Tel Kabri

This article is about the archaeological site of Tel Kabri. For the associated kibbutz, see Kabri, Israel. For the former near-by Palestinian village, see al-Kabri. For other uses, see Kabri.
Tel Kabri
תל כברי

Aerial photo of the palace at Tel Kabri. The 2013 excavation team is lying on top of the painted plaster floor, spelling out Kabri.
Alternate name Rehov?[1]
Location Kibbutz Kabri
Region Upper Galilee
Coordinates 33°0′30.15″N 35°8′20.7″E / 33.0083750°N 35.139083°ECoordinates: 33°0′30.15″N 35°8′20.7″E / 33.0083750°N 35.139083°E
Type Settlement
Area 80 ha (200 acres)
History
Material Mudbrick, stone, plaster, mortar[2]
Periods Pottery Neolithic – Byzantine[3]
Cultures Yarmoukian, Wadi Raba, proto-Canaanite, Canaanite, Phoenician, Hellenistic,[4] Jewish[5]
Site notes
Excavation dates 1957–1958, 1969, 1975–1976, 1986–1993, 1999, 2004, 2005–ongoing
Archaeologists Eric H. Cline, Assaf Yasur-Landau, Andrew Koh, Nurith Goshen, Inbal Samet, Alexandra Ratzlaff, Wolf-Dietrich Niemeier, Aharon Kempinski, Moshe Prausnitz
Ownership Private
Management Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA)
Public access No
Website digkabri2015.wordpress.com

Tel Kabri (Hebrew: תֵל כַבְרִי; Arabic: تَلْ ألْقَهوَة, Tell al-Qahweh, "the mound of coffee"[6]) is an archaeological site, home to one of the largest Middle Bronze (MB) Age (2,100–1,550 BC) Canaanite palaces in ancient Israel,[7] and the largest such palace excavated as of 2014.[8] Kabri is named for the abundance of its perennial springs—as described in the Etymology section below—the presence of which has led to the site's occupation and use as a water source from the Pottery Neolithic (PN) period (6,400–4,500 BC) to the present day.[9] Located in the Western Upper Galilee, the site was at the height of its power in the MB, controlling much of the surrounding region. Kabri declined as a local power at the end of the MB, but the site continued to be occupied at times, on a much reduced level, up until the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.

Since 1957, Tel Kabri has been excavated by the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), formerly the Israel Department of Antiquities and Museums (IDAM), as well as Israeli and American universities.[10] Among the discoveries at the site by the two full-scale archaeological expeditions,[nb 1] two have attracted particular attention from the archaeological community. The first finding to come to international attention was the discovery of Minoan-style frescoes in the palace at Kabri.[11] As of 2015, these are the only Minoan-style frescoes ever discovered in Israel.[12] Second, in 2013, the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project uncovered the oldest and largest known palatial wine cellar in the Ancient Near East in Kabri's palace.[13]

Etymology

As of 2015, the original Canaanite name of Tel Kabri is unknown.[nb 2] Aharon Kempinski hypothesised that Kabri might have been the same city as Rehov, referred to in the Execration Texts, an Ancient Egyptian list of enemy polities.[15] Amihai Mazar once believed that Tel Kabri—or the site of Tel Rehov—might be the Rehov from the Execration Texts, or Tel Kabri might be a different Rehov mentioned in topographic lists by Pharaoh Thutmose III.[16] No definitive evidence has been found to support any of these hypotheses. By the Iron Age, 1200-500BC (IA), the site is known to have been called Rehov, and this continued into the Phoenician period—a period of Phoenician dominance over the area, which was concurrent with the Iron Age.[17]

Early in the Roman Period (64 BC–500s AD), the town of Kabrita had been established to the east of the tel.[17] Kabrita became the Arab village of el-Kabira, which by the late 1200s AD was called al-Kabrah by the Arabs and Le Quiebre by the Crusaders who controlled the area at the time. By 1880, both the village and the ruins on the tel had come to be associated and bear the same names.[18] Al-Kabrah eventually became al-Kabri,[19]and this name lasted until the 1948 Arab-Israeli War when the village was depopulated.[20] Both the post-war kibbutz, Kabri, on whose grounds the archaeological site is located, and the tel itself, are named for al-Kabri.[20] The name of Kabrita, and the later names, were derived from the triconsonantal Semitic root, כבר, meaning 'great or powerful', in reference to the plentiful water from Kabri's springs.[15]

Geography

Tel Kabri is at the eastern end of the Western Galilee coastal plain, located on the grounds of Kibbutz Kabri. It is less than 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from the sea, and the Ga'aton River is nearby to the south, with the closest major city being Nahariyya to the west. The tel is home to four springs, Ein Shefa, Ein Giah, Ein Tzuf, and Ein ha-Shayara.[9] It is these springs that have brought people to Kabri since the Neolithic.[9]

The tel is also close to many natural resources—such as trees on the hills to the east and quarriable stone near the coast—that kept the various groups that lived there well-supplied. As with all tels, Kabri's height is partly a result of human activity, which over the centuries has deposited the material remains of several occupations in layers to create the tel.[21] During Kempinski's excavations, it was found that the original surface in the Neolithic would have been up to 5.5 metres (18 ft) lower than the present surface.[22]

History

The tel and its surrounding area have been inhabited since the Pottery Neolithic (PN).[nb 3] Kabri was at the height of its power in the MB, when the polity there controlled a significant portion of the Upper Galilee. After the MB, Tel Kabri was occupied by later peoples—though on a much reduced scale—up to the founding of the State of Israel, when the kibbutz of Kabri was created.[23]

Pre-Palatial

The area of Kabri was first settled during the PN by members of the Yarmoukian culture.[4] In the early Chalcolithic period (4500–3500 BC), Kabri was a major centre of the Wadi Raba culture. In the Early Bronze (EB) Age (3500-2100 BC), there was a town on the side of the tel that was destroyed as part of the region-wide systems collapse that characterised the EB collapse.[nb 4] In the early and middle MB I, Tel Kabri—along with Megiddo, Aphek, and Akko—was one of the earliest cities in the Levant to rebuild its fortifications following the EB collapse.[24] The new city was confined to the northern part of the earlier EB tel.[25]

Palatial

Prior to the ongoing excavations at Kabri that began in 2005,[nb 5] archaeologists thought that there was only one palace at the site,[nb 6] and that it was built in the period between the late MB I (2200–1950 BC) and MB IIA (1950–1700 BC). It was also thought that the MB I period had been a transition phase. However, the palace found by Kempinski has been dated to the MB IIB (1700–1550 BC), and in 2010, a second, earlier, palace—an MB IIA palace[nb 7]—was identified beneath the MB IIB palace.[nb 8] The remains of the earlier MB IIA palace appear to show that it was expanded to create the later MB IIB palace. The discovery of the earlier palace pushes the dates for palatial occupation of the site to the MB IIA, 150 years earlier than originally believed. The earlier MB IIA palace may have been "the most impressive structure in the Upper Galilee" at the time, and was possibly the oldest palace in Canaan.[26]

Earlier still, at the transition between the MB I and MB II, a large-scale restructuring programme was undertaken in a possible effort to transform Kabri into an idealised Syrian-style city—a powerful city-state centred around a magnificent and well-fortified palace.[25] The area was fortified, and an additional 25 hectares (250,000 m2) were enclosed within a large glacis, a type of earthwork fortification that was 50 metres (160 ft) wide with a stone core and that encircled the tel as it appears today. The glacis was topped by mudbrick and stone.[27] There was an MB I palace and this was expanded into the MB II palaces.[26] This restructuring programme resulted in some parts of the tel being flattened out and a large portion of the population having to find new homes in the city, as a result of part of the MB IIA palace—along with certain parts of the rampart—being built in an area previously occupied by private houses.[28] Kabri's ancillary sites (such as Achziv and Avdon) were also built up, and migration from the hinterland to Kabri—and its secondary sites—increased dramatically as a result of these projects.[29] Kabri became the capital of a major polity, with the newly expanded MB II palace at its centre.[30]

At the peak of its power, Kabri may have controlled a domain that stretched from Mount Carmel in the south to the Sulam range in the north, with as many as 31 vassal sites and 30,000 subjects.[31] Kempinski hypothesised that Kabri might be the Bronze Age settlement of Rehov, a polity mentioned in the Execration Texts and the biblical Book of Joshua.[23] During this period, Kabri maintained significant contacts with neighbouring regions in the form of trade and exchange of ideas.[32]

Counting the MB I, MB IIA, and MB IIB stages, the palace was continuously occupied for three centuries. This is longer than any other palace in ancient Israel.[26]

Post-Palatial

For more details on the modern history of the village of al-Kabri and the kibbutz of Kabri, see Kabri, Israel § Modern history.
Ottoman period French survey map from 1799 showing the Upper Galilee. Kabri's springs are shown as being exploited by Akko.

By 1500 BC, the site was abandoned for reasons unknown as of the 2015.[13] Some time after the abandonment, during the Late Bronze (LB) Age (1550–1200 BC), a small village occupied the tel.[17] In the Iron Age, the site was reoccupied by Greek mercenaries under hire from the Phoenician city-state of Tyre. The mercenaries were based in a citadel there.[33] Close to the citadel, in the Iron Age and Phoenician periods, the later Phoenician city of Rehov was sited at Kabri. The Phoenician town was fortified by a casemate wall. This town was destroyed by the armies of the Neo-Babylonian king, Nebuchadnezzar II around 585 BC, and his rule was extended over Phoenicia.[34] After this destruction, the town was rebuilt and this new town grew during the Persian period (538–332 BC). Remains from this time have been found near the tel's spring of Ein Shefa.[17] Habitation at the tel itself ends at this point. Early in the Hellenistic period (332–64 BC), the ruins of the Iron Age citadel were used for burials, but the tel was not resettled until the Ottoman period (1517-1917 AD).[35]

Some time during the Early Roman period, a Jewish settlement is mentioned, named Kabrita,[5] located east of the tel in the area that was occupied by the later Arab village, eventually named al-Kabri.[23] Kabri, appearing under the name of al-Kabrah, is mentioned in the last hudna, or peace treaty, between the Kingdom of Jerusalem[nb 9] and the Mamluks.[nb 10] In the treaty, the village and its surrounding fields, are shown as belonging to the ruler of Akko.[19]

In addition to al-Kabri which is located east of the site, during the Ottoman Period, two additional Arab villages were founded on the actual site—en-Nahr and et-Tell—in the southern and western portions of the tel, respectively.[23] All three villages were close to the major springs, but during most of their existence, they were sparsely populated—in the low hundreds. Al-Kabri appears as Kabli and En-Nahr appears as el-Qahweh in the first topographic map of the region made in 1799 by Napoleon's cartographer, Pierre Jacotin. This same map does not show Et-Tell, and only shows a mill in that location.[36] Et-Tell does appear in the later Palestine Exploration Fund map of 1880,[36] and is talked about by Victor Guérin in his travelogue of the area, published that same year, which described all three villages.[37] Karmon hypothesised that the new village of et-Tell might have been founded by villagers from el-Qahweh as a home for mill workers.[38] The three villages existed up to the 1948 Arab-Israeli War when they were depopulated.[39]

Much of Kabri's recorded history also deals with its springs and, starting in the Hellenistic period, the springs' relationship to the city of Akko.[40] The springs of Kabri have fed Akko for centuries, and aqueducts have been built from Kabri to Akko by local rulers.[41] In the Hellenistic period, an aqueduct was constructed at Kabri,[42] and another was built during the governorship of Jezzar Pasha, the Ottoman ruler of Akko who also ruled the Eyalet of Sidon (1775-1804).[nb 11] Later, a new aqueduct was built by Jezzar's successor, Sulaymán Páshá[nb 12] in the Ottoman Period, and this aqueduct functioned up until the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.[43] Portions of the structure still stand today.[44]

Following the War, the tel was incorporated into the grounds of Kibbutz Kabri and was made into agricultural land. Soon after, the ancient remains of the site were rediscovered and on-and-off archaeological work began which continues to the present day alongside the agricultural work of the kibbutz.

Archaeology

Tel Kabri has been a subject of archaeological study since 1957, following the discovery of Late Neolithic vessels at the site in 1956 by members of the kibbutz.[45] After 1961, most of the focus on the site shifted to Bronze Age material remains. Surveys and excavations have taken place at the site to explore its past.[46]

Archaeological context

Tel Kabri is a multi-period site, meaning that it has layers, or "strata", of occupation dating from different time periods. The tel itself operates as an agricultural area of Kibbutz Kabri, and certain layers have been subject to damage as a result of agriculture activity.[47]

Condition of the site

The tel is located on the grounds of the kibbutz, and contains the remains of the Canaanite city from the MB period and the partially excavated later Iron Age citadel. Tel Kabri is the only Canaanite city that can be excavated in its entirety because no other city with monumental architecture was built on the site after the MB city.[12] In 2013, it was estimated that the palace would have occupied 6,100 m2 (1.5 acres),[48] and in 2006, it was estimated that the ancient city as a whole would have occupied 4 ha (10 acres).[49]

As a result of farming and erosion, Stratum 1 of the tel, the uppermost layer, has been heavily damaged.[nb 13] Prior to agricultural activities by the kibbutzniks in 1976, there still existed large towers on the tel, which may have been gates.[50] The entire site is cut across by a British Mandate period (1920–1948 AD) road that originally led from the coastal city of Nahariyya to the moshav of Me'ona.[51] Most of the tel was also covered over with a metre of sterile top-soil (containing no archaeological remains) laid down for the purpose of farming by the kibbutz between Kempinski's excavations ending in 1993 and the beginning of the ongoing expedition in 2005. According to Tel Kabri Archaeological Project co-Director Assaf Yasur-Landau: "The city's preservation enables us to get a complete picture of political and social life in the Canaanite period. We can reveal whether or not it had a central government, whether taxes were levied, what sort of agriculture there was and how politics were conducted at the time."[12]

Stratigraphy

For more details on stratigraphy and its uses in archaeology, see Stratigraphy (archaeology).

Kempinski identified twelve stratigraphic layers at Tel Kabri. Stratigraphy is the layering of soil with the more recent soil layers higher up and the older soil layers further down. Archaeologists and geologists use stratigraphy to date artefacts found in the soil relative to each other.[nb 14] The artefacts—in particular, sherds of pottery—can, in turn, be used to date the layer of soil and its contents to a specific date range.[nb 15] The 1986-1993 Tel Kabri Expedition did not find a continuous stratigraphic sequence in any one excavation trench, and so Kempinski based the identification of the layers at Tel Kabri on finds in different areas.[52] He arranged the layers as follows:[53]

Stratum Period Areas studied
1 Hellenistic – Ottoman E
2 LB – Iron Age II E, D
3 MB IIB B, C, D
4 MB IIA B, C, D
5 MB IIA B, C
6 EB III Sherds found in rampart
7 EB II B
8 EB II B
9 EB IB B
10 EB IA B
11 EB IA B
12 Late Neolithic/Chalcolithic B

Areas

Tel Kabri is divided up into areas (some of which are shown in the table above) for practical purposes of organisation.[nb 16] The first areas—A, B, and C—were designated during the 1975–1976 excavations by Kempinski and Prausnitz.[54] Later Areas D, E, F, and T were opened by the 1986–1993 Tel Kabri Expedition, and Area D was subdivided by the ongoing Tel Kabri Archaeological Project starting in 2005.The following areas have been investigated as of the 2013 season.[55]

Archaeological work

A view to the southeast of the 40 or so wine storage vessels in-situ in the D-West wine cellar in 2013. The expedition has numbered the vessels in the photo.

Archaeological work has taken place at Tel Kabri since 1956. The work at Tel Kabri has consisted of a survey, five minor excavations, and two major excavations,[nb 17] although prior to 1986, much of the activity was salvage excavations and surveys. As of 2015, Tel Kabri is being excavated by an international consortium, the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project.[55] Among the finds that have been discovered at Tel Kabri, are Minoan-style wall frescoes—of which there are four known at Kabri—and the oldest and largest known palatial wine cellar in the Ancient Near East.[7]

Early work

In the years before the first large-scale excavations by Aharon Kempinski (1986-1993), surveys and smaller excavations were conducted to rescue artefacts and get an idea of the nature of Tel Kabri. This began when the archaeological remains of the tel were first discovered in the 1950s after kibbutzniks started coming across Neolithic artefacts near the local spring of Ein Giah. In 1956, on behalf of IDAM, the forerunner of today's Israel Antiquities Authority, David Alon and Daniel Rosolio conducted a survey in the area where the Neolithic artefacts had first been found earlier in the same year. They came across fortifications from the MB, and this survey led to salvage excavations in the following two years of what would later become Area A. In 1961, public works by the national water company revealed Bronze Age architectural remains in the form of a palace floor. In 1969, another rescue excavation was launched to investigate MB IIA tombs revealed as a result of agricultural activity by the kibbutz. [23] From 1975 to 1976, a salvage excavation was conducted to examine areas exposed in 1957, 1958, 1961, and 1969 [54]

From 1957 to 1958, The first rescue excavations were carried out by Moshe Prausnitz working with the IDAM,[70] who was joined by Robert Stigler of Brandeis University.[71] Prausnitz focused on Area A of the site where the surveyors, Alon and Rosoliyo, had first investigated the Neolithic implements found by the kibbutzniks in 1956. His expedition found Neolithic 'cist' tombs as well as round and rectangular dwellings from the lower part of the city.[57]

In 1961, after Prausnitz's excavation, a large trench was cut into the tel by the national water company, Mekorot, so as to incorporate the local springs into the national water system. This inadvertently led to the start of exploration into the EB and MB archaeological remains at Kabri.[23] The stratigraphy from the Mekorot trench was photographed and revealed the existence of the Bronze Age settlements.[72] It also revealed the plaster floors – the first evidence of what would later be identified as the MB II palaces.[52] The trench also cut into—and revealed the existence of—the MB II rampart.[60]

In 1969, as a result of the kibbutz removing an orchard from the tel, MB II tombs containing grave goods were found in what had been the lower city. Their findspot[nb 18] was excavated by Y. Ben-Yosef for the IDAM that same year.[60]

From 1975 to 1976, salvage excavations were carried out by Prausnitz representing the IDAM, Kempinski of Tel Aviv University (TAU), and Ruth Amiran of the Israel Museum, to explore the area where the MB II tombs had been found, the lower city, the earthen rampart, and the Neolithic layers of the site.[23] Among their finds was a 2.10 metres (6.9 ft) tall stela that had a polished face, but no inscription.[60] Following this excavation, Kempinski, focused his work on Tel Kabri[73] and applied for permits from the IDAM and permission from Kibbutz Kabri to conduct large-scale excavation of the site.[74]

The Tel Kabri Expedition: 1986–1993

In 1986, large-scale excavations began at Tel Kabri, initially under the direction of Kempinski for TAU, and then, from 1989 onwards, Kempinski and Wolf-Dietrich Niemeier for Heidelberg University,[23] until Kempinski died in July 1994, and the expedition was discontinued.[75] Between 1986 and 1988, the first remains of the MB palaces were discovered near the spring of Ein Shefa, along with a contemporaneous residential area. The portion of the palace initially excavated included a 10 by 10 metres (33 by 33 ft) hall, with a Minoan-style decorated plaster floor.[17] The style of the floor is closest to what is referred to as the 'Cretan-Theran Late Minoan IA' tradition of wall painting.[76] They also found more than 2,000 Aegean-style painted plaster fragments.[77] It was during the course of Kempinski's excavations that an Iron Age Phoenician citadel was also discovered. The site's excavators believed this fortification was occupied by Greek mercenaries, based on the pottery found there.[78]

An MB II duck-billed axe recovered during the 1988 excavations.

In the first year of excavation by the Kempinski expedition, work was carried out in Area C, [nb 19] and continued each year through the 1991 season. In 1986, Areas D and E were opened, and excavated,[79] for the first time.[80] Area D was, and is, home to the MB palace, which became the focus of Kempinski's excavations for the duration of his expedition, which was the first to excavate the palace intentionally (after the accidental excavation by the Mekorot water company in 1961).[81] Area D was excavated each year by Kempinski's team. In 1987, the Kempinski expedition discovered the entranceway to what would be designated as Hall 611 in the palace, the ceremonial hall with the painted plaster floor.[82] Area E was excavated every year except 1987, 1988, and 1991, and in the first year, 1986, yielded Iron Age Greek pottery.[83] In 1987, new work was carried out in Prausnitz's Area B and continued each year through 1992.[79] During the 1988 excavation, a large family tomb was discovered in Area C,[84] and MB II bronze artefacts, such as a "duck-billed axe" from Area B[85] (see picture to the right), were also recovered from tombs in both Areas B and C.[86]

At the start of the 1989 season, German Archaeologist, Wolf-Dietrich Niemeier, joined Kempinski's Tel Kabri Expedition as his co-director. Along with the excavations in Areas B, C, D, and E, additional work was carried out in the new Area F,[nb 20] which continued each year excluding the 1991 season, and in Area T,[87] which was excavated in 1990. Area T was an area at the northern part of the tel opened to explore what looked like a surviving tower but the exploration of which resulted in finding well-preserved fortifications. In 1990, finds included a Phoenician seal impression which had both the name of the official who owned it and the year according to the Tyrian calendar.[88] Also in 1990, the western portion of Hall 611 was completely revealed in Area D, and preliminary preservation efforts were completed on the hall's painted plaster floor.[89] Work by the Kempinski expedition continued up though 1993. In Area E, work was done to investigate occupation of the site after the Iron Age—prior focus having been on the Bronze Age aspects of the site.

At the end of the 1993 season, the painted plaster floor in Hall 611 was covered over with geotextile, as the team expected to return the following summer in 1994. However, Kempinski's excavations never resumed past 1993, as Kempinski died in June the following year.[75] In accordance with his wishes, Kempinski was buried at Tel Kabri.[90]

1999 and 2004 salvage projects

Between the major excavations by Kempinski and the ongoing Tel Kabri Archaeological Project, two separate minor excavations were conducted by Dina Shalem and Howard Smithline. In 1999, Shalem headed up a salvage excavation ahead of a construction project on the Mandate period road running through the tel. Her team worked in Area D and came across EB architecture, as well as some Chalcolithic sherds and a possible surface from that period.[91] In 2004, the Israeli telecommunications company, Cellcom, was laying down new telephone cable near Area E, and Smithline was asked to conduct a salvage excavation before the work started. He used this as an opportunity to investigate further the Iron Age aspects of the site. His team did not make any new discoveries, but did add to the collection of Iron Age I (1,200–1,000 BC) and Iron Age II (1,000–586 BC) pottery from the site.[69]

The Tel Kabri Archaeological Project: 2005–ongoing

In 2003, former Tel Kabri Expedition excavator, Assaf Yasur-Landau,[75] and geophysicist, Yitzhach Makovsky, both then of Tel Aviv University, conducted an investigation to see if Kempinski and Niemeier had underestimated the size of the palace at Tel Kabri. They conducted electric resistivity and magnetometric soundings in an attempt to map out the architectural features under the soil without having to dig trenches. Their findings showed that the palace was indeed larger than previously thought.[92] With these results, Yasur-Landau approached his former Megiddo Expedition colleague, Prof. Eric H. Cline of The George Washington University, the following year and asked whether he would like to co-direct new excavations at Tel Kabri. After devoting a year to getting the necessary funding and permits for excavation, the two were able to begin work on the site in the summer of 2005.[93]

Since 2005, the renewed excavations have been conducted by the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project, an international team co-directed by Yasur-Landau, now of the Leon Recanati Institute for Maritime Studies at the University of Haifa, Cline on behalf of The George Washington University, and Prof. Andrew Koh of Brandeis University, which officially joined the consortium in 2013.[94] The majority of these excavation seasons have taken place at the MB palaces in Area D of the tel,[95] and, since 2009, have been semi-annual.[96]

Exploration: 2005–2008

The first four seasons at Tel Kabri were dedicated to investigating the site's potential for future large-scale excavation. As a result, the 2005 season was exploratory in nature, featuring assessment of the site and minor excavations to determine the viability of conducting future work at the site.[97]During the course of the season, additional palatial architecture was uncovered, and the palace was found to be twice as large as previously thought by Kempinski, thus confirming the results of the 2003 soundings by Yasur-Landau and Makovsky.[98] Along with this, another structure – possibly communal or another palace – was discovered below the MB II palace.[97] It was during the 2005 season that the first find of a gold artefact at Kabri was made.[62]

The team also found that in the time between the end of Kempinski's excavations and the start of the new expedition, there had been significant damage done to the site by the elements. The most apparent example of this was the geotextile that had been placed by Kempinski to cover the painted plaster floor in the palace hall.[99] Since 1993, the geotextile had bonded to the plaster, and this made it impossible to remove the geotextile without destroying the floor. As a result of this, much of the work done in the 2005 season was also conservation work.[100]

The following 2006 season was a series of surveys of the region around Kabri. The goals of this season were only partially fulfilled during the original timeframe though, as the 2006 season coincided with the 2006 Lebanon War.[101] The team was able to survey MB II sites in the area around the site and see how they would have interacted with Kabri in that time period. However, as a result of the war, they had to postpone any aerial photography of the tel – by order of the Israeli Air Force—and access to the pottery from previous excavations—held in the IAA storerooms at Kibbutz Beit HaEmek—was restricted for the duration of the war.[101] In that time period, the IAA did allow the team to remove the relevant pottery from Beit HaEmek[nb 21] to Tel Aviv for study, where the pottery could also be kept safe.[102] The team had to wait until mid-September to achieve its goals fully. As a result of the dangers posed by the rockets from the north,[nb 22] some members of the team had to return to their home countries, without completing their work.[101]

The 2007 season was partly devoted to finishing the work that had to be halted in the 2006 season, as well as preparing the site for excavation the following season.[103] Through comparative studies of pottery, the team was able to map out Kabri's rise to regional power in the MB II.[104] The architecture of the palace was mapped out using a total station, and a digital topographic map was made of the tel using aerial photography and measurements on the ground.[105]

The 2008 season saw a return to excavation at the site, with a focus on the palace in Area D that had been discovered by Kempinski. The team wanted to go deeper and explore the possibility of there being a palace beneath the one Kempinski found.[106] They managed to get a clearer picture of the entire MB palatial area up to the 1600s BC destruction, and recovered further wall plaster fragments. The structure underneath the MB II palace was determined most likely to be a palace itself, and further fragments of Aegean wall frescos and imported pottery were found, allowing the excavators to push back the time for contact with the Aegean and Cyprus to the MB I period.[107] At the close of the dig season, the site was covered up to preserve it in the off-season.[108]

Excavation: 2009–ongoing

2009 was the first year of large-scale excavation by the expedition, and the first year that the system of semi-annual excavation—with the off-years devoted to data-processing—was implemented and was in use as of the 2013 season.[96] The 2009 season was also the only year that two separate seasons of excavations were conducted: a summer large-scale excavation, and a winter minor excavation. During the summer season of 2009, additional Aegean style frescoes were found at the site. In Area D-West, the northern bounds of the palace were successfully determined,[109] and a corridor was discovered that held restorable pottery.[110] During the winter season, the corridor in D-West was revisited, so that its use could be determined.[111] As a result of these excavations, the date for the construction of the earliest palace was revised and estimated to be in the MB I period in the 1800s BC, making the palace at Kabri one of the oldest palaces in Canaan.[26]

2011 excavations in Area D South-1

The main finds of the 2011 season included an orthostat building close to the palace, further pieces of painted plaster,[112] and a scarab of the Second Intermediate Period.[113]

Nurith Goshen, area supervisor of Area D-West, and Andrew Koh, associate director of the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project, articulating a vessel in the Tel Kabri wine cellar.[nb 23]

During the 2013 season, the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project discovered the first known complete MB storage room in Canaan.[7] On 22 November 2013, the team announced that this storage room had been found to be the oldest palatial wine cellar in the Ancient Near East, with 40 large ceramic jars, totalling 2,000 litres in capacity,[nb 24] containing traces of wine dating to 1700 BC.[114] During the latter half of the season, the dig shifted its focus to Area D-West, where the wine cellar was located. To speed up the process of uncovering the vessels in the wine cellar, for part of the time, the team adopted the atypical practice of working in morning and afternoon shifts of 05:00 to 12:00 and 13:00 to 19:00, respectively,[115] almost exclusively in Area D-West.[116][nb 25] Prior to the actual removal of the vessels, LiDAR work was done on the site, for the first time, in this area.[118] Near the end of the season, red plaster fragments were discovered while the area was being cleaned.[116] However, the finds were not restricted to Area D-West. In Area D-South, a deposit was discovered that held additional pieces of wall plaster.[116] In Area D-West-East, the area of D-North was linked up with the areas excavated by Kempinski, thus unifying the whole area from D-North to D-West, exposing further architecture,[119] and bringing the estimate of the size of the palace to approximately 6000m2.[48] As a result of the discovery of two doorways in D-West at the end of the 2013 season, part of the 2015 season will be devoted to exploring where—and to what—these doorways lead.[120]

Site reports

Below are the site reports that could be located for the archaeological work at Tel Kabri. They have been arranged chronologically, with internet links where available, for reference.

The reports for the 1957–1958, 1975–1976, 1999, and 2004 excavations were all published in journals, some in English and some in Hebrew. It was not until the Tel Kabri Expedition of Tel Aviv University under Kempinski that stand-alone excavation reports for Tel Kabri were published, and then Kempinski made sure to publish a report for each year—a practice that has continued with the ongoing excavations by the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project of The George Washington University and the University of Haifa. Reports for the 1969 survey could not be located.

1956 Survey

1957–1958 salvage excavation

1975–1976 salvage excavation

The Tel Kabri Expedition: 1986–1993

Final Report


Preliminary reports

Note that all preliminary reports by Kempinski's expedition are in English and Hebrew with the Hebrew sections summarised in the English section. Please note that the English sections use a different page numbering system where the pages are starred. this is to eliminate confusion from having a page 1 at the start of each cover.

1999 salvage excavation

2004 salvage excavation

The Tel Kabri Archaeological Project: 2005–ongoing

The Tel Kabri Archaeological Project has published preliminary reports for each season of excavation online. As of 2015, there is no collected site report.

See also

Other Near Eastern sites with Minoan-style frescoes:

Notes

  1. The Tel Kabri Expedition (1986–1993) and The Tel Kabri Archaeological Project (2005–ongoing) are discussed in-detail later in the text.
  2. Tel Kabri, as the name suggests is a tel, a type of mound found from the Balkans to the Punjab that is created as a result of the destruction of mudbrick from repeated different periods of occupation of a site.[14]
  3. 6,400–4,500 BC
  4. The Early Bronze Age collapse is the event that is traditionally used to mark the end of the EB and the beginning of MB. The "collapse" was an abrupt end to the material culture—such as pottery and architecture—that is identified with the EB civilisations of the Aegean, Anatolia and the Levant and the beginning of a period marked by the prevalence of so-called palatial society. As of 2015 there is no accepted explanation for this sudden change.
  5. As of 2015, excavations are ongoing.
  6. A palace that had been found by Aharon Kempinski during the Tel Kabri Expedition of 1986–1993.
  7. MB I and MB IIA are interchangeable terms. This palace is hereinafter referred to as the earlier palace.
  8. Hereinafter referred to as the later palace.
  9. Which by that point had been reduced to a remnant based out of Akko (called Acre).
  10. A Turkic sultanate based in Egypt which ruled most of the Levant at the time
  11. An eyalet was an Ottoman administrative division corresponding to a province. Most of the Galilee, including Kabri, fell under the Eyalet of Sidon.
  12. Jezzar's aqueduct had been destroyed by the military forces of Napoleon Bonaparte.
  13. Strata (sing. stratum) are layers of stratigraphy. Typically strata arranged in descending order, so Stratum 1 is physically on top of Stratum 2, which is in turn over Stratum 3, and so on. See the following section for a brief explanation of stratigraphy.
  14. See Relationship (archaeology) for further information on how the relationships between archaeological finds are determined.
  15. See Seriation (archaeology) for an explanation on how archaeologists can use pottery to create a timeline for the past.
  16. As defined in Kempinski (2002a); p. 4-5
  17. Kempinski's 1986–1993 excavations, under the Tel Kabri Expedition, and the excavations by the Tel Kabri Archaeological Project ongoing since 2005
  18. Later designated as Area B in the 1975–1976 excavations.
  19. which had been designated during the 1975–1976 excavations.
  20. An extension of Area D, again for the sake of organisation
  21. This was a result of Beit HaEmek being under continuous bombardment.
  22. Six rockets struck the tel and one rocket hit the kibbutz itself.
  23. Area D-West is where the wine cellar was found. Andrew Koh, and students from Brandeis University, were responsible for doing the residue analysis on the wine jars in the storage room, which led to the room's identification as a wine cellar.
  24. The equivalent of 3,000 750ml standard wine bottles.
  25. Near Eastern summer archaeological digs typically dig in the morning only so as to avoid the afternoon heat. Exceptions are made when time is a constraint or the collecting of artefacts is urgent.[117]

Bibliography

References

  1. Stern, Lewinson-Gilboa & Aviram (1993), p. 840.
  2. Horowitz (2002), p. 11.
  3. Kempinski (2002), p. 449-461.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Marder & al. (2002), p. 305.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Aviram (1997), p. 23.
  6. Khalidi (1992), p. 28.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Wiener (2013b).
  8. Koh, Yasur-Landau & Cline (2014).
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Tsuk (2002), p. 15.
  10. Stern, Lewinson-Gilboa & Aviram (1993), pp. 839–841.
  11. Cline, Yasur-Landau & Goshen (2011), p. 245.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Science Daily (2009).
  13. 13.0 13.1 Burrows (2013).
  14. Cline (2009), pp. 21-22
  15. 15.0 15.1 Kempinski (2002b), p. 452.
  16. Mazar (1999), p. 4.
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 Stern, Lewinson-Gilboa & Aviram (1993), p. 841.
  18. Guérin (1880), p. 32.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Barag (1979), p. 203.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Anon (1988), p. 49.
  21. Cline (2009), pp. 21-22.
  22. Horowitz (2002), p. 8.
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 23.6 23.7 Stern, Lewinson-Gilboa & Aviram (1993), p. 839.
  24. Kempinski (1992), p. 127.
  25. 25.0 25.1 Yasur-Landau, Ebeling & Mazow (2011), pp. 70.
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 Yasur-Landau & Cline (2010), p. 8.
  27. Issar & Zohar (2004), p. 147.
  28. Yasur-Landau, Ebeling & Mazow (2011), p. 72.
  29. Yasur-Landau, Ebeling & Mazow (2011), pp. 72–73.
  30. Marom & al. (2014), p. 63.
  31. Cline & Yasur-Landau (2007), p. 162.
  32. Cline, Yasur-Landau & Pierce (2008), p. 62.
  33. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), p. 2.
  34. Kempinski & Niemeier (1994), p. 35*.
  35. Lehmann (2002), p. 87.
  36. 36.0 36.1 Karmon (1960), p. 160.
  37. Guérin (1880), pp. 31-33, 46, 50.
  38. Karmon (1960), p. 246.
  39. Morris (2004), pp. 253-254.
  40. Tsuk (2002), pp. 15-17.
  41. Tsuk (2002), p. 17.
  42. Frankel (2002), pp. 82-87.
  43. Tsuk (2002), p. 18.
  44. Kahanov (2011), p. 104.
  45. 45.0 45.1 Prausnitz (1959), pp. 268–269.
  46. Kempinski (2002a), pp. 2–3.
  47. Kempinski 2002a, p. 4; Kempinski 2002c, p. 35.
  48. 48.0 48.1 48.2 Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), p. 10.
  49. Cline & Yasur-Landau (2006b), p. 37.
  50. 50.0 50.1 Kempinski (2002c), p. 35.
  51. Kempinski (2002a), p. 1.
  52. 52.0 52.1 52.2 52.3 52.4 52.5 Kempinski (2002a), p. 4.
  53. Kempinski (2002a), pp. 4–5.
  54. 54.0 54.1 54.2 Prausnitz & Kempinski (1977), pp. 165–166.
  55. 55.0 55.1 55.2 55.3 55.4 55.5 55.6 See Tel Kabri Archaeological Project preliminary site reports
  56. Prausnitz (1959), pp. 268–269
  57. 57.0 57.1 Prausnitz (1970), p. 160.
  58. Marder & al. (2002), p. 299.
  59. Marder & al. (2002), pp. 299–305.
  60. 60.0 60.1 60.2 60.3 Prausnitz & Kempinski (1977), p. 166.
  61. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), p. 4.
  62. 62.0 62.1 Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), p. 3.
  63. 63.0 63.1 Yasur-Landau & Cline (2011), pp. 4-6.
  64. Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), pp. 6-7.
  65. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2009), p. 5.
  66. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), pp. 3–4.
  67. Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), p. 7.
  68. 68.0 68.1 Kempinski (2002d), p. xvi.
  69. 69.0 69.1 Smithline (2007).
  70. Kempinski (2002a), p. 2.
  71. Prausnitz (1959), p. 268.
  72. Kempinski (2002b), p. 449,451.
  73. Oren (2002b), p. xii.
  74. Kempinski (2002a), p. 3.
  75. 75.0 75.1 75.2 Cline & Yasur-Landau (2006b), p. 34.
  76. Kempinski (1992), pp. 112–113.
  77. Wiener (2013a).
  78. Niemeier (2002), pp. 328–331.
  79. 79.0 79.1 Kempinski (2002d), p. xv.
  80. Oren 2002a, p. 55; Lehmann 2002, p. 73.
  81. Oren (2002a), p. 55.
  82. Niemeier & Niemeier (2002), p. 254.
  83. Kempinski & Niemeier (1991), p. 31*.
  84. Kempinski (1989), p. Introduction.
  85. Kempinski (1989), p. vi.
  86. Shalev (2002), pp. 310–311.
  87. Kempinski & Niemeier (1990), p. 1*.
  88. Naveh & Kempinski (1991), p. 10*.
  89. Kempinski & Niemeier (1991), p. 1*.
  90. Oren (2002b), p. xv.
  91. Shalem (2009), pp. 19–39.
  92. Cline (2009), pp. 67-68.
  93. Cline & Yasur-Landau (2006b), pp. 34-36.
  94. Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), p. 1.
  95. Yasur-Landau, Ebeling & Mazow (2011), pp. 70–75.
  96. 96.0 96.1 Yasur-Landau & Cline (2009), p. 1.
  97. 97.0 97.1 Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), p. 1.
  98. Cline (2009), p. 68.
  99. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), p. 5.
  100. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2005), pp. 5–6.
  101. 101.0 101.1 101.2 Cline & Yasur-Landau (2006a), p. 1.
  102. Cline & Yasur-Landau (2006a), p. 4.
  103. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2007), p. 1.
  104. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2007), p. 3.
  105. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2007), p. 5.
  106. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2008), p. 2.
  107. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2008), p. 8.
  108. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2008), p. 9.
  109. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2009), p. 2.
  110. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2009), pp. 4–5.
  111. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2010), pp. 1–2.
  112. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2011), p. 1.
  113. Yasur-Landau & Cline (2011), p. 4.
  114. Wilford (2013).
  115. Ingeno (2015), p. 51.
  116. 116.0 116.1 116.2 Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), p. 6.
  117. Ingeno (2015), p. 51
  118. Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), p. 2,6.
  119. Yasur-Landau & al. (2013), p. 7,10.
  120. Lopatto (2013).

Works cited

Further reading

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tel Kabri.