Category: Archaeology

  • Bethsaida 2014 – Day Five

    Our fifth day since arriving in Israel, and our third day on the tools at the Bethsaida archaeology project.

    Despite strong winds coming up around 11.00am, we made fantastic progress in Area T  today. We exposed a wall running the entire width of our square. It was not only almost right on top of the northern boundary line, but even turned a snappy 90 degrees at the NW corner of our square to continue a metre or so so south along the western boundary of the square.

    The wall can be seen here:

    140612 AreaT W1204

     

     

    While the neat change of direction in the NW corner can be seen here:

    The energy levels in the square rose perceptibly as these walls began to be uncovered. While it is not yet clear how they connect (if at all) with the lower walls found in 2012 and 2013, it sure will be interesting to find out.

    Stay tuned for the next update …

     

  • Bethsaida 2014 – Day Four

    Today in Area T work continued on the new square that we marked out yesterday.

    This photo from last year shows the sifters located exactly where we are now digging (!!), which was a spot we chose in 2012 because it was a pit with a lot of stones and rubbish. I guess we are now going to remove those stones and shift that rubbish:

    Happily we prepared the area for this year by removing the sifted soil and the worst (we hope) of the stones, as this picture records:

    Steady progress was made during the morning, and we look forward to even better results tomorrow, as well as on Friday morning when we shall be joined by a dozen or so young people from the Sabeel community in Nazareth. Our goal is to expose the eastern extension of walls W1200 and W1202 that run east-west and were uncovered in 2012 and 2013 respectively.

    From 12o2, Wall W1200:

    From 2013, Wall W1202:

    This photo shows the new area in relation to the squares from the last two years:

    In the evening I presented the night time lecture. My topic was “Searching for the Nazareth of Jesus”. This is the same topic as one of my presentations at the Snowstar Institute Conference in Canada in April this year. The related full text article has been downloaded almost 1,000 times from Academia.edu, while the lecture from Canada is available online as a video.

  • Bethsaida 2014 – Day Three

    Today was our first regular day on the dig at Bethsaida.

    Work resumed in Area A South (Iron Age remains south of the monumental city gates) and Area A West (a Roman villa above Iron Age remains), while in Area T work commenced for the first time this season. Since I am involved with the project in Area T these daily updates will mostly focus on work in that area, but when special finds are made in other areas I will attempt to mention them as well.

    In Area T we are looking for evidence of occupation by non-elite population groups, since the elites (then and now) tend to occupy the higher levels of any site. The heights offer better security, fresher air, and effective gravity-feed drainage systems … down to the less influential people located lower down the slope. The ‘upper city’ was naturally the fortified portion of the settlement, as well as the place where more expensive structures were to be found.

    The monumental city gate structure from Stratum Five at Bethsaida is a classic example of this selective investment of public resources for the benefit of the elite:

     

    In Area T we do not expect to find such monumental structures (although we are happy to be proved wrong), but rather domestic structures from the non-elite elements of ancient societies. Based on finds from 2012 and 2013, it seems that this part of the site was occupied by a Mamluk village for at least part of the time between 1200 and 1500 CE. There is also some evidence of first century CE settlement, but so far no structures from the early Roman period have been found in Area T.

    The site for our primary excavations this year had been identified and pre-prepared towards the end of the 2013 season, while we had a backhoe on site for other works. That site lies just to the East of the two squares excavated in 2012 and 2013. Our first task today were to prepare for the excavations that will follow over the next few weeks:

    • The site was cleared of weeds.
    • A new square was marked out. In this case, the ‘square’ is actually a rectangle: 4m x 10m. As such it parallels both the earlier squares, and will allow us to see whether any of the walls found in those earlier excavations are extending eastward.
    • The sifting frames were set up, ready for the many buckets of soil that need to be sifted to reduce the possibility of small items being discarded inadvertently.
    • Shade cloth was erected to provide some protection from the sun during our digging.
    • The first bucket loads of soil were removed and most of the crew had the personal pleasure of finding pottery from either the Hellenistic/Roman period, or the Mamluk period.

    As there was no pottery waiting to be identified and catalogued, there was no ‘pottery reading’ session today. Many people took the opportunity to go into Tiberias for a few hours.

    After dinner we had the first of the evening lectures, with Rami Arav offering an overview of some work in progress on the origins of the ancient Israelites and the question of their original religion. Heavy stuff after a hot day in the sun, but lots of food for thought.

  • Bethsaida 2014 – Day Two

    Today was a gentle way to begin the middle session of the 2014 season.

    Rather than leave on the bus at 5.30am we were able to sleep in and take a late breakfast before taking the bus at 8.30am. The morning was spent offering the 40+ volunteers an orientation to the site as well as covering the health and safety issues. Sadly, the morning was overshadowed by a medical event that required one of our staff to be evacuated to the local hospital by ambulance. Fortunately, there are two medical doctors and one emergency room nurse among the Australian volunteers this year, so medical assistance was available within seconds of the event.

    Mid-afternoon the group went by bus to Ginosar, which is the usual base of our operations and also the location of our work rooms below the Beit Alon Museum. This allowed the volunteers to see examples of finds from previous seasons, including the processes for restoration and conservation of these precious items.

    Tomorrow the serious work will commence, with an early departure for the dig at 5.30am.

  • Bethsaida 2014 – Day One

    After a mostly—and happily—uneventful flight from various Australian cities via Dubai and Amman, the 12 people in this year’s Bethsaida team from Australia arrived safely at Hakuk Balev (also spelt Huqoq) late Saturday afternoon. We checked into our rooms, enjoyed the opportunity for a shower, and gathered for dinner at 7.00pm. It was an early night all round, with the blessing of a real bed deeply appreciated after the 18 hours or so of air travel, plus varying amounts of land travel before and after the flights.

    Hakuk is located in the hills to the west of the Sea of Galilee. It is about 5km inland from the main north-south road along the western side of the lake, and about 10 minutes north of our usual location at Ginosar. It offers wonderful views of the lake, as well as Tiberias and the Horns of Hattim.

    Sunday was spent touring some selected sites in the northern area of Israel. Our driver (Fahim) and guide (Ghattas Zaher ) are both Christians from Nazareth, and we soon identified many common friends with both of these gentlemen. Fahim was also the person who picked us up from the Jordan Valley Border Crossing when we came through to Israel from Jordan, and they will both be with us for our program in Nazareth next Saturday and in Haifa the following day. Ghattas is the father of Linda, who works at the Sabeel office in Nazareth, so another special connection there.

    After a visit to Chorazin, we headed north to Banias where we explored the site for a couple of hours. After doing the usual visit to the Cave of Pan, we walked down Banias Stream (one of the four sources of the Jordan) to Banias Falls. The walk took about 90 minutes as detoured via the palace of Agrippa II, bought cherries and pita from the Druze man near the old flour mill, and made our way across the grassy hilltops in the far north of Israel.

    After a picnic lunch at Banias Falls we headed back to the Sea of Galilee where we visited the quiet prayer gardens at Mt Beatitudes, the Church of the Primacy at Tabgha, and the beautiful Greek Orthodox Church at Capernaum. Sadly, the Benedictine monastery at Tabhga was closed so we did not get to see the Byzantine mosaic of the loaves and fishes. We also missed the Franciscan area at Capernaum as we arrived just a few minutes after their shiny new gate was locked for the day. We shall go back there on our way to Haifa next Sunday.

    By the end of dinner all of the volunteers for this middle session of the 2014 season at Bethsaida had arrived, so our new community is beginning to take place. It was another fairly early night for people, but already we are beginning to feel very much at home in the quiet setting of Hakuk and in this beautiful corner of a very special place.

    A few photos relating to each day’s program, including today, will be posted on my Facebook page.

  • Salah al-Din coins at Bethsaida

    Some news about the two Islamic coins recovered from Area T at Bethsaida in 2012.

    Yesterday I met with Ariel Berman in Kiryat Tivon. He had identified the two coins found in Area T during the 2012 season at Bethsaida (et-Tel).

    The first of those (IAA 138739, Basket 31013) is a coin from Al-Nasir Yusuf Salah al-Din (aka, Saladin), and dates to 1189 CE – just 12-18 months after his decisive victory over the Crusader forces at the Horns of Hattin. The coin was minted in Damascus.

    The other coin (IAA 138740, Basket 31016) is from just a few years later: 1193 CE. It is also a coin issued by Salah al-Din and minted at Damascus, but this time from the final year of his rule.

    Although Ariel Berman had not yet received the coins from the 2013 season from IAA, I was able to show him high quality photographs of the coins on my iPad. He immediately identified several of the coins from Area T in 2013 as also being from this period and from the subsequent Mamluk period.

    It seems that I now have a new research project to study the period of Salah al-Din in more detail, and then to consider the significance of Ayyubid and Mamluk occupation at et-Tel. We may well have an entirely new level of occupation for the site, from the late 12C through to the 16C, and Berman suggested to me that the site was a base for veterans of the victorious Muslim forces after the Crusaders were defeated in the Galilee.

    It will be very good to have formal identifications of the coins from 2013 once Ariel Berman has had an opportunity to see them.

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