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By
Dr.
Jennie R. Ebeling
Lady
Davis Fellow at the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem.
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Rising dramatically beyond a bend in the road linking the Sea of
Galilee with Israel’s northern border, Tel Hazor stands as
prominently on the landscape today as when the Canaanite city founded
on the site was at the height of its prosperity and international
influence some |
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View
of the main entrance to the Late Bronze Age palace |
| 3500
years ago. Our knowledge of the site’s history comes from intensive
archaeological excavations, textual sources dating to the Middle and
Late Bronze Ages, and important passages in the Hebrew Bible. |
Hazor was the largest city in the southern Levant for much of the 2nd
millennium BCE and closely associated with the large and powerful Bronze Age
city-states in Syria. Texts unearthed at Mari, in Syria, Tel el-Amarna, Egypt,
and in Hazor itself describe the Canaanite city’s role in international
trade and diplomacy and suggest Hazor’s autonomy from Egypt during the New
Kingdom period when most of Canaan was under Egyptian control. The Late Bronze
Age city was destroyed sometime in the 13th century BCE, perhaps during the
Israelite incursions into Canaan described in the Book of Joshua, which
describes Hazor as the “head of all those kingdoms” (Joshua 11:10). After
several centuries of limited occupation, Hazor was rebuilt in the 10th century
BCE, probably as part of King Solomon’s building activities described in 1
Kings 9:15. The Israelite city prospered briefly before it was destroyed in
732 BCE by the Assyrians under Tiglath-Pileser III (2 Kings 15:29). This brief
sketch of Hazor’s history during the Bronze and Iron Ages may now be filled
in with the results of the current Hebrew University excavation project, which
will enter its 13th season in the summer of 2002.
Hazor was first excavated for four seasons in the 1950s and again in 1968-1969
by the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem under
the direction of one of the fathers of Israeli archaeology, Yigael Yadin.
Yadin’s team opened excavation areas in both the 30-acre Upper City – the
tel proper – and the 170-acre Lower City and identified an occupation
sequence beginning in Early Bronze II (early 3rd century BCE) on the tel and
Middle Bronze IIB (ca. 1800 BCE) in the Lower City. Although these excavations
were quite successful in revealing the chronology, character, and physical
extent of the site, they also raised a number of questions that could not be
resolved without further excavation. Yadin planned to return Hazor until his
untimely death in 1984.
Excavations in honor of Yigael Yadin were initiated in 1990 under the
direction of Amnon Ben-Tor as a joint project of the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem and the Complutense University in Madrid, Spain. The past twelve
seasons of excavation, confined to two large areas on the tel itself, have
corroborated many of Yadin’s conclusions and greatly increased our
understanding of the series of Canaanite and Israelite settlements at Hazor.
The renewed excavation project has focused much attention on the Late Bronze
Age (ca. 1550-1200 BCE) remains at Hazor, especially a Canaanite palace
discovered in Area A at the center of the tel. Yadin had uncovered a corner of
this massive structure during his excavations and dated it to the Middle
Bronze Age; the current excavations have shown, however, that it should be
dated to the Late Bronze Age. The palace exterior features decorative,
Syrian-style basalt orthostats forming a zigzag-shaped outer wall, a paved
outdoor courtyard with a cultic platform in its center, a raised entrance
porch with the remains of two huge column bases, and two guard rooms flanking
the entrance. The palace core, which is dominated by a central throne room,
was constructed of mudbrick walls faced with basalt orthostats and a floor
built of planks of costly cedar of Lebanon. Among the many artifacts recovered
from the palace are fragments of ivory plaques and boxes, cylinder seals and
beads, figurines, two bronze statues of kings or deities, and the largest
Bronze Age anthropomorphic statue ever found in Israel, made of basalt and
standing over three feet tall.
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Three cuneiform tablets were also found in the palace core, which led
the excavators to believe that an archive was close at hand. Indeed,
in a palace built on almost the exact same plan at Alalakh, in Syria
an archive room with the remains of hundreds of cuneiform documents
was uncovered, and the location of this room roughly corresponds |
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Middle
Bronze Age tablet sent to a Canaanite king of Hazor
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the spot in the Hazor palace where the three tablets were found.
Unfortunately, no other direct evidence for a royal archive has come
to light since these documents were excavated during the 1996 season,
although a few other tablets have been found in random locations
around the site. Some of the tablets date to the Middle Bronze Age and
some to the Late Bronze Age, suggesting that two archives might still
be buried somewhere on the tel. Most of these documents are concerned
with economic and legal matters, while others consist of fragments of
a bilingual (Akkadian and Sumerian) dictionary and a mathematical
table. These latter texts suggest that a scribal school functioned at
Hazor. |
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Excavations in the second area opened on the tel, Area M, also yielded
important Late Bronze Age remains. Area M is located on the tel’s
northern side in a spot where the tel gently slopes down to meet the
Lower City; excavators believed that this area must contain the main |
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Late
Bronze Age cultic platform in Area M |
| passage
between the Lower City and the tel during the Middle and Late Bronze
Ages. In addition to the remains of staircases, drainage
installations, and fragments of massive walls, archaeologists
uncovered a cultic platform just inside a gateway with two small
towers. The platform is made of a single dressed basalt block
measuring about 5 x 5 feet and weighing over a ton, with four small
symmetrical depressions on its surface probably used to support a
throne or statue. This slab sat on a base of carefully cut orthostat
blocks in the middle of an orthostat pavement and was set in front of
a niche cut into a mudbrick wall. Ceramic and other artifacts found in
the vicinity of the platform suggest that it may have been a gate
shrine where those passing between the Lower City and the Upper City
paid respects, taxes, or tribute to Hazor’s king or one of its
patron deities. |
The Late Bronze Age city was destroyed sometime during the 13th century BCE in
a fire so intense that it cracked the basalt architectural elements of the
palace, the gate shrine, and other structures and left a layer of ash up to
three feet deep in places. Yadin attributed this destruction layer to the
Israelite campaigns led by Joshua and dated it to 1230 BCE. Although his date
for the final destruction of Canaanite Hazor is a bit too late, it now looks
as though Yadin may have been correct in attributing the destruction to
invading Israelites. Noting the intentional mutilation and destruction of a
number of statues found at Hazor depicting Canaanite and Egyptian rulers and
deities, Ben-Tor discounts both the Canaanites and the Egyptians as the
destroyers of Late Bronze Age Hazor. The lack of evidence for the Sea Peoples
at Hazor and the site’s location so far inland also make these invading
groups from the Aegean world unlikely candidates. Invading Israelites, along
with disenfranchised elements in Canaan, seem to have been responsible for the
devastation of Late Bronze Age Hazor, although this issue is far from resolved
and likely to continue as a source of debate.
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If the
Israelites did indeed destroy Canaanite Hazor, they did not establish
a permanent settlement at the site for some time. The Iron Age I (ca.
1200-1000 BCE) occupation of Hazor left barely a trace, but for a
number of refuse pits containing ashes, broken ceramic vessels and
other artifacts dug directly into the last Canaanite level, and a
small shrine. These remains seem to indicate that a semi-nomadic
population inhabited the site either immediately after the Late Bronze |
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Bronze
figurine of a Canaanite nobleman |
| Age
destruction or immediately before the 10th-century reestablishment of
the site; the pottery and other artifacts do not allow for a more
secure dating of this ephemeral occupation. These semi-nomadic people
may have been members of the early Israelite tribes described in the
Books of Joshua and Judges in the Hebrew Bible, although the
relationship between the destroyers of the Late Bronze Age city and
the Iron Age I inhabitants of Hazor is still not completely
understood. |
One of the most controversial issues in biblical archaeology in recent years
concerns the 10th century BCE and the archaeological evidence for the
Israelite monarchy as described in the Hebrew Bible. Yadin first suggested
that the nearly-identical six-chambered gates and casemate walls unearthed at
Hazor, Megiddo, and Gezer were evidence for King Solomon’s building
activities in the 10th century BCE, as described in 1 Kings 9:15. Yadin’s
conclusions have been challenged in recent years by biblical scholars
(especially the biblical “revisionists”) who cast doubt on the historicity
of David and Solomon and a few archaeologists who have dated these
fortifications down to the 9th century BCE. The recent excavations at Hazor
have shown definitively, however, that the six-chambered gate and casemate
wall were built in the mid-10th century BCE, along with a large public
building connected to the earliest phase of the casemate wall by a paved
street. The ceramic assemblages found on the floors of this four-phased public
building corroborate a 10th-century date for these constructions. This
massive, well-planned building activity coincides with the accepted date for
King Solomon’s reign, making this ruler of Israel’s United Monarchy the
most likely candidate for the reestablishment of Hazor in Iron Age II (ca.
1000-732 BCE).
The Israelite city reached its height of prosperity during the 9th century
BCE, perhaps during the reign of King Ahab of Israel. The population of Hazor
more than doubled in size, and a number of large public buildings were
constructed at the site along with an impressive water system. The city fell
into decline in the 8th century under the threat of the Assyrian kings and
Israel’s other enemies, and Israelite Hazor was finally destroyed in 732 BCE
by the Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III (2 Kings 15: 29-30). Although most of
the population of Hazor was probably deported to Assyria, some Hazorites
remained and continued to live both within the city limits and outside the
ruined city wall. Hazor was never occupied on a large scale after the Assyrian
conquest; the subsequent Assyrian, Persian, and Hellenistic settlement of the
site was limited mainly to defensive structures.
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As one of the largest and most important Bronze and Iron Age sites in
the region, Hazor has the potential to answer a number of longstanding
questions in archaeology and biblical studies and ask new ones.
Analysis and publication of the results of the current excavation
project will contribute a great deal to our understanding of Hazor’s
history and the larger history of the southern Levant during this
important period. |
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Bronze
figurine of a Canaanite 'smiting' god |
Dr.
Jennie R. Ebeling is currently a Lady Davis Fellow at the Institute of
Archaeology at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
For Further Reading:
A useful summary of the results of Yigael Yadin’s
excavations at Hazor can be found in the New Encyclopedia of Archaeological
Excavations in the Holy Land (Jerusalem, 1993). A survey of the results of
the renewed excavations can be found in Biblical Archaeology Review
vols. 25/2-3 (1999) and on Hazor’s website (address given below). Along with
the author’s own knowledge of the results of the current excavations, these
published sources provided much useful information for this article.
Call for Volunteers:
The 13th season of the Selz Foundation Hazor Excavations
in Memory of Yigael Yadin is planned for the summer of 2002. The dig
season will run from June 25 through August 6, and volunteers are invited to
participate for either 3 or 6 weeks. More information and an application for
prospective volunteers can be found at: http://unixware.mscc.huji.ac.il/~hatsor/hazor.html
Photos
are courtesy of Amnon Ben-Tor, Director of the Selz Foundation Hazor
Excavations in Memory of Yigael
Yadin.
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