View Table of Contents

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

View Table of Contents Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research Number 376 Table of Contents November 2016 Articles Nadav Naʾaman: Tel Dor and Iron Age IIA Chronology . 1–6 Max D . Price, Austin C . Hill, Yorke M . Rowan, and Morag M . Kersel: Gazelles, Liminality, and Chalcolithic Ritual: A Case Study from Marj Rabba, Israel . 7–27 Ruth Eve Jackson-Tal: Glass Vessel Use in Time of Conflict: The Evidence from the Bar Kokhba Refuge Caves in Judaea, Israel (135/136 c .e .) . 29–62 Andrew Burlingame: Line Five of the Amman Citadel Inscription: History of Interpretation and a New Proposal . 63–82 Chad Spigel: Debating Ancient Synagogue Dating: The Implications of Deteriorating Data . 83–100 Jennifer H . Ramsay and S . Thomas Parker: A Diachronic Look at the Agricultural Economy at the Red Sea Port of Aila: An Archaeobotanical Case for Hinterland Production in Arid Environments . 101–120 Serdar Yalçın: Men, Women, Eunuchs, Etc .: Visualities of Gendered Identities in Kassite Babylonian Seals (ca . 1470–1155 b .c .) . 121–150 Anat Cohen-Weinberger and Achim Lichtenberger: Late Roman Workshops of Beit Nattif Figurines: Petrography, Typology, and Style . 151–168 Erez Ben-Yosef: Back to Solomon’s Era: Results of the First Excavations at “Slaves’ Hill” (Site 34, Timna, Israel) . 169–198 Nicholas Hudson: A Hellenistic Household Ceramic Assemblage from Tell el-Timai (Thmuis), Egypt: A Contextual View . 199–244 Book Reviews Gideon Avni: The Byzantine–Islamic Transition in Palestine: An Archaeological Approach (Donald Whitcomb) . 245–246 Bernard Mulholland: The Early Byzantine Christian Church: An Archaeological Re- Assessment of Forty-Seven Early Byzantine Basilical Church Excavations Primarily in Israel and Jordan, and Their Historical and Liturgical Context (Zbigniew T . Fiema) . 246–249 Olivier P . Nieuwenhuyse, Reinhard Bernbeck, Peter M . M . G . Akkermans, and Jana Rogasch, eds .: Interpreting the Late Neolithic of Upper Mesopotamia (Michael Rosenberg) 249–251.
Recommended publications
  • Constructing God's Community: Umayyad Religious Monumentation
    Constructing God’s Community: Umayyad Religious Monumentation in Bilad al-Sham, 640-743 CE Nissim Lebovits Senior Honors Thesis in the Department of History Vanderbilt University 20 April 2020 Contents Maps 2 Note on Conventions 6 Acknowledgements 8 Chronology 9 Glossary 10 Introduction 12 Chapter One 21 Chapter Two 45 Chapter Three 74 Chapter Four 92 ​ Conclusion 116 Figures 121 Works Cited 191 1 Maps Map 1: Bilad al-Sham, ca. 9th Century CE. “Map of Islamic Syria and its Provinces”, last modified 27 December 2013, accessed April 19, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilad_al-Sham#/media/File:Syria_in_the_9th_century.svg. ​ ​ 2 Map 2: Umayyad Bilad al-Sham, early 8th century CE. Khaled Yahya Blankinship, The End of the ​ Jihad State: The Reign of Hisham Ibn ʿAbd al-Malik and the Collapse of the Umayyads (Albany: ​ State University of New York Press, 1994), 240. 3 Map 3: The approximate borders of the eastern portion of the Umayyad caliphate, ca. 724 CE. Blankinship, The End of the Jihad State, 238. ​ 4 Map 4: Ghassanid buildings and inscriptions in Bilad al-Sham prior to the Muslim conquest. Heinz Gaube, “The Syrian desert castles: some economic and political perspectives on their genesis,” trans. Goldbloom, in The ​ Articulation of Early Islamic State Structures, ed. Fred Donner (Burlington: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2012) ​ 352. 5 Note on Conventions Because this thesis addresses itself to a non-specialist audience, certain accommodations have been made. Dates are based on the Julian, rather than Islamic, calendar. All dates referenced are in the Common Era (CE) unless otherwise specified. Transliteration follows the system of the International Journal of Middle East Studies (IJMES), including the recommended ​ ​ ​ ​ exceptions.
    [Show full text]
  • Palaces of the Early Islamic Caliphates
    PART 2 PALACES OF THE EARLY ISLAMIC CALIPHATES (SEVENTH-TENTH CENTURIES) UMAYYAD PALACES RECONSIDERED BY OLEG GRABAR 5 THE LATEST, MOST COMPLETE, AND MOST AUTHORITATIVE Islamic foundations or ornamental inscriptions. survey of early Islamic architecture-Allan's re- For Qusayr Amra, as we shall see shortly, there is working of Creswell's standard history-contains a valid presumption for an Umayyad dynastic seventeen partly documented buildings datable patronage on the basis of the paintings decorat- between 690 and 750, the main decades of Umay- ing the monument. As to Mshatta, it is primarily yad rule, and fitting into the general category of its inordinate size and its peculiar decoration that palaces. It is a loose category including nearly all make it reasonable to assume that only princes, foundations with living accommodations for and in all likelihood ruling princes, had access to which a reasonable assumption can be made of the funds and personnel necessary for its plan- sponsorship or use by the state (a daral-imara for ning and construction, and for a completion instance), by the ruling dynasty, or by members of which never took place.6 the Arabian aristocracy associated with the Umay- In short, we have no direct knowledge of these yads.1 buildings as palaces built for ruling Umayyad Out of these seventeen buildings, five-al-Mu- princes, and I shall return in my conclusion to the waqqar, Rusafa, Qastal, Qasr al-Tuba, and Tulul hypotheses which can be derived from this appar- al-Sha'iba-are too poorly known or too poorly ent absence of clearly cut, written or archaeolog- preserved to allow for significant conclusions,2 ical, external labels.
    [Show full text]
  • History and Culture.Indd
    History & Culture Table of Contents Map of Jordan 1 L.Tiberius Umm Qays Welcome 2 Irbid Jaber Amman 4 Pella Hemmeh Ramtha er As-Salt HISTORY & CULTURE12 ITINERARIES Ajlun Mafraq Madaba 14 dan Riv Jerash Deir 'Alla Umm al-Jimal 1 Day Tour Options: Jor Umm Ar-Rasas1. Jerash, Ajlun 16 ey Salt Qasr Al Hallabat Mount Nebo2. Amman (City Tour) 17 all Zarqa Marka 3. Madaba, Mount Nebo, Bethany Beyond the Jordan V dan Jordan Valley & The Dead Sea 18 Jor Amman Iraq al-Amir Qusayr Amra Azraq Karak 20 Bethany Beyond The Jordan Mt. Nebo Qasr Al Mushatta 3 Day Itinerary: Dead Sea Spas Queen Alia Qasr Al Kharrana Petra 22 Madaba International Day 1. Amman, Jerash, Madaba and Dead Sea - Overnight in Ammana Airport e Hammamat Ma’in Aqaba Day 2. Petra - Overnight in26 Little Petra S d Dhiban a Umm Ar-Rasas Jerash Day 3. Karak, Madaba and30 Mount Nebo - Overnight in Ammane D Ajlun 36 5 Day Itinerary: Umm Al-Jimal 38 Qatraneh Day 1. Amman, Jerash, Ajlun - Overnight in Amman Karak Pella 39 Mu'ta Day 2. Madaba, Mount Nebo, Karak - Overnight at PetraAl Mazar aj-Janubi Umm QaysDay 3. Petra - Overnight at40 Petra Shawbak Day 4. Wadi Rum - Overnight42 Dead Sea Tafileh Day 5. Bethany Beyond The Jordan MAP LEGEND Desert Umayyad Castles 44 History & Culture Itineraries 49 Historical Site Shawbak Highway Castle Desert Wadi Musa Petra Religious Site Ma'an Airport Ras an-Naqab Road For further information please contact: Highway Jordan Tourism Board: Tel: +962 6 5678444. It is open daily (08:00- Railway 16:00) except Fridays.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 and 2019 Seasons Volume 2 2020
    2018 and 2019 Volume 2 Seasons 2020 Archaeology in Jordan 2: 2018 and 2019 Seasons Pearce Paul Creasman, John D. M. Green, and China Shelton, editors © 2020 by ACOR ACOR ACOR 209 Commerce Street PO Box 2470 Alexandria, VA 22314-2909 Amman 11181 USA Jordan publications.acorjordan.org/aij Original design by Jawad Hijazi, original layout by Starling Carter Amended and typeset by Noreen Doyle Arabic site and project names compiled by Samya Kafafi Cover image: Khirbet al-Batrawy (Zarqa): General view of the northern multiple fortification line in Area B north at the end of the 14th season (2018) of excavations and restorations, seen from the northeast. © Rome “La Sapienza” University Expedition to Palestine & Jordan. Archaeology in Jordan is an open access (OA) online publication by ACOR. All the original reports published in this journal are free to access immediately from the time of publication. We do not charge fees for any reader to download articles for their own scholarly or educational use. Archaeology in Jordan operates under the Creative Commons Licence CC-BY-NC-ND. This allows for the reproduction of articles, free of charge, for non-commercial use only and with the appropriate citation information. All authors publishing with Archaeology in Jordan accept these as the terms of publication. Please contact individual authors for further information on their contributions or for images under copyright or requiring additional permissions. Contents Map of Sites and Projects vi Introduction 1 Mafraq Badia Epigraphic Survey 2 Eastern Badia
    [Show full text]
  • Living on the Edge of Empire: Edomite Households in the First Millennium B.C.E
    Living on the Edge of Empire: Edomite Households in the First Millennium B.C.E. By Stephanie Hope Brown A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Near Eastern Studies in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Benjamin Porter, Chair Professor Christine Hastorf Professor Ronald Hendel Doctor Laurie Pearce Summer 2018 Copyright © 2018 Stephanie Hope Brown All rights reserved Abstract Living on the Edge of Empire: Edomite Households in the First Millennium B.C.E. by Stephanie Hope Brown Doctor of Philosophy in Near Eastern Studies University of California, Berkeley Professor Benjamin Porter, Chair This dissertation explores the relationship between ancient empires and their peripheries. Due to the uneven distribution of written sources in the ancient world, the narratives describing this relationship are almost always written from the perspective of the imperial core. By ignoring the perspectives of groups living within imperial peripheries, this dissertation argues that these narratives omit a crucial element of the core-periphery relationship. Two such core-periphery relationships existed during the first millennium B.C.E. between the Neo-Assyrian and Neo- Babylonian Empires and the polity of Edom (located in present-day southwest Jordan). As with other core-periphery relationships in the ancient world, scholars have largely relied on sources produced by the imperial cores of the Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian Empires in order to understand their respective relationships with Edom, ignoring the perspectives and agency of conquered groups living in Edom. This dissertation uses a tripartite approach to explore the core-periphery relationships between Edom and the Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian Empires.
    [Show full text]
  • Heritage Stakeholders Join Forces to Preserve Archaeological Artifacts
    Heritage stakeholders join forces to preserve archaeological artifacts jordantimes.com /news/local/heritage-stakeholders-join-forces-preserve-archaeological-artifacts 11.5.2017 AMMAN — With the aim of preserving archaeological artifacts at the Jordan Archaeological Museum located at the Amman Citadel, the German Protestant Institute of Archaeology (GPIA), the Department of Antiquities (DoA) and the Gerda Henkel Foundation (GHF) joined forces in the project “Protection of Cultural Heritage in Jordan”, according to stakeholders. In January this year, the four-year project was finalised between the GPIA, the DoA and the GHF, with the later providing the funding for the project. The official launching was marked on Monday at GPIA in the presence of Minister of Culture Nabih Shuqum, representatives of these institutions, and scholars. DoA Director Munthir Jimhawi at the time noted that “dissemination of ideas” between Jordanian and international institutions is vital to overcome numerous hurdles. Jimhawi cited that Jordan has around 1,000 000 archaeological sites while archaeological surveys and excavations produced millions of finds. “Facing these problems, the DoA recently founded the initiative for the management and protection of museum inventories in Jordan, in cooperation with the GPIA and the GHF,” said Jutta Haser, the project manager at the GPIA. The current political instability in the region, which affects cultural heritage in general, “makes risk management and evacuation plans of the utmost importance”, the scholar emphasised. She underlined the three main objectives of the project: management of the museum facilities and documentation of finds, establishment of a risk-preparedness plan and training for the DoA staff. The Jordan Archaeological Museum at the Amman Citadel will serve as a pilot model, the scholar continued, stressing that the project will be conducted through digitisation and inventory of objects “as well as the installation of cameras and both internal and external alarm systems”.
    [Show full text]
  • The Reality of Tourist Sites Management in Jordan and Its Obstacles
    International Journal of Business and Management Invention ISSN (Online): 2319 – 8028, ISSN (Print): 2319 – 801X www.ijbmi.org || Volume 5 Issue 9 || September. 2016 || PP—41-53 The Reality of Tourist Sites Management in Jordan and Its Obstacles Dr. Mashael Saqer AL Khasawneh Director of Irbid Tourism Directorate, Ministry of Tourism, Jordan ABSTRACT: This study aimed to identify the tourist sites across the Kingdom of Jordan as they gain high valued revenues to the country if they are invested in the right way depending on planned strategies. The study also unveiled the most important obstacles in the face of the Ministry of Tourism and Antiques in the process of managing different tourist sites. The study sample consists of managers of directorates of the Ministry of Tourism and Antiques in all over the Kingdom and some other managers working in the center of the ministry. The study sample used a comprehensive to all tourist sites from (32) decision-makers who are directly responsible of managing and developing the tourist sites. The study used the qualitative approach to come up with results, and it used two tools in data collecting which are a questionnaire with open questions and face to face or call interviews. The study comes with the following findings: 1. The nature of performance, management and planning in the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities is baseless, in other words, it will be passed away by ending manager's mission, after that, you notice that such nature is subjugated to the worker's whims. 2. Promoting tourist sites in Jordan is not only the responsibility of the Ministry of Tourism, but also linked to a campaign of Jordan tourism, consequently, that leads to duplication of performance and dispersion of efforts.
    [Show full text]
  • Scienze Dell'antichità 23.3 (2017), Pp
    in: Scienze dell'Antichità 23.3 (2017), pp. 3-30, tav. I a p. 633 LORENZO NIGRO BEHEADED ANCESTORS. OF SKULLS AND STATUES IN PRE-POTTERY NEOLITHIC JERICHO INTRODUCTION One of the most striking features of prehistoric Jericho (Tell es-Sultan, Palestine) are 45 hu- man skulls retrieved in Pre-Pottery1 Neolithic layers by Kathleen M. Kenyon during the second British Expedition at the site, between 1952 and 19582. Pre-Pottery Neolithic human remains had already been discovered by John Garstang3 during the first British Expedition of 1930-364. Garstang also retrieved two caches of plaster statues, which, with a bust found by Kenyon in the same area5, represent the last development of the same process of images making started with skulls separated burials. Both phenomena can be fruitfully set into the long duration panorama of the transition from foraging to farming in Southern Levant6. Since their discovery, the attention of scholars and public was focused on the most striking plastered skulls/crania (twelve specimens + two only painted) found in Middle PPNB layers, al- though the practice of skulls separation started earlier7, and Kenyon had also found 26 separated skulls/crania in previous PPNA and Early PPNB strata (§ 2.)8. Jericho skulls (§ 3.) still represent almost half of all known plain and modeled skulls found in the Levant (Fig. 1)9. Hereby, a synthesis of finds is presented showing the development of this custom between PPNA and PPNB at Jericho10, and focusing on the finding contexts of these separated skulls/cra- 1 At Jericho, I would prefer to label this period “Aceramic” as it does not represent a premise of the following “Pottery Neolithic”, which, from many respects, marks a regression in cultural and technological achievements, except for the introduction of pottery.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 ASOR Program Book.Pdf
    November 16–19 | San Antonio, Texas Welcome to ASOR’s 2016 Annual Meeting 2–5 History and Mission of ASOR 6–7 Meeting Highlights 7 Program-at-a-Glance 10–12 Schedule of Business Meetings, Receptions, and Events 13–15 Academic Program 18–45 Projects on Parade Poster Session 46–47 Contents Hotel and General Information 49 Members’ Meeting Agenda 50 of ASOR’s Legacy Circle 50 2016 Sponsors and Exhibitors 51–56 Ten Things To Do in San Antonio 58 Looking ahead to the 2017 Annual Meeting 59 Table Table Fiscal Year 2016 Honor Roll 60–61 Annual Fund Pledge Card 62 Excavation Grants and Fellowships Awarded 63 2015 Honors and Awards 65 ACOR Jordanian Travel Scholarships 66 2017 Annual Meeting Registration Form 67 2017 ASOR Membership Form 68 ASOR Journals 69 Institutional Members 72 ASOR Staff 73 ASOR Board of Trustees 74 ASOR Committees 75–77 Overseas Centers 78 Paper Abstracts 80–182 Poster Abstracts 182–190 Index of Sessions 191–193 Index of Presenters 194–198 Notes and Contacts 199–204 La Cantera Resort and Spa, Floor Plan 206–207 ISBN 978-0-89757-096-1 ASOR PROGRAM GUIDE 2016 | 1 American Schools of Oriental Research | 2016 Annual Meeting Welcome from ASOR President, Susan Ackerman Welcome to ASOR’s 2016 Annual Meeting! The Program Committee has once more done an incredible job, putting together a rich and vibrant program of sessions and posters, covering all the major regions of the Near East and wider Mediterranean from earliest times through the Islamic period. I am especially pleased that some of our newer sessions—for example, on the archaeology of the Kurdistan region of Iraq and on the archaeology of monasticism—continue to thrive, and I am also pleased that our program demonstrates more and more ASOR’s expanded geographical and cultural reach.
    [Show full text]
  • Jordan Umayyad Route Jordan Umayyad Route
    JORDAN UMAYYAD ROUTE JORDAN UMAYYAD ROUTE Umayyad Route Jordan. Umayyad Route 1st Edition, 2016 Edition Index Andalusian Public Foundation El legado andalusí Texts Introduction Talal Akasheh, Naif Haddad, Leen Fakhoury, Fardous Ajlouni, Mohammad Debajah, Jordan Tourism Board Photographs Umayyad Project (ENPI) 7 Jordan Tourism Board - Fundación Pública Andaluza El legado andalusí - Daniele Grammatico - FOTOGRAFIAJO Inc. - Mohammad Anabtawi - Hadeel Alramahi -Shutterstock Jordan and the Umayyads 8 Food Photographs are curtsy of Kababji Restaurant (Amman) Maps of the Umayyad Route 20 Graphic Design, layout and maps Gastronomy in Jordan 24 José Manuel Vargas Diosayuda. Diseño Editorial Free distribution Itineraries ISBN 978-84-96395-81-7 Irbid 36 Legal Deposit Number Gr- 1513 - 2016 Jerash 50 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, nor transmitted or recorded by any information Amman 66 retrieval system in any form or by any means, either mechanical, photochemical, electronic, photocopying or otherwise without written permission of the editors. Zarqa 86 © of the edition: Andalusian Public Foundation El legado andalusí Azraq 98 © of texts: their authors Madaba 114 © of pictures: their authors Karak 140 The Umayyad Route is a project funded by the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI) and led by the Ma‘an 150 Andalusian Public Foundation El legado andalusí. It gathers a network of partners in seven countries in the Mediterranean region: Spain, Portugal, Italy, Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon and Jordan. This publication has been produced with the financial assistance of the European Union under the ENPI CBC Mediterranean Sea Basin Programme. The contents of this document are the sole responsibility of the beneficiary (Fundación Pública Bibliography 160 Andaluza El legado andalusí) and their Jordanian partners [Cultural Technologies for Heritage and Conservation (CULTECH)] and can under no circumstances be regarded as reflecting the position of the European Union or of the Programme’s management structures.
    [Show full text]
  • Inscribed Administrative Material Culture and the Development of the Mu Ayyad State in Syria- Palestine 661-750 Ce Tareq Ramadan Wayne State University
    Wayne State University Wayne State University Dissertations 1-1-2017 Inscribed Administrative Material Culture And The Development Of The mU ayyad State In Syria- Palestine 661-750 Ce Tareq Ramadan Wayne State University, Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/oa_dissertations Part of the Ancient History, Greek and Roman through Late Antiquity Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Ramadan, Tareq, "Inscribed Administrative Material Culture And The eD velopment Of The mU ayyad State In Syria-Palestine 661-750 Ce" (2017). Wayne State University Dissertations. 1860. https://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/oa_dissertations/1860 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@WayneState. It has been accepted for inclusion in Wayne State University Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@WayneState. INSCRIBED ADMINISTRATIVE MATERIAL CULTURE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE UMAYYAD STATE IN SYRIA-PALESTINE 661-750 CE by TAREQ RAMADAN DISSERTATION Submitted to the Graduate School of Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY 2017 MAJOR: ANTHROPOLOGY Approved By: ________________________________ Advisor Date __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ __________________________________ © COPYRIGHT BY TAREQ RAMADAN 2017 All Rights Reserved DEDICATION This dissertation is dedicated to the honor and memory of some my very dear friends and mentors who passed away before they could witness the completion of my work and who would have been proud. I miss all of them, dearly and I wish they were all here, today. I will forever be there student. They were all beacons of light and impacted my life in ways that are hard to put into words.
    [Show full text]
  • Jordan Architecture, Architectural Heritage, Architectural Identity, Architectural Type
    Architecture Research 2016, 6(1): 1-12 DOI: 10.5923/j.arch.20160601.01 The Relationship between Heritage Resources and Contemporary Architecture of Jordan Abdelmajeed Rjoub Department of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, al-Albayt University, al-Mafraq, Jordan Abstract This Research concerned in studying the conditions of the emergence and development of Jordanian architecture and the extent of its communication with the architectural heritage resources of civilizations that have passed on Jordan. The main aim of research is to identify the heritage resources that Jordanian architects contacted with, and to classify the architectural styles and design relations which he used to achieve that communication. The author adopted descriptive and analytical methods to analyse the selected projects as models of contemporary architecture. The research found out that Jordanian architects preferred to communicate with Roman, Nabataea, Islamic and local heritage resources by expressing them at planning and architectural levels, and variations of design relationships. Research recommends increasing more attention to communicate with heritage because of its role in creating the original identity of Jordanian architecture. Keywords Jordan architecture, Architectural heritage, Architectural identity, Architectural type developments in technology and multimedia. The idea of this 1. Introduction research deals with the conditions of emergence of modern architecture in Jordan and its relation with the heritage Jordan in the last years of twentieth century
    [Show full text]