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  • 2020-2024  (2)
  • Gaza (Gaza Strip) Antiquities  (1)
  • Inscriptions, Aramaic  (1)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Palestine Exploration Quarterly
    Angaben zur Quelle: 155,4 (2023) 275-288
    Keywords: Hazael, ; Copper industry and trade History ; Safi, Tell es- (Israel) ; Arava (Israel) ; Gaza (Gaza Strip) Antiquities ; Cyprus Antiquities
    Abstract: Recent research has proposed that the Philistine city of Tell es-Safi/Gath was centrally involved in the copper trade from Faynan and Timna in the Wadi Arabah, and that the end of Arabah copper production in the second half of the 9th century bce should be attributed to the destruction of Tell es-Safi/Gath by Hazael, after which Cyprus replaced the Arabah as the major source for Levantine copper. This paper argues that the assumptions underlying this interpretation are not supported by the evidence. Gaza, not Tell es-Safi/Gath, was the main terminus for the Arabah copper trade; the termination of copper production in the Arabah was not an abrupt end caused by external intervention, but the result of a long process of decrease in administrative control and abandonment of copper production sites from the early 9th century bce; Hazael’s motivation in destroying Tell es-Safi/Gath was more likely owing to its size and dominance of the region, and its economic power through olive oil production; Cypriot copper production had already intensified in the late 10th and first half of the 9th centuries bce, while Arabah copper production was still at its peak. An alternative and more complex explanation for the end of copper production in the Arabah emerges from this re-evaluation. The Arabah industry may have lacked the leadership and administrative infrastructure to compete with the renewed Cypriot trade. It continued to produce copper and probably traded it to established markets, but finally petered out by the end of the 9th century bce.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: Hebrew Bible and Ancient Israel
    Angaben zur Quelle: 10,3 (2021) 243-256
    Keywords: Hazael, ; Inscriptions, Aramaic ; Monuments ; Dan (Extinct city) (Israel) Antiquities
    Abstract: The Tel Dan Stele is an essential piece of evidence for reconstructing Iron Age Levantine monumentality. Not only can we reasonably reconstruct the circumstances of the stele's production, the circumstances of its discovery also provide important clues as to its later reception. In particular, it is clear from the stele's broken state and reuse at Dan that it was utilized in counter-monumental practice. The stele was intentionally destroyed when the Israelites conquered Dan and its pieces were reused as building materials in the city's gateway. Both the stele's destruction and its reuse in the gate's reconstruction were patterned performances, allowing the Israelites to perform their defeat of Aram before the Danites. These actions constituted a ritual forgetting of the ideology formerly afforded by the stele: the dominance of Hazael and the kingdom of Aram-Damascus. Thus embedded in counter-monumental practice, the stele was transformed into an ephemeral symbol of Aram-Damascus' defeat.
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