Posted on 07/28/2012 7:32:50 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
A team from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel Nature and Parks Authority (INPA) uncovered 14 large pithoi-style bulk storage jugs filled with the wheat inside what was a storage room in a monumental, palace-like building from the Canaanite period (2,000-3,000 BCE), the INPA said on Monday.
After the jars are fully exposed the researchers will transfer them to conservation and restoration laboratories. Afterwards, the palace will be covered up again until the next excavation season.
Archeological excavations at Hatzor have been conducted by Hebrew University in cooperation with the INPA for the past couple of decades. In 2007, according to the INPA, the hill was given World Heritage Site status...
Significant excavations in the 1950s and '60s were led by Yigael Yadin, the archeologist responsible for discoveries at Masada and Megiddo, according to Tsuk. Tel Hatzor received World Heritage Site status, alongside the biblical remains at Megiddo and Beersheba, in large part due to Yadin's work, Tsuk said.
"The water system built at Hatzor is one of the largest and most amazing that have been exposed in the country, and everyone who continues to explore the site finds more and more secrets and details about our past in Israel," he added.
Prof. Amnon Ben-Tor, of the Hebrew University, likewise praised the work of Yadin, noting that further excavations at the site were halted after his research until 1990.
(Excerpt) Read more at jpost.com ...
Team from Heb. U., Israel Nature and Parks Authority uncovers 14 large pithoi-style bulk storage jugs filled with wheat. Photo: Sharon Zuckerman
/johnny
This is also one of *those* topics. From the recesses of the hard drive and/or reprised from other topics:Did Joshua Destroy Canaanite Hatzor?Hatzor is the largest archaeological tel in Israel. The discovery of several cuneiform tablets at the 800-dunam (200-acre) site over the years points to the likelihood that Hatzor will produce the first ancient archive, other than the Dead Sea Scrolls, ever to be found in the country... Ben-Tor... hoped there might be two archives -- one in each of the two palaces identified on the acropolis atop the tel. The late Prof. Yigael Yadin had been the first to identify a palace during his landmark dig at Hatzor in the 1950s, dating it to the 18th century BC or Middle Bronze (MB) period. That fitted perfectly with the date of the royal archive in Mari, Syria, in which cuneiform messages relating to MB Hatzor were found - the first hint of a possible archive at Hatzor. However, when Ben-Tor began his excavations in 1990 he came upon a palace near Yadin's which he dated, by means of its ceramics, to a few hundred years later -- that is, to the last half of the second millennium or Late Bronze (LB) period. The generally accepted dating of the biblical destruction of Hatzor by Joshua roughly coincides with the date of this LB palace's destruction, the 14th or 13th centuries BCE. This summer, as he probed the area of the palaces, Ben-Tor began to have an uneasy feeling that Yadin, his former teacher, had made a wrong dating and that there was in fact only one palace -- his own LB structure... Even if he is a palace short, however, the one that Ben-Tor is left with is proving enormous... The basalt stones had been distorted by a terrible fire which likewise echoes the biblical description of Joshua's destruction. It was clear for anyone to see that the basalt stones had been fractured by a hot fire. Geologists report that the fire had to be over 1200 degrees to cause this kind of damage to basalt.
by Clarence H. Wagner, Jr.
September 1997
original, dead linkThe Burning Of HazorThe Egyptians could be responsible. Pharaoh Seti I, in an inscription describing his military campaign against Canaan ca. 1300 B.C., claimed to have destroyed Hazor. Another possibility is that Ramses II could have conquered the city, either on his way northward to Syria before the Battle of Kadesh in 1275 B.C. or on his return to Egypt afterward. Yet Ben-Tor believes that the intentional smashing of statues at Hazor, particularly those of the Egyptian kings, makes these possibilities unlikely. He also dismisses the likelihood of destruction at the hands of a rival Canaanite city-state because of the apparent absence of nearby cities powerful enough to attack Hazor. As for the Sea Peoples, Ben-Tor notes that not a single sherd of their distinctive decorated pottery has been found in the city, which is much further inland than the sites they are known to have conquered. That leaves the Israelites. The discovery of an archive at Hazor might pinpoint the date of the city's destruction, or provide information about the historical situation in Canaan in the years immediately preceding the Israelite settlement.
by Abraham Rabinovich and Neil Asher Silberman
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Not "Canaanite" -- Israelite. |
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:’)
And to think I was about to attribute this to time-traveling muzzies.
I didn’t know my mother-in-law was cooking back then...
I just burned some bean soup - in case they are interested.
Me, too. When I burnt my wheat, I slathered it with butter, and called it toast.
Cheers!
Archeologists find 6,300-year-old burnt wheat
not 3,300
How little we have changed despite all our modern appliances...
And just how was *I* supposed to know that it is inadvisable to tie a torch to the tails of foxes if one didn’t want a burnt wheat crop?
Interesting. I’ve been reading a study guide on Joshua. Now I can’t wait to ge to Hazor!
Actually, article says 2000 to 3000 BCE for the palace, which would be 4000 to 5000 years old. Where the headline gets 3300 years or 1300 BCE for the wheat is not explained in the text. Although one would assume carbon dating would be effective.
1300 BCE would probably put this about a century before the purported invasion of Canaan by Joshua.
Sansom did it. c. 1000-1100 B.C.
Samson`s Flaming Foxtails throught the grainfields.
viz
Judges 15: 4-5
“Samson then went out and caught three hundred jackals. He lashed the jackals’ tails together in pairs and tied a torch between each pair of tails. He then set fire to the torches and let them loose in the Philistine fields of ripe grain. Everything burned, both stacked and standing grain, vineyards and olive orchardseverything.”
So they gathered up the burnt grain and stored it in the palace? I don’t think so.
Anywho, Hazor is way over by the Jordan in Upper Galilee, a long way from Philistia. Or a long way as things went back then. It’s only 125 miles or so, a two hour drive on the interstate.
The Philistines had conquered all of Judah in that area?
Judges 15:11 “Then three thousand men from Judah went down to the cave in the rock of Etam and said to Samson, Dont you realize that the PHILISTINES ARE RULERS OVER US? What have you done to us?
IOW, as far from the territory of the tribe of Judah as it was possible to get.
The Israelites in this part of the land had their own problems, mostly with Syrians, but I doubt they had much trouble with Philistines.
Part of the set-up for the History Channel’s new Gordon Ramsey series on bad cooking through history?
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