2007 - Campaign Spring The Spring campaign 2007 took place from the 3rd March - 10th April and involved a team of 31 from the Biblical Archaeological Institute Wuppertal and the GPIA in Amman and Jerusalem: archaeologists, theologians, an architect and an ever-increasing number of scientists. They were supported by 22 volunteers from the Thomas Morus-Akademie in Bensberg near Cologne and 10 Jordanian workers. We are very grateful to all participants for their tremendous work and good temper, despite the cold, windy and, on a couple of days, rainy weather. They are the ones who made the campaign, with all its significant discoveries and valuable finds, possible. The most important initial move in
Area I was to determine as far as possible the extent and form of the impressive Iron Age I house that was discovered in the southern part of the area in 2006. To this purpose, two squares were opened to the east, and K. Vriezen's earlier "sondage" to the south was incorporated in the form of two squares. A well-preserved courtyard house was discovered in the process. A second entrance and an unusually thick internal wall point to an interpretation of the building as a double house. Work will continue on the southern part in summer, which will almost certainly bring new results. The eastern part will be continued in spring 2008.
The Iron Age I (12th–11th century BC) settlement displays a very clear change of culture. We did not find fortifications for this period. It is obvious that the inhabitants of the Early Iron Age did not create their own settlement pattern, but used the walls of their Late Bronze Age predecessors. The architecture is very distinctive. In the northern part of the excavation area, the inhabitants of the tall dug several large pits for grain storage, built small walls for stables with some installations and joined simple huts to older walls. In the southern part of Area I, an exceptionally large storage pit made of mud was found in the centre of the area. In addition, there is one large building with carefully constructed walls, made of two or more rows of undressed stones.
The main focus of the campaign in Area I ws, however, the the Late Bronze Age stratum. Beside the impressive casemate wall (in yellow on the drawing) with its tower, sanctuary and gate to the south (in green), internal buildings of the settlement were also discovered and excavated. The skilfully paved inner yard of courtyard house I (in blue) and its stone-covered sewers (in purple) were also uncovered. Courtyard house II consisted of 4 rooms assembled around a central yard and a portico in the south supported by a column. House III displays excellent stonework. It was protected to the north by the slope of the tall, which at this point is a high stone cliff, which explains why this is also the point at which the casemate wall ends. An area of roughly 2.5mx2.5m inside the the house contained 24 cylinder seals, an intact bronze pendant with a figurative image and other valuable finds.
Work will continue on
Tall Zira´a from the 1st to the 16th August 2007 in the context of the GPIA Course Programme.
Last updated: 2007
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