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By
Rami
Arav
University of Nebraska, Omaha
May 2004
Due to the political
situation, the Bethsaida excavation season was shorter than usual, it
began on July 1st and ended on July 18th 2003.
Twenty seven people participated in the expedition and they include the
following members: Dr. Rami Arav (Director of the excavations,
University of Nebraska at Omaha), co-directors: Dr. Nicolae Roddy
(coordinator for the 2003 season, Creighton University), Dr. Carl Savage
(Drew University), Dr. Richard Freund (Hartford University), Dr. Mary
XXXX (Drake University), Prof. H.-W. Kuhn and Dr. Regina (University of
Munich Germany), Staff member were: Steve Reynolds (Archivist,
University of Omaha at Nebraska), Christine Dalenta (Photography,
Hartford University), Paul Bauman (Geophysics, Canada), Morton Fine
(Land Surveyor, Hartford CT), students and volunteers.
Excavations Results
The purpose of this
season was to clarify and retrieve more information on several issues
that were unsolved during past seasons and were needed for completion
the final report on Stratum 5 for Bethsaida volume 4. This season of
excavation was all taken place in Area A (the city gate area). The
following issues were addressed:
- The connection between the bastion, of Stratum 6, and the Four Chambers
inner city gate, of Stratum 5.
- The wall that connects the Outer City Gate and the bastion (W855).
- Sounding in Chamber 4 in order to check possible walls indicated
by Ground Penetration Radar.
- To retrieve more information about the occupation layer that dates
to the Roman period.
The following is a detailed description and preliminary
conclusions, on the excavations listed according to the points above:
1. The bastion, The bastion is located at the
southeast corner of the gate complex and protrudes to the east.
It measures 6 X 6 meters and was built when the city was founded
(Stratum 6) and served also during the next occupation level
(Stratum 5). It was thoroughly destroyed during the Assyrian
conquest in 732 BCE that no remains of Stratum 5 were left of
the bastion. The conquerors did not leave anything above the
elevation of -169.70 which is the lowest spot of the preserved
floor level of Stratum 5. Directly above the ruins of Stratum 6,
there were the remains of Stratum 2, which date to the Roman
period. In other words, the eastern section of the gate complex
were all destroyed below Stratum 5 and the next occupation level
– Stratum 2 – was found directly superimposed on it.
2.
Locus 1525 – the Iron Age City Wall and the Roman
Period City Wall. Since there were no remains left of
Stratum 5 bastion, and the eastern gate area was all removed,
it was important to find out whether there are any remains
preserved that connect the bastion to Stratum 5
structures, that would indicate that the bastion was also
functioning during Stratum 5. The closest element of Stratum 5
to the bastion is the southern
tower of the Four Chamber City Gate. In order to find the
connection between the bastion and the southern tower of the
Four Chamber city gate, the wall that connects the two
elements, W 400, was excavated.
Segments of this wall had been excavated in the past few years
but no connection to the southern wall was established. The area
selected for the excavation is located in square N56 and was
designated as Locus 1525. The debris from the top of the W400
was removed and the northern face of W400 was cleaned.
W400 was found to continue and connect the southern tower of the
Four Chambers city gate and the bastion. This discovery is
important because it shows that although
constructed in Stratum 6, the bastion was part of the city gate
complex during the existence of the gate in Stratum 5. What
became also apparent in the dig of this locus is that W336,
which is situated on W400 and
was thought to be Iron Age because it looks
parallel to W328,
(the western
wing
of the outer
city gate of Stratum 5
located in square
N53) is
in fact the only remnant
of W400 of
Stratum 5. During the
Roman period (Stratum 2)
this wall was altered and was made into
a thin
wall in north south
direction , parallel
to the city wall.
During the excavation of Locus 1525, wall W856 emerged. It is
a north-south wall that measures 1.5 meters and was overlapping
W400. Its thickness and solid construction indicate that it is
part of Roman city wall, presumably built by Philip Herod in the
first half of the first century CE. Segments of the Roman period
city wall had been excavated already in the past. During the
1994 season a long segment of this wall was excavated on top of
the Iron Age city wall in Area A south in squares K 58, 59. The
wall collapsed perhaps in the third century CE and debris of the
collapse of W856 were found scattered over the area east of the
wall in squares N,O 55,56. The layout of the debris indicates
that it is a result of a sever earthquake.
The pottery from Locus 1525 contains Iron age pottery and
Roman first and second century CE pottery among which are Roman
casseroles, globular cooking pots with triple ridged rims
usually dating to the first half of the first century CE,
Galilean bowls of the early type and Roman glass dating from the
end of the first century CE to the early second century CE.
3. Bastion - Outer City Gate connections. The distance
between the Bastion and the Outer City Gate is fifteen meters.
Past excavations had shown that a wall connects the bastion
and the Outer City Gate. Segments of this wall were found in
squares O 54, 56 and were numbered as W855. This wall, of
undetermined width, was built with large boulders and perhaps
extends over the entire length. Thus far only a meter and a half
of its width has been excavated. The area west of this wall
constituted the Inner Courtyard which is situated between the
Outer City Gate and the Inner City Gate. Since Stratum 5 was not
preserved in O squares (53-57), all the remains belong to
Stratum 6. It consists of the followings elements: 1) the
eastern part of the Outer City Gate. 2) the Inner Courtyard
built of paved floor with coble stones of small and medium size
stones covered with a layer of white plaster. 3) A debris layer
of about 30 cm separates between this floor and an upper clay
floor, and about one meter of debris separates this from the
floor of Stratum 5. Excavation in this courtyard was divided
into several loci. Locus 1508 (square O,54) revealed
mixed pottery of Roman and Iron Age and testifies an occupation
from the Roman period. Locus 1526 (square O, 54) has a
similar mixture of Iron Age and Roman period shards. Locus
1527 (square O, 54) is a probe to determine whether there is
a postern stairway leading out of the city, presumably to the
spring located at the bottom of the ravine approximately 50
meters southeast of the city gate. The fill above the Iron Age
wall was all made of Roman period material including shards of
pottery and glass. At the bottom of this locus the excavation
encountered a well built blocking of a possible postern. This
blocking dates from the Iron Age and perhaps was added not long
before the city was conquered. Wall W855 seemed to end about
1.25 away from the Outer City Gate (W403) and continues east.
Next season excavations will check this area to reveal more
details on this possibility. Alongside the western face of W855
there was found a bench incorporated in the wall. It was set to
about 25 cm. off the wall. The significance of this discovery
should not be underestimated. This bench is undoubtedly
identified with the seats of the elders of the city mentioned
very often in the Bible (Example: Proverbs 31:23). Philistine
shards of pottery found on the floor of this stratum indicate
that the date of the construction of Stratum 6 is no later than
the mid 10th century BCE. It is noteworthy, therefore
that the date of this establishment goes back to at least to the
mid 10th century BCE.
4. Locus 1528 – Chamber 4 probe, Sounding in Chamber 4
began on July 7th 2003. Previous years Ground
Penetration Radar indicated a possible wall running in east west
direction about 2 meters below the floor of the chamber. Since
the ground plan of Stratum 6 in this area is not yet clear, a
probe of 2.5 by 3.6 meters, was carried out in this area. The
probe revealed two compact dirt floors. The upper one contained
red slip and
burnished ware, clear Early Iron Age II shards and scattered
stones from some debris in this area. Philistine shards were
found on these floors indicating that the construction of the
floors was no later than the middle of the tenth century BCE.
Two foundation trenches of the two Stratum 5 walls were reached
and were found filled with small stones. The foundation trenches
of these walls cut the two floors which indicate that the 4
Chamber gate was built after the floors went out of use, meaning
that the 4 Chamber city gate was a late construction. Noteworthy
the two floors elevations (-169.73 and 170.15), which are about
two meters
above the floor of the Inner Courtyard.
5. Area A, Loci 1529-35, Stratum 2, The Roman period
occupation. These loci are
located in the west of the Iron Age city gate, in squares: H,
54, 53. In general, the occupation in this area is rather poor,
built of stones of various sizes, probably mostly reused from
the Iron Age occupation layers. The walls are not even in their
construction, some are built of one course in width, some in two
and some perhaps more. No define architecture could be observed
although it seems that the walls were built on remains of older
walls. Two
parallel walls were observed in east west direction. Among the
finds there were a few metal objects, one a bronze bell, basalt
grinding square grinding stone, pottery shards, glass and coins.
6. Pottery, pottery shards include casseroles, with
everted rims, globular cooking pots with triple ridge rims,
Galilean bowls and fine ware of the Eastern Terra Sigilatta type
together with one sample of North African Red Ware. These finds
date from the first to the third centuries CE.
7. Coins, Ten coins were discovered at the Area A, of
which one is silver and all the rest are bronze. The silver coin
is a provincial Tetradrachme minted in Antioch at the time of
Philippus Senior (244-249 CE). Two coins date to the end of the
first century CE and beginning of the second and all the others
are third century coins, which would perhaps indicate the date
of this occupation layer. A rare coin of the Emperor Gordianus
III (238-244) minted in Tyre was also found. All coins are from
northern or northwestern mints which indicate ties of Bethsaida
to Provincia Arabia with its capital city at Bostra or to
Antioch. No coins are from any southern or southwestern mints to Bethsaida.
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Statistics of 2003 Coins: |
Excavation Site Map: |
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