalte
Location Tabqa, Syria
Coordinates 36°13′01″N 38°07′44″E / 36.217047°N 38.12891°E / 36.217047; 38.12891
Type Tell
Part of Settlement
Site notes
Archaeologists Winfried Orthmann, Alfred Werner Maurer,
Condition ruins
Public access Yes

Tall Munbāqa (also Ekalte (Mumbaqat)) is a 5000-year-old town complex in northern Syria now lying in ruins.

Geographical location

The ruins are located on the east bank of the upper course of the Euphrates, on the steep slope of the former river valley. In the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC, the city was an important city-state in the region. Due to the establishment of the Tabqa Dam at Al-Thawrah, 35 kilometers west of Ar-Raqqah, the city ruins are partially flooded today. The situation in the dam area has changed dramatically in the years since the establishment of the excavations in 1969. In the Euphrates valley, whose image was marked by the green of the cotton and the wide river, a large artificial lake has been formed, which has partially flooded the ruined city. It most affected the west bank, with its flat river terraces that were flooded first. Situated high above the steep drop of the eastern shore, Tall Munbāqa is still preserved.

The exposed during the 1974 excavation East Gate is located on ♁ 36 ° 13 '9 " N , 38 ° 7 '54 " O36.219159 38.131635, the south gate on ♁ 36 ° 13 '1 " N , 38 ° 7 '44 " O36.217047 38.12891 . The exposed during the 1974 excavation East Gate is located on ♁ 36 ° 13 '9 " N , 38 ° 7 '54 " O36.219159 38.131635, the south gate on ♁ 36 ° 13 '1 " N , 38 ° 7 '44 " O36.217047 38.12891 .

City development

The Euphrates was one of the highways, the Asia with the Mediterranean combined. Of course one of the main trade routes between the Sumerian and later Babylonian centers of power and the Syrian coastal cities and the immediate access to the main navigable river can be considered as one of the basic motives for founding this city. Trade was driving to urban planning. Town authorities and city destruction characterize the Urbanisationsfieber of the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC in northern Syria, where the river from the Armenian highlands turns to the south-east, 200 km from the nearby Mediterranean were major trading centers. From there, the road passes over the northern Syrian plateau of Aleppo. Starting from the 4th millennium BC, Sumerian trading sites are detectable here. In the 3rd millennium, the height of the cultural and economic development, according to the model developed chiefdom Sumerian cities. The Old Syrian kingdom reached the 2nd millennium BC to the Euphrates. The Mitannistaat the Hurrians dominated a few centuries out the northeast of the modern-day Syria to the Euphrates. In the 14th century BC ruled the Hittites northern Syria and the Euphrates was the boundary area between the Assyrian and Hittite Empire. Around 1200 BC settled the Syrians on the Euphrates. This eventful history may be seen from the numerous ruins of hills along the 90 km long reservoir. One of the largest excavated ruins of this ancient cultural landscape Tall Munbāqa.

Exploration of Tall Munbāqa

Gertrude Bell was wrong in the localization of Bersiba, but recognized the importance of the mound for the study of the oriental city. The 400 m x 500 m large, rectangular, once strongly fortified town ruins in 1964 documented and researched on the occasion of the inspection of the proposed reservoir area. 1968 requested the German Oriental Society, the excavation permit for the mound. 1969-1970 of Ernst Heinrich of the Berlin Institute of Technology was performed measuring the overground visible and in 1971 started building remains were uncovered. The excavation was in 1973 and 1974 by In 1907, the English explorer discovered Gertrude Bell, the ruins, drew up a plan and described the ramparts: "Munbayah where my tents were pitched - the Arabic name means only a high-altitude course - was probably the Bersiba in Ptolemy's list of city names. It consists of a double ramparts, situated on the river bank." Gertrude Bell was wrong in the localization of Bersiba, but recognized the importance of the mound for the study of the oriental city. The 400 m x 500 m large, rectangular, once strongly fortified town ruins in 1964 documented and researched on the occasion of the inspection of the proposed reservoir area. 1968 requested the Deutsche Orient Gesellschaft Berlin, the excavation permit for the mound. 1969-1970 of E. Heinrich (University of Berlin) was performed measuring the overground visible and in 1971 started building remains were uncovered. The excavation was in 1973 and 1974 by Winfried Orthmann and 1977 by Alfred Werner Maurer of the University of Saarbrücken and from 1979 onwards led by Dittmar Machule of the Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg continued. During the excavations in 1973, 1974 and 1977 up to 16 scientists and up to 90 local workers were involved in the excavations. The ancient name of the Late Bronze Age city is believed due to 15 discovered clay tablets with the reference to that city name with "Ekalte". Tall Munbāqa is possibly the Middle Bronze Age in the Aplaḫanda of Carchemish and Shamshi-Adad I mentioned Yakaltum equate.{{[1]}}

Literature

  • Winfried Orthmann: Der Alte Orient. Propyläen Kunstgeschichte, Bd. 14 (1974), 475;
  • W. Orthmann, Hartmut Kühne: Mumbaqat 1973, Vorläufiger Bericht über die von der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft mit Mitteln der Stiftung Volkswagenwerk unternommenen Ausgrabungen, In: MDOG (1974) 53–97;
  • W. Orthmann: Mumbaqat 1974. Vorläufiger Bericht über die von der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft mit Mitteln der Stiftung Volkswagenwerk unternommenen Ausgrabungen. MDOG 108(1976) 25–44;
  • W. Mayer: Tall Munbaqa - Ekalte II. Die Texte. DOG 102, Saarbrücken 2001;
  • Boese, W. Orthmann: Mumbaqat. Eine 5000 Jahre alte Stadt am Euphrat. Saarbrücken 1976;
  • Alfred Werner Maurer: Ausgrabungen 1977 in Mumbaqat am Syrischen Euphrat. Vortrag am 17. März 1978 in Berlin Schloss Charlottenburg
  • P. Werner: Tall Munbaqa - Bronzezeit in Syrien. Katalog zur Wanderausstellung, Neumünster 1998; ISBN 3-529-02008-7
  • E. Kretz: Ein Töpferofen mit Lochtenne und Kuppel in Mumbaqat. In: Festschrift für Martin Graßnick, ed. Fachbereich Architektur / Raum- und Umweltplanung / Bauingenieurwesen der Universität Kaiserslautern, 1987, 267–270;
  • Alfred Werner Maurer: Mumbaqat 1977, Bericht über die von der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft mit Mitteln der Universität Saarbrücken unternommene Ausgrabung. Philologus Verlag, Basel 2007.

References

  1. W. Yuhong, N.A.B.U. 2/1991, D. Charpin, N.A.B.U. 1 /1993, 26

External links

See also

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