Publications by Year: 2006

2006
Gamla I: The Pottery of the Second Temple Period
Berlin, Andrea, Gamla I: The Pottery of the Second Temple Period (Israel Antiquities Authority, 2006).Abstract

This is the first in a series of volumes intended to bring the results of the excavations of the late Shmarya Gutmann at Gimla to the public. Gutmann - a brilliant archaeologist, but with no formal training - was the driving force behind these excavations of the site of Gamla, which was not inhabited after 67AD.

Read a review from The Bulletin of The American Schools of Oriental Research No. 352 (Nov., 2008) HERE.

Purchase through the publisher's website HERE.

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Anaskaphes Mykenon Vol. I
Iakovidis, Spyros, Anaskaphes Mykenon Vol. I (The Archaeological Society at Athens (He En Athenais Archaiologike Hetaireia), 2006), pp. 187 + 43 plates.Abstract
This is the publication of the building complex situated in the NW corner of the citadel. The complex consists of 3 buildings of 2 - 4 rooms each, preserved to basement level and separated by open passages. They were cleared down to bedrock by Tsountas sometime before or at the turn of the century. Tsountas left only a baulk for the traffic of his wheelbarrows, which was found to cover a large jar in situ, showing together with other evidence that the basements were used as storerooms. They were built in the 13th cent. BC and were destroyed by an earthquake before the end of that century. Tsountas never published this excavation nor did he ever refer to it. The ruins were cleared by G.E. Mylonas and the applicant, working on behalf of the Archaeological Society at Athens, in 1984 and 1985, a detailed situation plan was drawn and all the surviving evidence from Tsountas' baulk and a drain running beneath the buildings was collected, enough to justify a detailed publication. The program aims at studying this evidence and organizing its publication in full, thus filling an unfortunate gap in the history of the citadel.
Jewish Quarter Excavations in the Old City Jerusalem Volume III: Area E and Other Studies
Geva, Hillel, Jewish Quarter Excavations in the Old City Jerusalem Volume III: Area E and Other Studies (Israel Exploration Society, 2006).Abstract

This is the third volume on the results of the excavations directed by the late Professor Nahman Avigad in the years 1969-1982 at the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem. The first two volumes on these excavations (Jewish Quarter I, II) dealt with Areas A, W and X-2, the prominent remains of which are First and Second Temple period fortifications located on the northern side of the Southwestern Hill. These volumes also included studies on all the First Temple period seal impressions and imported Greek stamped amphora handles from the Hellenistic period found throughout the Jewish Quarter excavation areas.

The present volume focuses on the findings from Area E, located in the center of the Jewish Quarter. The area yielded finds from six occupational strata ranging from the Iron Age II to the Late Roman and Byzantine periods. The most significant of these are the strata from the late Second Temple period, specifically the second half of the 1st century BCE. Prominent architectural remains from this period are a group of well-preserved structures, which contained a variety of finds (Stratum 3), put into disuse and sealed by the massive stone pavement of a street (Stratum 2). The importance of the finds contained within the structures lies in the fact that they were deposited in a clear stratigraphical context that can be well dated to a brief and defined period of time during the reign of Herod the Great.

The remains from the Second Temple period can contribute much to the understanding of the nature and chronology of the establishment of the wealthy residential quarter of the Upper City, and to the classification of pottery and stone vessel forms, as well as other finds, in use in Jerusalem during Herod's reign. Part One of this report includes seventeen chapters. The first chapter describes the architectural remains uncovered in Area E, presented according to stratum. The second chapter discusses uniquely shaped stone basins of the Second Temple period used for washing feet before descent into miqwa'ot for immersion; two of these basins were found in Area E, one in situ. The other chapters in Part One present the variety of small finds found in different strata of Area E. An index of the Area E finds is brought at the end of Part One. Part Two of the report contains five chapters dealing with several types of small finds from the Second Temple period uncovered in excavation areas throughout the Jewish Quarter: stone scale weights, Hebrew and Aramaic ostraca, and the refuse of a glass workshop. Also appearing in the second part are supplementary studies on various finds from the excavations.

Our plan is to continue in the coming years with the publication of the principal findings from the Jewish Quarter excavations. The fourth volume, which is being prepared by Oren Gutfeld, will deal with the findings from Areas X (the Byzantine Cardo) and T (the Nea Church). The fifth volume will be devoted to the findings from Area B (the Burnt House). To be published subsequently are the remains of the elaborate dwellings of the wealthy residential quarter-the Upper City of the late Second Temple period (also referred to as the Herodian Quarter)-uncovered in Areas F, M, and P of the Jewish Quarter. The present volume could not have been effectively realized without the assistance of numerous scholars, from research institutions both in Israel and abroad. They are appreciated for offering their time, knowledge and expertise on behalf of the publication of the wealth of finds unearthed in Area E and in other areas of the Jewish Quarter. Some of these scholars had already taken part in the study of Jewish Quarter finds published in the previous two volumes. Our thanks go to all of them for their invaluable contribution, and we hope that our rewarding partnership with them will continue in the future.

We would like to express our thanks and appreciation to the foundations that supported the publication of this volume: The Donna and Marvin Schwartz Foundation, The Dorot Foundation, The Reuben and Edith Hecht Trust, and George Blumenthal and the Center for Online Judaic Studies. The research and the editing of the chapters on the Hebrew and Aramaic ostraca were supported by The David and Jemima Jeselsohn Epigraphic Center of Jewish History at Bar-Ilan University. We are also grateful to all who participated in the excavation and in the processing of the finds and the publication of this volume. Our thanks go to the Israel Exploration Society and its director, Joseph Aviram, for his encouragement and efforts in pushing the publication of the Jewish Quarter excavations forward, and his help in obtaining necessary financial support for the publication of previous volumes and the present volume; to the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem on Mt. Scopus, where the Jewish Quarter excavation's finds are stored and where their processing and study takes place, and whose laboratories were of great assistance in the preparation of finds for publication; and to the Israel Antiquities Authority (the Department of Antiquities and Museums at the time of the excavation), a trusted partner during the excavation, and in whose laboratories the pottery vessels were restored and the metal vessels were treated at the conclusion of the excavation.

We offer special thanks to those who have assisted over the years in bringing this volume to fruition in accord with the high standards set for the publication. Ben Gordon worked diligently on the translation of some chapters of the book to English, and on the final editing of the book, seeing it through to its final publication. Alan Paris and Shelly Sadeh translated and edited several of the chapters. Alan Paris also offered helpful advice in preparing the manuscript for publication. Gabi Laron took the color photographs of the finds. Oren Gutfeld assisted in preparing the stratigraphy chapter. Ravit Nenner-Soriano worked meticulously and devotedly on the registration of the finds and the production of publication-ready plates. We extend our thanks also to all those who have participated, over the years since the close of the excavations, in the drawing and photographing of the finds and in their preparation for publication (a full list of these individuals appears in Chapter One, this volume). Also deserving of mention for their tireless efforts are Arieh Marzel, who typeset the manuscript, and Avraham Pladot of the Old City Press, who harnessed his talent and expertise for the sake of the book, preparing its illustrations and page layout, supervising its printing, and essentially seeing the book through to the final form laid before you.

Copies may be ordered
by contacting:

The Israel Exploration Society
P. O. Box 7041,
5 Avida Street,
Jerusalem 91070 Israel.
Fax: 972-2-6-247772
Phone: 972-2-6-257991
E-mail: ies@vms.huji.ac.il

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Roman Portrait Statuary from Aphrodisias. Aphrodisias II
Smith, R.R.R. Roman Portrait Statuary from Aphrodisias. Aphrodisias II (Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 2006).Abstract

Aphrodisias is an unusally well preserved Greek city of the Roman period in inland Caria (S.W. Turkey) and has a remarkable body of surviving carved marbles with excavated contexts - statues, monuments, reliefs. A large proportion of the statues produced were portraits awarded to me and women of the local elite. Their number and variety are striking.

The present volume is a study of the character and use of portrait statues as public honors in an ancient city, as well as primary publication of all the portrait statuary from the site, from the first century BC to the third century AD. Emphasis is placed on context and local meaning - on the setting and significance of statue monuments in local society under the Roman Empire.

The Central Palace of Tiglath-pileser III at Nimrud and the Polish Center of Mediterranean Archaeology’s Excavation (1974-1976)
Paley, Samuel, and Richard Sobolewski, The Central Palace of Tiglath-pileser III at Nimrud and the Polish Center of Mediterranean Archaeology’s Excavation (1974-1976) (Learning Sites, Inc. 2006) . Online PublicationAbstract

The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology returned to re-excavate the site of the Central Palace of Tiglath-pileser III (744-727 BCE) at Nimrud (ancient Kalhu) near the city of Mosul in northeastern Iraq in 1974, because the Palace was the least known and least understood of the buildings on Nimrud's citadel.  It was hoped that new excavations would elucidate this poorly preserved Palace with more up-to-date excavation techniques and new finds.  The excavation was supposed to make the Central Palace a source for the study of the life and times of this important ancient Assyrian king.  Many fragments of Assyrian bas-relief, not only those of Tiglath-pileser III, were discovered, some re-excavated in the trenches of the previous excavator, Austen Henry Layard. Then the field director, Janusz Meuszynski, died in 1976, and the final reports were never completed. 

There are too few examples of Tiglath-pileser’s bas-reliefs in the total corpus of Assyrian bas-relief to allow the results of the Polish project to remain unpublished.  The Polish finds are an extremely valuable resource.  An additional and disturbing fact is that individual bas-relief sculptures (some with inscriptions) have been appearing on the antiquities market, looted from the site museum storerooms at Nimrud.  Some of the bas-reliefs have been broken up into pieces to obscure their origin and in order to obtain more money from several rather than from the one original fragment.  Many of the better examples of bas-relief from this excavation are now on the international art market as a result of illicit activities (theft) at Nimrud subsequent to the Gulf War of 1991 (there is increasing anxiety among scholars -- expressed in a 2003 interview -- that war in Iraq will lead to further destruction of key monuments, like those at Nimrud).

What we know of Tiglath-pileser’s Palace is that many of the themes of earlier and later sculpture are to be found on its wall decoration.  And, there are new motifs and the syntax of the sculpture, the way scenes were portrayed, the placement of the vignettes of individual parts of scenes on the faces of the slabs, and details of the garment decorations have their own character and style. 

Richard Sobolewski and (the late) Samuel Paley were to publish the results of the excavation in digital format with top plans, photographs, and comparative material from museums and Layard’s archives.  Learning Sites will finish the publication. The digital format will allow the reader to access all the relevant data through appropriate links from interactive 3D computer models of the remains and in reconstructed panels of the wall decorations.  Fragments of bas-relief and inscriptions from the periods of Ashur-nasir-pal II and Shalmaneser III discovered during the course of the excavation will also be incorporated into this publication, as well as the scant remains of the post-Assyrian buildings built on the Central Palace site.  The corpus of photographs of the Polish Center's excavation will be available permanently on this Website.  The final computer model and the publication will be prepared, marketed, and distributed by Learning Sites, Inc., in collaboration with scholars from around the world.

The Chalcolithic Cemetery of Souskiou-Vathrykakas, Cyprus
Peltenburg, Edgar, The Chalcolithic Cemetery of Souskiou-Vathrykakas, Cyprus (Cyprus Department of Antiquities, 2006).Abstract

The archaeology of pre-Bronze Age Cyprus is unremittingly focused on evidence from settlement sites, from Mylouthkia and Shillourokambos to Khirokitia and Kissonerga. Since human activities outside settlements are scarcely documented, we have a rather flat, single dimensional view of the lifestyle and achievements of the island's prehistoric inhabitants. The environmental record and the interaction of communities with the landscape are still poorly understood, and the archaeological record lacks direct information on procurement sites for raw materials, on stations like butchery sites and potentially on other sites like those devoted to ideological concerns as on the Levantine mainland. This report begins to redress the balance in our sources of information by providing the first detailed account of a non-domestic site belonging to the Chalcolithic period, c. 3000 BC. It comprises an initial attempt to analyse the mortuary and palaeodemographic data from Souskiou-Vathyrkakas Cemetery I.

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Bronze Age Rural Ecology and Village Life at Tell el-Hayyat, Jordan
Falconer, Steven E., and Patricia L. Fall, Bronze Age Rural Ecology and Village Life at Tell el-Hayyat, Jordan (Archaeopress, 2006).Abstract

Tell el-Hayyat, the focus of this volume, is situated in the Jordan Rift Valley approximately two kilometres east of the Jordan River on the first terrace above the present floodplain. This work details the authors’ investigations of agrarian economy and ecology as they illuminate the roles of rural communities in the larger context of the first urbanized civilizations. The study explores the ways in which small farming villages like Tell el-Hayyat contributed and responded to the rise and fall of Bronze Age town life in the southern Levant. A rural perspective is particularly appropriate for this region amid its long legacy of sedentary agriculture, dynamic urban-rural relations, and their ecological consequences.

View or purchase through the publisher's website HERE.

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