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Gezer

Gezer, or Tel Gezer (Hebrew: גֶּזֶר), in Arabic: تل الجزرTell Jezar or Tell el-Jezari is an archaeological site in the foothills of the Judaean Mountains at the border of the Shfela region roughly midway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. It is now an Israeli national park. In the Hebrew Bible, Gezer is associated with Joshua and Solomon.

Gezer
גֶּזֶר
The Gezer High Place with stone monoliths and basin
Shown within Israel
Alternative nameTel Gezer (Heb.), Tell Jezer/Tell el-Jazari (Ar.)
Location Israel
Coordinates31°51′32.4″N 34°55′8.4″E / 31.859000°N 34.919000°E / 31.859000; 34.919000
Grid position142/140 PAL
Site notes
ConditionRuin

The archaeological site of Tel Gezer rises to an elevation of 229 metres (751 ft) above sea-level, and affords a commanding prospect of the plains to the west, north and east.

Gezer became a major fortified Canaanite city-state in the first half of the 2nd millennium BCE. It was later destroyed by fire and rebuilt. The Amarna letters mention kings of Gezer swearing loyalty to the Egyptian pharaoh.[1] Its importance was due in part to the strategic position it held at the crossroads of the ancient coastal trade route linking Egypt with Syria, Anatolia and Mesopotamia, and the road to Jerusalem and Jericho, both important trade routes. In Roman and Byzantine times, the site was sparsely populated. Later, In the modern era, Tel Gezer was the site of the Palestinian village of Abu Shusheh, the residents of which were expelled by Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

Sources edit

Ancient Egyptian sources edit

Gezer is mentioned in the victory stele of Merneptah, dating from the end of the 13th century BCE.[2]: 26 

Biblical conquest under Joshua edit

The biblical story of the Israelite conquest of Canaan under their leader Joshua mentions a certain "king of Gezer" (Joshua 10:33) who had gone to help his countrymen in Lachish, where he met his death. Gezer is listed in the Book of Joshua as one of the cities allotted to the tribe of Ephraim, as well as a Levitical city, one of ten allotted to the Levite children of Kehoth – the Kohathites (Joshua, ch. 21). Eusebius (4th century CE), describing the biblical Gezer of his day, writes:

Gazer [sic]. The lot of Ephraim, set aside for Levites. And Joshua besieged it, killing its king (Josh. 10:33). Solomon also built here (1 Kings 9:15–16). It is now called Gazara, a village of Nikopolis (Emmaus), [which is a place located] 4 milestones from it in the north. The tribe of Ephraim did not expel the foreigners from it (Judges 1:29).[3]

The Egyptian sack of Gezer edit

According to the Hebrew Bible, the only source for this particular event, the Sack of Gezer took place at the beginning of the 10th century BCE,[4] when the city was conquered and burned by an unnamed Egyptian pharaoh, identified by some with Siamun, during his military campaign in Philistia. This anonymous Egyptian pharaoh then gave it to King Solomon as the dowry of his daughter. Solomon then rebuilt Gezer and fortified it.

The Bible states:

This is the account of the forced labor that King Solomon conscripted to build the house of the Lord and his own house, the Millo and the wall of Jerusalem, Hazor, Megiddo, Gezer, Lower Beth-horon, Baalath, Tamar in the wilderness, within the land, as well as all of Solomon’s storage cities, the cities for his chariots, the cities for his cavalry, and whatever Solomon desired to build... (Pharaoh king of Egypt had gone up and captured Gezer and burned it with fire, and had killed the Canaanites who lived in the city, and had given it as dowry to his daughter, Solomon's wife;

— (1 Kings 9:15–16)

Identifying the biblical pharaoh edit

 
The Archaeological ruin of Gezer

The only mention in the Bible of a pharaoh who might be Siamun (ruled 986–967 BCE) is the text from 1 Kings quoted above, and we have no other historical sources that clearly identify what really happened. As shown below, Kenneth Kitchen believes that Siamun conquered Gezer and gave it to Solomon. Others such as Paul S. Ash and Mark W. Chavalas disagree, and in 2001 Chavalas states that "it is impossible to conclude which Egyptian monarch ruled concurrently with David and Solomon".[5] Professor Edward Lipinski argues that Gezer, then unfortified, was destroyed late in the 10th century (and thus not contemporary with Solomon) and that the most likely Pharaoh was Shoshenq I (ruled 943–922 BCE).[6] However, the archaeological evidence recovered at the site indicates that Gezer was previously destroyed in an earlier stratum, around the times of Siamun.[7]

Lindelle C. Webster's excavation team concluded recently that correlation of Stratum IX, in Tel Gezer, with Solomon’s era and Siamun "[is] improbable [as the end] of Tandy Stratum 10A is estimated by [radiocarbon] within the 11th century BCE, contemporary with the 21st Dynasty of Egypt but too early for Solomon by any estimate," and that correlation of Stratum 7 "with Shishak/[Shoshenq I]'s [e]nd boundary, (927–885 BCE, 68.3% hpd), [included in] the biblical date for Shishak’s campaign [d]oes not fit well with current [radiocarbon]-based estimates for [Shoshenq I]."[8] They estimate Shoshenq I's reign within the Stratum 8 destruction of Tel Gezer, which has been radiocarbon dated to the mid-10th century BCE (c. 969-940 BCE with 68.3% hpd, and 991-930 BCE with 95.4% hpd).[8]

Tanis temple relief edit

One fragmentary but well-known surviving triumphal relief scene from the Temple of Amun at Tanis believed to be related to the sack of Gezer depicts an Egyptian pharaoh smiting his enemies with a mace. According to the Egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen, this pharaoh is Siamun.[9] The pharaoh appears here "in typical pose brandishing a mace to strike down prisoners(?) now lost at the right except for two arms and hands, one of which grasps a remarkable double-bladed axe by its socket."[10] The writer observes that this double-bladed axe or 'halberd' has a flared crescent-shaped blade which is close in form to the Aegean-influenced double axe but is quite distinct from the Canaanite double-headed axe, which has a different shape that resembles an X.[11] Thus, Kitchen concludes Siamun's foes were the Philistines, who were descendants of the Aegean-based Sea Peoples and that Siamun was commemorating his recent victory over them at Gezer by depicting himself in a formal battle scene relief at the temple in Tanis. Alternatively, Paul S. Ash had put forward a detailed argument that Siamun's relief portrays a fictitious battle. He points out that in Egyptian reliefs Philistines are never shown holding an axe, and that there is no archaeological evidence for Philistines using axes. He also argues that there is nothing in the relief to connect it with Philistia or the Levant.[12]

 
Canaanite gateway at Tel Gezer flanked by two towers (now in ruin)

Location edit

 
Tell Jezer from the 1871-77 PEF Survey of Palestine, also showing Abu Shusha

Gezer was located on the northern fringe of the Shephelah region, approximately 30 km (19 mi) northwest of Jerusalem. It was strategically situated at the junction of the Via Maris, the international coastal highway, and the highway connecting it with Jerusalem through the valley of Ayalon, or Ajalon. The nearest modern-Israeli settlement to the archaeological site is Karmei Yosef.

Verification of the identification of this site with biblical Gezer comes from a dozen bilingual inscriptions in either Hebrew or Aramaic, and Greek, found engraved on rocks several hundred meters from the tell.[13] These inscriptions from the 1st century BCE read "boundary of Gezer" and "of Alkios" (probably the governor of Gezer at the time). The discovery of these boundary stones near the archaeological site makes it the first biblical city to be positively identified.

Today's archaeological site spans an area of 130 dunams (32 acres), and contains 26 levels of settlement, from the Chalcolithic to the early Roman periods (3500 BCE to 100 CE). Most of the remains date from the Middle and Late Canaanite and the Israelite periods.[14]

History edit

Chalcolithic edit

The first settlement established at Tel Gezer dates to the end of the 4th millennium BCE during the Chalcolithic period, when large caves cut into the rock were used as dwellings.[15]

Early Bronze Age edit

At the beginning of the Early Bronze Age (early 3rd millennium BCE), an unfortified settlement covered the tell. It was destroyed in the middle of the 3rd millennium BCE and subsequently abandoned for several centuries.[15]

Middle Bronze Age edit

In the Middle Bronze Age IIB (MBIIB, first half of the 2nd millennium BCE), Gezer became a major city, well fortified[4] and containing a large cultic site.[16] It may have grown due to MBIIA-sites like Aphek becoming weaker.[citation needed]

 
Ruined tower at Tel Gezer
Fortifications

On the north side of the city, the fortifications consisted of at least two lines of defense surrounding the tell.[17] Some excavators have noted as many as three defensive walls built in different periods: an outer earthen rampart, a central wall and an inner wall.[18] In what remained of the outer rampart, it reached a height of about 5 metres, and was built of compacted alternating layers of chalk and earth covered with plaster.[19] The inner wall measured 4 metres in width and was made of large stone blocks, reinforced with towers.[17][18] The city gate stood near the southwest corner of the wall, was flanked by two towers which protected the wooden doors, a common design for its time.[20] The tell was surrounded by a massive stone wall and towers, protected by a five-meter-high (16 ft) earthen rampart covered with plaster. The wooden city gate, near the southwestern corner of the wall, was fortified by two towers.[20]

Cultic site with massebot

Cultic remains discovered in the northern part of the tell were a row of ten large standing pillars, known as massebot or matsevot, singular masseba/matseva, oriented north–south, the tallest of which was three meters high, with an altar-type structure in the middle, and a large, square, stone basin, probably used for cultic libations. The exact purpose of these megaliths is still debated, but they may have constituted a Canaanite "high place" from the Middle Bronze Age, ca. 1600 BCE, each masseba possibly representing a Canaanite city connected to Gezer by treaties enforced by rituals performed here. Both the number and size of the standing stones confer a unique character to this cultic site.[16] Such massebot are found elsewhere in the country, but those from Gezer massebot are the most impressive examples.[21][22][23] The area was almost completely cleared by Macalister. The remains were re-excavated in 1968.[24] A double cave beneath the high place was shown to be predating it and not connected to it.[citation needed]

Late Bronze Age edit

In the Late Bronze Age (second half of the 2nd millennium BCE) a new city wall, 4 m (13 ft) thick, was erected outside the earlier one.[18] It is a very rare example of Late Bronze Age fortifications in the country, witness for the elevated political status of Gezer in southern Canaan during Egyptian rule.[citation needed]

Thutmosid Period edit



or

ḳꜣḏjr or ḳꜣḏꜣꜣr[25][26]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

The Canaanite city was destroyed in a fire, presumably in the wake of a campaign by the Egyptian pharaoh Thutmose III (ruled 1479–1425 BCE). The oldest known historical reference to the city is to be found on an inscription of conquered sites at Thutmose's temple at Karnak.[25] A destruction layer from this event was found in all excavated areas of the tell.[15]

Amarna Period edit

The Tell Amarna letters, dating from the 14th century BCE, include ten letters from the kings of Gezer swearing loyalty to the Egyptian pharaoh.[27] The city-state of Gezer (named Gazru in Babylonian) was ruled by at least three leaders during the 20-year period covered by the Amarna letters.[4] Discoveries of several pottery vessels, a cache of cylinder seals and a large scarab with the cartouche of Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep III attest to the existence of a city at Gezer's location in the 14th century BCE—one that was apparently destroyed in the next century[28]—and suggest that the city was inhabited by Canaanites with strong ties to Egypt.[29]

In the 14th century BCE, a palace was constructed on the high western part of the tell, the city's acropolis.[citation needed] Archaeologists also discovered remains of what might have been the Egyptian governor's residence from the same period in the northern part of the tell.[citation needed]

Ramesside Period edit

In the late reign of Ramesses II, climate became drier and colder causing turmoil in the Mediterranean from around 1250 BCE, eventually leading to the Late Bronze collapse. The death of Ramesses II caused cities in Canaan to rebel to become independent. Merneptah of Egypt, who succeeded Ramesses II, had to regain control and boasted about his capture of Gezer. A massive fiery destruction seems to support this in excavations done by Prof. Steven Ortiz.[30][31]

Toward the end of the Bronze Age, the city declined and its population diminished.[citation needed]

Iron Age edit

 
The Gezer Calendar tablet, early Iron Age, 10th century BCE, Museum of Archaeology, Istanbul, Turkey

In 12th and 11th centuries BCE, a large building with many rooms and courtyards was situated on the acropolis. Grinding stones and grains of wheat found among the sherds indicate that it was a granary. Local and Philistine vessels attest to a mixed Canaanite/Philistine population.[citation needed] The 10th century BCE seems to have been a period of notable urban development for the city until it became destroyed in the third quarter of that century, probably as a result of Shoshenq I's campaign in Canaan at that time.[32]

Siege of Gezer
Date10th century BCE (biblical account)
Location
Gezer, Israel
Result Egypt takes Gezer, Egyptian victory
Belligerents
Egypt Philistines
Commanders and leaders
Siamun (?) Unknown
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Many killed

Israelite city gate, wall edit

On the southern slope about 200 meters east of the gate from the Middle Bronze Age IIB, there is what is now known as the "Solomon Gate". This area was excavated at the beginning of the 20th century by Macalister, who defined the remains discovered there as a "Maccabean citadel" from the 2nd century BCE, because on one of the stones a curse against Simon was found engraved in Greek (Macalister 1912, vol. I: 209–23; 236–56).

After the discovery of identical gates from the time of King Solomon in Megiddo and Hazor, and following what is told in the Bible about the construction projects of this king in the three cities, Yigael Yadin proved in 1957 that in fact the Hasmonean citadel was no other than a gate from the days of Solomon.[33][34][35] In the excavations of the 1960s, the entire gate was revealed. It is identical in plan and size to the other two mentioned and is connected by a casemate wall.[36] On both sides of the passageway within the gate are four pairs of pillars and three pairs of cell-like chambers. In front of the entranceway stood two towers. At the gate, a construction of hewn-stone in the style typical of the days of Solomon is evident.[36] The Solomon Gate has since been reinterpreted by some as dating from several centuries later, by virtue of the fact that the gate was rebuilt,[37] although recent radiocarbon tests support an early date for the strata at the site.[8]

Tiglath-Pileser III and the Neo-Assyrian period edit

The Neo-Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III put Gezer under siege between the years 734 and 732 BCE.[38] The city was probably captured by the Assyrians at the end of the campaign of Tiglath-Pileser III to Canaan.[39] At any rate, a fiery destruction so severe befell the city at this time, insofar that it reduced the upper two courses of stone in the inner casemate wall to powdery lime.[40] A reference to Gezer's destruction appears in a cuneiform relief from the 8th-century BCE royal palace of Tiglath-Pileser III at Nimrud.[40] The city inscribed on the relief is called 'Gazru'.[15]

Hellenistic period edit

Stamped Rhodian amphora handles, a Tyrian lead weight of the Tanit series, and a didrachm of Ptolemy VI found in situ suggest a Hellenistic occupation from the end of the 3rd century BCE to 142 BCE.[41]

According to the book of 1 Maccabees, Simon Thassi captured Gazara and expelled the population during the Maccabean Revolt. He then brought in new settlers of devout Jews and fortified it, making it part of the Hasmonean kingdom.[42] Gezer became known as Gazara in the Hellenistic period and became an important city for the Hasmonean rulers.[43][44][45]

Notwithstanding Simon's capture of Gezer in circa 142 BCE, Josephus alludes to the fact that Gezer returned under Seleucid control in the days of Antiochus VII Sidetes and during the high-priesthood of Simon's son, John Hyrcanus.[46]

Josephus, in both his Antiquities (12.7.4.; 13.6.7.; 13.9.2.) and in the Jewish War (1.2.2.), cites the Book of Maccabees as his primary source for these events and retains the Greek form of the name Gazara (Greek: Γάζαρά), meaning, Gezer.

Elsewhere, Josephus (Jewish War 1.170) wrote that a certain "Gadara" (Greek: Γαδάροις) was one of the five synedria, or regional administrative capitals of the Hasmonean realm, established by Aulus Gabinius, the Roman proconsul of Syria, in 57 BCE.[47] The name has been edited to "Gazara" in the Loeb edition (Jewish War 1.170). However, in this case, other researchers[who?] prefer one of two candidates from Transjordan, Gadara in Perea, or Gadara of the Decapolis (see more at Perea and Gadara (disambiguation)).

Roman and Byzantine periods edit

Gezer was sparsely populated during Roman times and later times, as other regional population centers took its place.[1] Archaeological finds attesting to the Hellenistic and early Roman periods include two bath houses discovered in situ, as well as a number of ritual baths (mikveh) and rock tombs.[48][a] The site continued to be occupied after the destruction of the Second Temple, but was gradually abandoned during the late Roman-early Byzantine period.[48]

Crusader period edit

In 1177, the plains around Gezer were the site of the Battle of Montgisard, in which the Crusaders under Baldwin IV defeated the forces of Saladin. There was a Crusader Lordship of Montgisard and apparently a castle stood there, a short distance from Ramleh.[50]

Early modern and modern periods edit

R.A. Stewart Macalister who excavated the ruin in the years 1902–1905 and 1907–1909 has noted that around the year 1869 the mound and other parts of the lands of the village of Abû Shûsheh were acquired by Messrs. Bergheim, who had been bankers in Jerusalem. Their acquisition of these lands would prove "a fortunate circumstance" for the excavator, as the site was later put at the disposal of the Palestine Exploration Fund.[51]

Archaeological highlights edit

Canaanite water system edit

 
Canaanite water tunnel at Tel Gezer
 
June 3, 2011, excavation by New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and the Israeli Parks Authority to clear the Bronze Age water system at Gezer, originally excavated by Macalister. see below

A large Canaanite (Bronze Age) water system comprising a tunnel going down to a spring, similar to those found in Jerusalem, Tel Hazor and Tel Megiddo, was first excavated by Macalister and was re-excavated as part of the 2006–2017 campaigns of the Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project.[52]

In 2010 a team from the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary ("NOBTS"), in partnership with the Israeli Parks Authority and the Israeli Antiquities Authority, launched an effort to clear a massive water tunnel, discovered first by Macalister over a hundred years earlier.[53] Macalister never fully excavated the tunnel because a strong storm blew debris back into the tunnel and he considered it too expensive and time consuming to re-excavate the site.[54][55]

In 2011 professor Dennis Cole, archaeologist Dan Warner and engineer Jim Parker from NOBTS, and Tsvika Tsuk from the Israeli Parks Authority, led another team in an attempt to finish the effort.[53] In just two years the teams removed approximately 299 tons of debris from the ancient water system.[53]

In 2012, the team uncovered a large sealed cavern about nine meters beyond the water pool and "Macalister's Causeway."

In 2013, the team began an effort to preserve the ancient Canaanite mudbrick gate and complex near the water system.

In the Water System: "Most of the first two weeks of the dig were spent searching for the bottom step and cleaning Macalister’s causeway. Tons of debris and rocks were removed in the process. When the bottom step was located and the causeway area clear, the team excavated three probes in the pool area. Each of the pool probes reached a depth of more than six feet before the end of the season and the bottom of the pool was discovered in only one probe (Eastern probe)—the one just below the bottom step of the water shaft."

The debris removal and excavation continued until the summer of 2017.[56]

Gezer calendar edit

 
Large replica of the Gezer calendar in Gezer National Park

One of the best-known finds is the "Gezer calendar". This is a plaque containing a text appearing to be either a schoolboy's memory exercises, or a text designated for organising the collection of taxes from farmers. Another possibility is that the text was a popular folk song, or child's song, listing the months of the year according to the agricultural seasons. It has proved to be of value by informing modern researchers of ancient Middle Eastern script and language, as well as the agricultural seasons.

Boundary stones edit

 
Boundary inscription from Hellenistic Gezer, in Aramaic or Hebrew (top) and Greek (bottom)

Thirteen boundary stones have been identified near the tell, distanced between less than 200 metres to almost 2 km from it, probably dating from the Late Hellenistic period (late 2nd[57] – 1st century BCE), the most recent having been found by archaeologists from SWBTS in 2012.[58] See also Location.

There are only a few "lost" biblical cities that have been positively identified through inscriptions discovered by means of archaeological work (surveys or digs).[58] Gezer is the first among them, thanks to Clermont-Ganneau's discovery of three such inscribed stones in 1874 and of a fourth in 1881.[58]

Ten of the thirteen inscriptions are bilingual,[59] including the first three ones, containing two distinct parts, one in Greek and one either Hebrew or Aramaic,[59] and written in what is known as square Hebrew characters.[58] Clermont-Ganneau's reading of the Hebrew/Aramaic part as "the boundary of Gezer" was later confirmed.[58] The inscriptions' Greek part contains personal names, either (H)alkios, Alexas, or Archelaos, for instance Clermont-Ganneau's four stones were all bearing the inscription "of Alkios".[58] Sometimes the two parts are upside-down, or "tête-bêche", in relation to each other,[58] on the last discovered one the lines being separated by a line and the Hebrew/Aramaic inscription תחמ גזר‎ > "Teḥum Gezer" ("the boundary of Gezer")[57] facing the tell.[58] With the discovery of the last nine inscriptions it became evident that their distribution does not support Clermont-Ganneau's initial interpretation, of them marking Gezer's Sabbath limit, but rather that they probably mark the boundaries between private estates, or between city land and these estates.[58] Analysis of the lettering have led to the conclusion that they were all contemporaneous, with opinions based on palaeography and history slightly diverging in regard to their date – either Hasmonean or Herodian.[58] The earlier date and the Hebrew script can be connected to what is known from the First Book of Maccabees about Simon replacing the gentile inhabitants with Jewish ones (1 Macc. 13:47–48) The later date can be supported by a scenario in which Herod, after acquiring the lands of the vanquished Hasmoneans, gave them to (H)alkios, Archelaos and Alexas, all three names mentioned by Josephus for members of a powerful land-owning family from Herod's court.[58]

Language: Hebrew or Aramaic edit

David M. Jacobson wrote that the inscriptions are in Hebrew and that this suggests a need for a closer look at their date.[58]

Other scholars are not convinced that the language of the inscriptions is Hebrew and not Aramaic, leaving both options as possible as is the case in the Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae/Palaestinae.[59]

 
Welcoming sign at Tel-Gezer National Park (Israel Nature and Parks Authority)

Egyptian-era remains edit

In July 2017, archaeologists discovered skeletal remains of a family of three, one of the adults and a child wearing earrings, believed to have been killed during an Egyptian invasion in the 13th century BCE.[60][52] A 13th-century BCE amulet, various scarabs and cylinder seals were also found on the site. The amulet bears the cartouches—or official royal monikers—of the Egyptian pharaohs Thutmose III and Ramses II.[28]

Archaeological excavation history edit

Archaeological excavation at Gezer has been going on since the early 20th century, and it has become one of the most excavated sites in Israel. The site was identified with ancient Gezer by Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau in 1871. R. A. Stewart Macalister excavated the site between 1902 and 1909 on behalf of the Palestine Exploration Fund.[61] Twentyone quarterly dig reports were published in the Palestine Exploration Quarterly.[62] Macalister recovered several artifacts and discovered several constructions and defenses. He also established Gezer's habitation strata, though due to poor stratigraphical methods, these were later found to be mostly incorrect (as well as many of his theories). In 1914 and 1921 Raymond-Charles Weill dug there, focusing mainly on the Bronze and Iron Age Tombs. Results were not published due the Weill's assistant Paule Zerlwer-Silberberg dying in a camp in occupied France and the excavation data was lost at that time.[63][64] Surprisingly, the master thesis of that assistant, about the dig, was recently discovered and was published in 2012.[65] Alan Rowe briefly visited the site in 1934. Between 1964 and 1974 G.E. Wright, William Dever and Joe Seger worked at Gezer on behalf of the Nelson Glueck School of Archaeology in the Hebrew Union College and Harvard University.[66][67][68][69][70][71][72] Dever worked there again in 1984 and 1990, with the Andrews University.[73]

 
Ruins at Tel Gezer

Latest excavations and surveys (2006–2017) edit

Excavations were renewed in June 2006 by a consortium of institutions under the direction of Steve Ortiz of the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (SWBTS) and Sam Wolff of the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA). The Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project is a multi-disciplinary field project investigating the Iron Age history of Gezer. The effort completed in 2017.[74][75][76]

The first season of the Gezer excavations concluded successfully and revealed some interesting details. Among other things is a discovery of a thick destruction layer may be dated to the destruction at the hands of the Egyptians, which some associate with the biblical episode from 1 Kings 9:16: "Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, had attacked and captured Gezer, killing the Canaanite population and burning it down. He gave the city to his daughter as a wedding gift when she married Solomon."

In 2013, two separate archaeological survey-excavations were conducted at Tel Gezer, one by Tsvika Tsuk, Yohanan Hagai, and Daniel Warner, on behalf of the IAA,[77] and the other led by a team of archaeologists from the SWBTS and Andrews University's Institute of Archaeology.[78]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b James F. Ross (May 1967). "Gezer in the Tell el-Amarna Letters". The Biblical Archaeologist. 30 (2): 62–70. doi:10.2307/3210955. JSTOR 3210955. S2CID 165347088.
  2. ^ Smith, Mark S (2002). The Early History of God. Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-3972-5.
  3. ^ Eusebius (2003). Chapmann III, R.L.; Taylor, J.E. (eds.). Palestine in the Fourth Century A.D.: The Onomasticon by Eusebius of Caesarea. Translated by G.S.P. Freeman-Grenville. Jerusalem: Carta. p. 42 (s.v. Gazer [1]). ISBN 965-220-500-1. OCLC 937002750.
  4. ^ a b c Finkelstein, I. (n.d.). "Tel Gezer". In Sefi Ben-Yosef (ed.). Israel Guide - Judaea (A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country) (in Hebrew). Vol. 9. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House. p. 314. OCLC 745203905.
  5. ^ Chavalas, Mark W. (Spring 2001). "Review of David, Solomon and Egypt: A Reassessment by Paul S. Ash". Journal of Biblical Literature. 120 (1): 152. doi:10.2307/3268603. JSTOR 3268603.
  6. ^ Lipinski, Edward (2006). On the Skirts of Canaan in the Iron Age (Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta). Leuven, Belgium: Peeters. pp. 96–97. ISBN 978-90-429-1798-9.
  7. ^ Ortiz, Steven M. (2023). "Gezer Destructions: A Case Study of a Border City". In Ben-Yosef, Erez; Jones, Ian W. N. (eds.). "And in Length of Days Understanding" (Job 12:12): Essays on Archaeology in the Eastern Mediterranean and Beyond in Honor of Thomas E. Levy. Springer Nature. pp. 731, 745. ISBN 978-3-031-27330-8.
  8. ^ a b c Webster, Lyndelle C.; Wolff, Samuel R.; Ortiz, Steven M.; Barbosa, Marcella; Coyle, Cameron; Arbino, Gary P.; Dee, Michael W.; Hua, Quan; et al. (2023-11-15). "The chronology of Gezer from the end of the late bronze age to iron age II: A meeting point for radiocarbon, archaeology egyptology and the Bible". PLOS ONE. 18 (11): e0293119. Bibcode:2023PLoSO..1893119W. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0293119. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 10651010. PMID 37967047.
  9. ^ Kitchen, K.A. (2003). On the Reliability of the Old Testament'. William B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 109.
  10. ^ Kitchen, K.A. (2003). On the Reliability of the Old Testament'. William B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 109, 526.
  11. ^ Kitchen, K.A. (2003). On the Reliability of the Old Testament'. William B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 109–10.
  12. ^ Ash, Paul S. (November 1999). David, Solomon and Egypt: A Reassessment (JSOT Supplement). Sheffield Academic Press. pp. 38–46. ISBN 978-1-84127-021-0.
  13. ^ Mitchell, Eric; Dodd, R. Adam; Coyle, S. Cameron (2014). "More 'Boundary of Gezer' Inscriptions: One New and Another Rediscovered". Israel Exploration Journal. 64 (2): 191–207. JSTOR 43855662.
  14. ^ Tel Gezer, Israel Antiquities Authority
  15. ^ a b c d Gibson, Shimon (2007). «Gezer». Encyclopedia Judaica (2nd ed.). 22 Nov. 2023 <https://www.encyclopedia.com>.
  16. ^ a b . Allaboutarchaeology.org. Archived from the original on 8 February 2015. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  17. ^ a b Finkelstein, I. (n.d.). "Tel Gezer". In Sefi Ben-Yosef (ed.). Israel Guide - Judaea (A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country) (in Hebrew). Vol. 9. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House. p. 313. OCLC 745203905.
  18. ^ a b c Macalister, R.A. Stewart (1912). The Excavation of Gezer 1902–1905 and 1907–1909 (PDF). Vol. 1. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund. pp. 235–256. OCLC 1424889375.
  19. ^ Tel Gezer (Tel el-Jazari) Ancient Village or Settlement, The Megalithic Portal
  20. ^ a b Finkelstein, I. (n.d.). "Tel Gezer". In Sefi Ben-Yosef (ed.). Israel Guide - Judaea (A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country) (in Hebrew). Vol. 9. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House. p. 317. OCLC 745203905. Fortifications of the Middle Bronze Age IIB and of the Late Bronze Age are visible on the southern slope of the mound. The gate is typical of the Middle Bronze Age IIB and similar ones have been discovered in many sites in the Land of Israel and in Syria. It consists of two large brick towers and between them there is a direct passage to the interior of the city, between three pairs of matching pillars.
  21. ^ Ussishkin, David (2006). "On the History of the High Place at Gezer". In Czerny E.; Hein I.; Hunger H.; Melman D.; Schwab A. (eds.). Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak. Vol. II. Leuven: Peeters Publishers. pp. 411–416. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  22. ^ Macalister, R.A. Stewart (1912). The Excavation of Gezer 1902–1905 and 1907–1909 (PDF). Vol. 2. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund. pp. 385–387. OCLC 1424889375.
  23. ^ "Gilat". The Nelson Glueck School of Biblical Archaeology. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
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  25. ^ a b Gauthier, Henri (1928). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 5. p. 164.
  26. ^ Wallis Budge, E. A. (1920). An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary: with an index of English words, king list and geological list with indexes, list of hieroglyphic characters, coptic and semitic alphabets, etc. Vol II. John Murray. p. 1043.
  27. ^ Moran, William L., ed. (1992). The Amarna Letters. Baltimore; London: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 253, 298, 306–ff., 340. ISBN 0-8018-4251-4.
  28. ^ a b Philippe Bohstrom (2 July 2017). "First Discovery of Bodies in Biblical Gezer, From Fiery Destruction 3,200 Years Ago". Haaretz. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  29. ^ Shapira, Ran (2013-10-24). . Haaretz. Archived from the original on 2013-11-27. Retrieved 2013-11-27.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), Haaretz, published October 24, 2013, retrieved November 27, 2013.
  30. ^ "First Discovery of Bodies in Biblical Gezer, from Fiery Destruction 3,200 Years Ago". Haaretz.
  31. ^ Ortiz, Steven; Wolff, Samuel (2019). "A reevaluation of Gezer in the Late Bronze Age in light of renewed excavations and recent scholarship". The Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages of Southern Canaan. pp. 62–85. doi:10.1515/9783110628371-004. ISBN 9783110628371. S2CID 199253906.
  32. ^ Ortiz, Steven; Wolff, Samuel (2021). "New Evidence for the 10th Century BCE at Tel Gezer". Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology. 1 (1): 221–240. doi:10.52486/01.00001.9. ISSN 2788-8819. S2CID 236231928.
  33. ^ Yadin, Y. (1958). "Solomon's City Wall and Gate at Gezer". Israel Exploration Journal. 8 (2): 80–86. JSTOR 27924728.
  34. ^ "Gezer". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  35. ^ Dever, W.G. (1986). "Late Bronze Age and Solomonic Defenses at Gezer: New Evidence". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 262 (262): 26. doi:10.2307/1356977. JSTOR 1356977.
  36. ^ a b Finkelstein, I. (n.d.). "Tel Gezer". In Sefi Ben-Yosef (ed.). Israel Guide - Judaea (A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country) (in Hebrew). Vol. 9. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House. p. 317. OCLC 745203905.
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  38. ^ Ehrlich, Carl S. (November 1996). The Philistines in Transition: A History from Ca. 1000-730 B.C.E. Brill Academic Publishers. pp. 192–193. ISBN 978-90-04-10426-6.
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  40. ^ a b Dever, W.G. (1985). "Solomonic and Assyrian Period 'Palaces' at Gezer". Israel Exploration Journal. 35 (4): 226. JSTOR 27925997.
  41. ^ Ortiz, Steven; Wolff, Samuel; Arbino, Gary (2011). "Tel Gezer: Preliminary Report". Hadashot Arkheologiyot: Excavations and Surveys in Israel. 123. Israel Antiquities Authority: 4 (s.v. Area B - Hellenistic Remains). JSTOR 26595238.
  42. ^ 1 Maccabees 13:43–48
  43. ^ Ortiz, Steven; Wolff, Samuel (2012). "Guarding the Border to Jerusalem: The Iron Age City of Gezer". Near Eastern Archaeology. 75 (1). The University of Chicago Press: 5. doi:10.5615/neareastarch.75.1.0004.
  44. ^ The Excavation of Ancient Gezer
  45. ^ Reich, R. (1981). "Archaeological Evidence of the Jewish Population at Hasmonean Gezer". Israel Exploration Journal. 31 (1–2): 48–52. JSTOR 27925781.
  46. ^ Josephus, Antiquities (13.9.2.; 13.259).
  47. ^ Meyers, Eric M. (1999). "Sepphoris on the Eve of the Great Revolt: Archaeology and Josephus". In Meyers, Eric M. (ed.). Galilee Through the Centuries: Confluence of Cultures. Duke Judaic Studies. Vol. 1. Eisenbrauns. p. 113. ISBN 9781575060408. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
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  49. ^ Mitchell, Eric; Zan, Jason M.; Coyle, Cameron S.; Dodd, Adam R. (2012). "Tel Gezer, Regional Survey: Preliminary Report". Hadashot Arkheologiyot: Excavations and Surveys in Israel. 124. Israel Antiquities Authority: 3. JSTOR 26601667.
  50. ^ Bradbury, Jim (2004). Montgisard, Battle of, 25 November 1177. Routledge. ISBN 9781134598465. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  51. ^ Macalister, R.A. Stewart (1912). The Excavation of Gezer 1902–1905 and 1907–1909 (PDF). Vol. 1. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund. p. Preface XI. OCLC 1424889375.
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Notes edit

  1. ^ Some of the tomb types discovered in Gezer include Arcosolium and loculus tombs, of which there were five Arcosolium or recessed bench tombs, another five distinct simple double arcosolia type, and nine loculus or kokhim tombs. These are considered to date to the Hellenistic through Byzantine periods, during which periods they were most common.[49]

Further reading edit

  • William G. Dever, Gezer Revisited: New Excavations of the Solomonic and Assyrian Period Defenses, The Biblical Archaeologist, Vol. 47, No. 4 (Dec., 1984), pp. 206–218
  • Dever, William G., "Visiting the Real Gezer: A Reply to Israel Finkelstein", Journal of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv University, Volume 30, Number 2, September 2003, pp. 259–282(24)
  • "Confronting the Past: Archaeological and Historical Essays on Ancient Israel", Seymour Gitin, (ed), Eisenbrauns, (January 2006), ISBN 978-1-57506-117-7

External links edit

  •   Media related to Gezer at Wikimedia Commons
  • New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary's Official Record of the Tel Gezer Excavation
  • The Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project (as of 2021); see also .
  • Tel Gezer Excavation Ceramic Database
  • "Gezer" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (9th ed.). 1879.

gezer, kibbutz, israel, kibbutz, region, israel, regional, council, hebrew, arabic, تل, الجزر, tell, jezar, tell, jezari, archaeological, site, foothills, judaean, mountains, border, shfela, region, roughly, midway, between, jerusalem, aviv, israeli, national,. For the kibbutz in Israel see Gezer kibbutz For the region in Israel see Gezer Regional Council Gezer or Tel Gezer Hebrew ג ז ר in Arabic تل الجزر Tell Jezar or Tell el Jezari is an archaeological site in the foothills of the Judaean Mountains at the border of the Shfela region roughly midway between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv It is now an Israeli national park In the Hebrew Bible Gezer is associated with Joshua and Solomon Gezerג ז ר The Gezer High Place with stone monoliths and basinShown within IsraelAlternative nameTel Gezer Heb Tell Jezer Tell el Jazari Ar Location IsraelCoordinates31 51 32 4 N 34 55 8 4 E 31 859000 N 34 919000 E 31 859000 34 919000Grid position142 140 PALSite notesConditionRuin The archaeological site of Tel Gezer rises to an elevation of 229 metres 751 ft above sea level and affords a commanding prospect of the plains to the west north and east Gezer became a major fortified Canaanite city state in the first half of the 2nd millennium BCE It was later destroyed by fire and rebuilt The Amarna letters mention kings of Gezer swearing loyalty to the Egyptian pharaoh 1 Its importance was due in part to the strategic position it held at the crossroads of the ancient coastal trade route linking Egypt with Syria Anatolia and Mesopotamia and the road to Jerusalem and Jericho both important trade routes In Roman and Byzantine times the site was sparsely populated Later In the modern era Tel Gezer was the site of the Palestinian village of Abu Shusheh the residents of which were expelled by Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab Israeli War Contents 1 Sources 1 1 Ancient Egyptian sources 1 2 Biblical conquest under Joshua 1 2 1 The Egyptian sack of Gezer 1 2 2 Identifying the biblical pharaoh 1 2 3 Tanis temple relief 2 Location 3 History 3 1 Chalcolithic 3 2 Early Bronze Age 3 3 Middle Bronze Age 3 4 Late Bronze Age 3 4 1 Thutmosid Period 3 4 2 Amarna Period 3 4 3 Ramesside Period 3 5 Iron Age 3 5 1 Israelite city gate wall 3 5 2 Tiglath Pileser III and the Neo Assyrian period 3 6 Hellenistic period 3 7 Roman and Byzantine periods 3 8 Crusader period 3 9 Early modern and modern periods 4 Archaeological highlights 4 1 Canaanite water system 4 2 Gezer calendar 4 3 Boundary stones 4 3 1 Language Hebrew or Aramaic 4 4 Egyptian era remains 5 Archaeological excavation history 5 1 Latest excavations and surveys 2006 2017 5 2 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksSources editAncient Egyptian sources edit Gezer is mentioned in the victory stele of Merneptah dating from the end of the 13th century BCE 2 26 Biblical conquest under Joshua edit The biblical story of the Israelite conquest of Canaan under their leader Joshua mentions a certain king of Gezer Joshua 10 33 who had gone to help his countrymen in Lachish where he met his death Gezer is listed in the Book of Joshua as one of the cities allotted to the tribe of Ephraim as well as a Levitical city one of ten allotted to the Levite children of Kehoth the Kohathites Joshua ch 21 Eusebius 4th century CE describing the biblical Gezer of his day writes Gazer sic The lot of Ephraim set aside for Levites And Joshua besieged it killing its king Josh 10 33 Solomon also built here 1 Kings 9 15 16 It is now called Gazara a village of Nikopolis Emmaus which is a place located 4 milestones from it in the north The tribe of Ephraim did not expel the foreigners from it Judges 1 29 3 The Egyptian sack of Gezer edit According to the Hebrew Bible the only source for this particular event the Sack of Gezer took place at the beginning of the 10th century BCE 4 when the city was conquered and burned by an unnamed Egyptian pharaoh identified by some with Siamun during his military campaign in Philistia This anonymous Egyptian pharaoh then gave it to King Solomon as the dowry of his daughter Solomon then rebuilt Gezer and fortified it The Bible states This is the account of the forced labor that King Solomon conscripted to build the house of the Lord and his own house the Millo and the wall of Jerusalem Hazor Megiddo Gezer Lower Beth horon Baalath Tamar in the wilderness within the land as well as all of Solomon s storage cities the cities for his chariots the cities for his cavalry and whatever Solomon desired to build Pharaoh king of Egypt had gone up and captured Gezer and burned it with fire and had killed the Canaanites who lived in the city and had given it as dowry to his daughter Solomon s wife 1 Kings 9 15 16 Identifying the biblical pharaoh edit nbsp The Archaeological ruin of Gezer The only mention in the Bible of a pharaoh who might be Siamun ruled 986 967 BCE is the text from 1 Kings quoted above and we have no other historical sources that clearly identify what really happened As shown below Kenneth Kitchen believes that Siamun conquered Gezer and gave it to Solomon Others such as Paul S Ash and Mark W Chavalas disagree and in 2001 Chavalas states that it is impossible to conclude which Egyptian monarch ruled concurrently with David and Solomon 5 Professor Edward Lipinski argues that Gezer then unfortified was destroyed late in the 10th century and thus not contemporary with Solomon and that the most likely Pharaoh was Shoshenq I ruled 943 922 BCE 6 However the archaeological evidence recovered at the site indicates that Gezer was previously destroyed in an earlier stratum around the times of Siamun 7 Lindelle C Webster s excavation team concluded recently that correlation of Stratum IX in Tel Gezer with Solomon s era and Siamun is improbable as the end of Tandy Stratum 10A is estimated by radiocarbon within the 11th century BCE contemporary with the 21st Dynasty of Egypt but too early for Solomon by any estimate and that correlation of Stratum 7 with Shishak Shoshenq I s e nd boundary 927 885 BCE 68 3 hpd included in the biblical date for Shishak s campaign d oes not fit well with current radiocarbon based estimates for Shoshenq I 8 They estimate Shoshenq I s reign within the Stratum 8 destruction of Tel Gezer which has been radiocarbon dated to the mid 10th century BCE c 969 940 BCE with 68 3 hpd and 991 930 BCE with 95 4 hpd 8 Tanis temple relief edit One fragmentary but well known surviving triumphal relief scene from the Temple of Amun at Tanis believed to be related to the sack of Gezer depicts an Egyptian pharaoh smiting his enemies with a mace According to the Egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen this pharaoh is Siamun 9 The pharaoh appears here in typical pose brandishing a mace to strike down prisoners now lost at the right except for two arms and hands one of which grasps a remarkable double bladed axe by its socket 10 The writer observes that this double bladed axe or halberd has a flared crescent shaped blade which is close in form to the Aegean influenced double axe but is quite distinct from the Canaanite double headed axe which has a different shape that resembles an X 11 Thus Kitchen concludes Siamun s foes were the Philistines who were descendants of the Aegean based Sea Peoples and that Siamun was commemorating his recent victory over them at Gezer by depicting himself in a formal battle scene relief at the temple in Tanis Alternatively Paul S Ash had put forward a detailed argument that Siamun s relief portrays a fictitious battle He points out that in Egyptian reliefs Philistines are never shown holding an axe and that there is no archaeological evidence for Philistines using axes He also argues that there is nothing in the relief to connect it with Philistia or the Levant 12 nbsp Canaanite gateway at Tel Gezer flanked by two towers now in ruin Location edit nbsp Tell Jezer from the 1871 77 PEF Survey of Palestine also showing Abu Shusha Gezer was located on the northern fringe of the Shephelah region approximately 30 km 19 mi northwest of Jerusalem It was strategically situated at the junction of the Via Maris the international coastal highway and the highway connecting it with Jerusalem through the valley of Ayalon or Ajalon The nearest modern Israeli settlement to the archaeological site is Karmei Yosef Verification of the identification of this site with biblical Gezer comes from a dozen bilingual inscriptions in either Hebrew or Aramaic and Greek found engraved on rocks several hundred meters from the tell 13 These inscriptions from the 1st century BCE read boundary of Gezer and of Alkios probably the governor of Gezer at the time The discovery of these boundary stones near the archaeological site makes it the first biblical city to be positively identified Today s archaeological site spans an area of 130 dunams 32 acres and contains 26 levels of settlement from the Chalcolithic to the early Roman periods 3500 BCE to 100 CE Most of the remains date from the Middle and Late Canaanite and the Israelite periods 14 History editChalcolithic edit The first settlement established at Tel Gezer dates to the end of the 4th millennium BCE during the Chalcolithic period when large caves cut into the rock were used as dwellings 15 Early Bronze Age edit At the beginning of the Early Bronze Age early 3rd millennium BCE an unfortified settlement covered the tell It was destroyed in the middle of the 3rd millennium BCE and subsequently abandoned for several centuries 15 Middle Bronze Age edit In the Middle Bronze Age IIB MBIIB first half of the 2nd millennium BCE Gezer became a major city well fortified 4 and containing a large cultic site 16 It may have grown due to MBIIA sites like Aphek becoming weaker citation needed nbsp Ruined tower at Tel Gezer Fortifications On the north side of the city the fortifications consisted of at least two lines of defense surrounding the tell 17 Some excavators have noted as many as three defensive walls built in different periods an outer earthen rampart a central wall and an inner wall 18 In what remained of the outer rampart it reached a height of about 5 metres and was built of compacted alternating layers of chalk and earth covered with plaster 19 The inner wall measured 4 metres in width and was made of large stone blocks reinforced with towers 17 18 The city gate stood near the southwest corner of the wall was flanked by two towers which protected the wooden doors a common design for its time 20 The tell was surrounded by a massive stone wall and towers protected by a five meter high 16 ft earthen rampart covered with plaster The wooden city gate near the southwestern corner of the wall was fortified by two towers 20 Cultic site with massebot Cultic remains discovered in the northern part of the tell were a row of ten large standing pillars known as massebot or matsevot singular masseba matseva oriented north south the tallest of which was three meters high with an altar type structure in the middle and a large square stone basin probably used for cultic libations The exact purpose of these megaliths is still debated but they may have constituted a Canaanite high place from the Middle Bronze Age ca 1600 BCE each masseba possibly representing a Canaanite city connected to Gezer by treaties enforced by rituals performed here Both the number and size of the standing stones confer a unique character to this cultic site 16 Such massebot are found elsewhere in the country but those from Gezer massebot are the most impressive examples 21 22 23 The area was almost completely cleared by Macalister The remains were re excavated in 1968 24 A double cave beneath the high place was shown to be predating it and not connected to it citation needed Late Bronze Age edit In the Late Bronze Age second half of the 2nd millennium BCE a new city wall 4 m 13 ft thick was erected outside the earlier one 18 It is a very rare example of Late Bronze Age fortifications in the country witness for the elevated political status of Gezer in southern Canaan during Egyptian rule citation needed Thutmosid Period edit or ḳꜣḏjr or ḳꜣḏꜣꜣr 25 26 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC The Canaanite city was destroyed in a fire presumably in the wake of a campaign by the Egyptian pharaoh Thutmose III ruled 1479 1425 BCE The oldest known historical reference to the city is to be found on an inscription of conquered sites at Thutmose s temple at Karnak 25 A destruction layer from this event was found in all excavated areas of the tell 15 Amarna Period edit The Tell Amarna letters dating from the 14th century BCE include ten letters from the kings of Gezer swearing loyalty to the Egyptian pharaoh 27 The city state of Gezer named Gazru in Babylonian was ruled by at least three leaders during the 20 year period covered by the Amarna letters 4 Discoveries of several pottery vessels a cache of cylinder seals and a large scarab with the cartouche of Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep III attest to the existence of a city at Gezer s location in the 14th century BCE one that was apparently destroyed in the next century 28 and suggest that the city was inhabited by Canaanites with strong ties to Egypt 29 In the 14th century BCE a palace was constructed on the high western part of the tell the city s acropolis citation needed Archaeologists also discovered remains of what might have been the Egyptian governor s residence from the same period in the northern part of the tell citation needed Ramesside Period edit In the late reign of Ramesses II climate became drier and colder causing turmoil in the Mediterranean from around 1250 BCE eventually leading to the Late Bronze collapse The death of Ramesses II caused cities in Canaan to rebel to become independent Merneptah of Egypt who succeeded Ramesses II had to regain control and boasted about his capture of Gezer A massive fiery destruction seems to support this in excavations done by Prof Steven Ortiz 30 31 Toward the end of the Bronze Age the city declined and its population diminished citation needed Iron Age edit nbsp The Gezer Calendar tablet early Iron Age 10th century BCE Museum of Archaeology Istanbul Turkey In 12th and 11th centuries BCE a large building with many rooms and courtyards was situated on the acropolis Grinding stones and grains of wheat found among the sherds indicate that it was a granary Local and Philistine vessels attest to a mixed Canaanite Philistine population citation needed The 10th century BCE seems to have been a period of notable urban development for the city until it became destroyed in the third quarter of that century probably as a result of Shoshenq I s campaign in Canaan at that time 32 Siege of GezerDate10th century BCE biblical account LocationGezer IsraelResultEgypt takes Gezer Egyptian victoryBelligerentsEgyptPhilistinesCommanders and leadersSiamun UnknownStrengthUnknownUnknownCasualties and lossesUnknownMany killed Israelite city gate wall edit On the southern slope about 200 meters east of the gate from the Middle Bronze Age IIB there is what is now known as the Solomon Gate This area was excavated at the beginning of the 20th century by Macalister who defined the remains discovered there as a Maccabean citadel from the 2nd century BCE because on one of the stones a curse against Simon was found engraved in Greek Macalister 1912 vol I 209 23 236 56 After the discovery of identical gates from the time of King Solomon in Megiddo and Hazor and following what is told in the Bible about the construction projects of this king in the three cities Yigael Yadin proved in 1957 that in fact the Hasmonean citadel was no other than a gate from the days of Solomon 33 34 35 In the excavations of the 1960s the entire gate was revealed It is identical in plan and size to the other two mentioned and is connected by a casemate wall 36 On both sides of the passageway within the gate are four pairs of pillars and three pairs of cell like chambers In front of the entranceway stood two towers At the gate a construction of hewn stone in the style typical of the days of Solomon is evident 36 The Solomon Gate has since been reinterpreted by some as dating from several centuries later by virtue of the fact that the gate was rebuilt 37 although recent radiocarbon tests support an early date for the strata at the site 8 Tiglath Pileser III and the Neo Assyrian period edit The Neo Assyrian king Tiglath Pileser III put Gezer under siege between the years 734 and 732 BCE 38 The city was probably captured by the Assyrians at the end of the campaign of Tiglath Pileser III to Canaan 39 At any rate a fiery destruction so severe befell the city at this time insofar that it reduced the upper two courses of stone in the inner casemate wall to powdery lime 40 A reference to Gezer s destruction appears in a cuneiform relief from the 8th century BCE royal palace of Tiglath Pileser III at Nimrud 40 The city inscribed on the relief is called Gazru 15 Hellenistic period edit Stamped Rhodian amphora handles a Tyrian lead weight of the Tanit series and a didrachm of Ptolemy VI found in situ suggest a Hellenistic occupation from the end of the 3rd century BCE to 142 BCE 41 According to the book of 1 Maccabees Simon Thassi captured Gazara and expelled the population during the Maccabean Revolt He then brought in new settlers of devout Jews and fortified it making it part of the Hasmonean kingdom 42 Gezer became known as Gazara in the Hellenistic period and became an important city for the Hasmonean rulers 43 44 45 Notwithstanding Simon s capture of Gezer in circa 142 BCE Josephus alludes to the fact that Gezer returned under Seleucid control in the days of Antiochus VII Sidetes and during the high priesthood of Simon s son John Hyrcanus 46 Josephus in both his Antiquities 12 7 4 13 6 7 13 9 2 and in the Jewish War 1 2 2 cites the Book of Maccabees as his primary source for these events and retains the Greek form of the name Gazara Greek Gazara meaning Gezer Elsewhere Josephus Jewish War 1 170 wrote that a certain Gadara Greek Gadarois was one of the five synedria or regional administrative capitals of the Hasmonean realm established by Aulus Gabinius the Roman proconsul of Syria in 57 BCE 47 The name has been edited to Gazara in the Loeb edition Jewish War 1 170 However in this case other researchers who prefer one of two candidates from Transjordan Gadara in Perea or Gadara of the Decapolis see more at Perea and Gadara disambiguation Roman and Byzantine periods edit Gezer was sparsely populated during Roman times and later times as other regional population centers took its place 1 Archaeological finds attesting to the Hellenistic and early Roman periods include two bath houses discovered in situ as well as a number of ritual baths mikveh and rock tombs 48 a The site continued to be occupied after the destruction of the Second Temple but was gradually abandoned during the late Roman early Byzantine period 48 Crusader period edit See also Vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem In 1177 the plains around Gezer were the site of the Battle of Montgisard in which the Crusaders under Baldwin IV defeated the forces of Saladin There was a Crusader Lordship of Montgisard and apparently a castle stood there a short distance from Ramleh 50 Early modern and modern periods edit Main articles Abu Shusha and Gezer kibbutz R A Stewart Macalister who excavated the ruin in the years 1902 1905 and 1907 1909 has noted that around the year 1869 the mound and other parts of the lands of the village of Abu Shusheh were acquired by Messrs Bergheim who had been bankers in Jerusalem Their acquisition of these lands would prove a fortunate circumstance for the excavator as the site was later put at the disposal of the Palestine Exploration Fund 51 Archaeological highlights editCanaanite water system edit nbsp Canaanite water tunnel at Tel Gezer nbsp June 3 2011 excavation by New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and the Israeli Parks Authority to clear the Bronze Age water system at Gezer originally excavated by Macalister see below A large Canaanite Bronze Age water system comprising a tunnel going down to a spring similar to those found in Jerusalem Tel Hazor and Tel Megiddo was first excavated by Macalister and was re excavated as part of the 2006 2017 campaigns of the Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project 52 In 2010 a team from the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary NOBTS in partnership with the Israeli Parks Authority and the Israeli Antiquities Authority launched an effort to clear a massive water tunnel discovered first by Macalister over a hundred years earlier 53 Macalister never fully excavated the tunnel because a strong storm blew debris back into the tunnel and he considered it too expensive and time consuming to re excavate the site 54 55 In 2011 professor Dennis Cole archaeologist Dan Warner and engineer Jim Parker from NOBTS and Tsvika Tsuk from the Israeli Parks Authority led another team in an attempt to finish the effort 53 In just two years the teams removed approximately 299 tons of debris from the ancient water system 53 In 2012 the team uncovered a large sealed cavern about nine meters beyond the water pool and Macalister s Causeway In 2013 the team began an effort to preserve the ancient Canaanite mudbrick gate and complex near the water system In the Water System Most of the first two weeks of the dig were spent searching for the bottom step and cleaning Macalister s causeway Tons of debris and rocks were removed in the process When the bottom step was located and the causeway area clear the team excavated three probes in the pool area Each of the pool probes reached a depth of more than six feet before the end of the season and the bottom of the pool was discovered in only one probe Eastern probe the one just below the bottom step of the water shaft The debris removal and excavation continued until the summer of 2017 56 Gezer calendar edit nbsp Large replica of the Gezer calendar in Gezer National Park One of the best known finds is the Gezer calendar This is a plaque containing a text appearing to be either a schoolboy s memory exercises or a text designated for organising the collection of taxes from farmers Another possibility is that the text was a popular folk song or child s song listing the months of the year according to the agricultural seasons It has proved to be of value by informing modern researchers of ancient Middle Eastern script and language as well as the agricultural seasons Boundary stones edit nbsp Boundary inscription from Hellenistic Gezer in Aramaic or Hebrew top and Greek bottom Thirteen boundary stones have been identified near the tell distanced between less than 200 metres to almost 2 km from it probably dating from the Late Hellenistic period late 2nd 57 1st century BCE the most recent having been found by archaeologists from SWBTS in 2012 58 See also Location There are only a few lost biblical cities that have been positively identified through inscriptions discovered by means of archaeological work surveys or digs 58 Gezer is the first among them thanks to Clermont Ganneau s discovery of three such inscribed stones in 1874 and of a fourth in 1881 58 Ten of the thirteen inscriptions are bilingual 59 including the first three ones containing two distinct parts one in Greek and one either Hebrew or Aramaic 59 and written in what is known as square Hebrew characters 58 Clermont Ganneau s reading of the Hebrew Aramaic part as the boundary of Gezer was later confirmed 58 The inscriptions Greek part contains personal names either H alkios Alexas or Archelaos for instance Clermont Ganneau s four stones were all bearing the inscription of Alkios 58 Sometimes the two parts are upside down or tete beche in relation to each other 58 on the last discovered one the lines being separated by a line and the Hebrew Aramaic inscription תחמ גזר gt Teḥum Gezer the boundary of Gezer 57 facing the tell 58 With the discovery of the last nine inscriptions it became evident that their distribution does not support Clermont Ganneau s initial interpretation of them marking Gezer s Sabbath limit but rather that they probably mark the boundaries between private estates or between city land and these estates 58 Analysis of the lettering have led to the conclusion that they were all contemporaneous with opinions based on palaeography and history slightly diverging in regard to their date either Hasmonean or Herodian 58 The earlier date and the Hebrew script can be connected to what is known from the First Book of Maccabees about Simon replacing the gentile inhabitants with Jewish ones 1 Macc 13 47 48 The later date can be supported by a scenario in which Herod after acquiring the lands of the vanquished Hasmoneans gave them to H alkios Archelaos and Alexas all three names mentioned by Josephus for members of a powerful land owning family from Herod s court 58 Language Hebrew or Aramaic edit David M Jacobson wrote that the inscriptions are in Hebrew and that this suggests a need for a closer look at their date 58 Other scholars are not convinced that the language of the inscriptions is Hebrew and not Aramaic leaving both options as possible as is the case in the Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae Palaestinae 59 nbsp Welcoming sign at Tel Gezer National Park Israel Nature and Parks Authority Egyptian era remains edit In July 2017 archaeologists discovered skeletal remains of a family of three one of the adults and a child wearing earrings believed to have been killed during an Egyptian invasion in the 13th century BCE 60 52 A 13th century BCE amulet various scarabs and cylinder seals were also found on the site The amulet bears the cartouches or official royal monikers of the Egyptian pharaohs Thutmose III and Ramses II 28 Archaeological excavation history editArchaeological excavation at Gezer has been going on since the early 20th century and it has become one of the most excavated sites in Israel The site was identified with ancient Gezer by Charles Simon Clermont Ganneau in 1871 R A Stewart Macalister excavated the site between 1902 and 1909 on behalf of the Palestine Exploration Fund 61 Twentyone quarterly dig reports were published in the Palestine Exploration Quarterly 62 Macalister recovered several artifacts and discovered several constructions and defenses He also established Gezer s habitation strata though due to poor stratigraphical methods these were later found to be mostly incorrect as well as many of his theories In 1914 and 1921 Raymond Charles Weill dug there focusing mainly on the Bronze and Iron Age Tombs Results were not published due the Weill s assistant Paule Zerlwer Silberberg dying in a camp in occupied France and the excavation data was lost at that time 63 64 Surprisingly the master thesis of that assistant about the dig was recently discovered and was published in 2012 65 Alan Rowe briefly visited the site in 1934 Between 1964 and 1974 G E Wright William Dever and Joe Seger worked at Gezer on behalf of the Nelson Glueck School of Archaeology in the Hebrew Union College and Harvard University 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 Dever worked there again in 1984 and 1990 with the Andrews University 73 nbsp Ruins at Tel Gezer Latest excavations and surveys 2006 2017 edit Excavations were renewed in June 2006 by a consortium of institutions under the direction of Steve Ortiz of the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary SWBTS and Sam Wolff of the Israel Antiquities Authority IAA The Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project is a multi disciplinary field project investigating the Iron Age history of Gezer The effort completed in 2017 74 75 76 The first season of the Gezer excavations concluded successfully and revealed some interesting details Among other things is a discovery of a thick destruction layer may be dated to the destruction at the hands of the Egyptians which some associate with the biblical episode from 1 Kings 9 16 Pharaoh the king of Egypt had attacked and captured Gezer killing the Canaanite population and burning it down He gave the city to his daughter as a wedding gift when she married Solomon In 2013 two separate archaeological survey excavations were conducted at Tel Gezer one by Tsvika Tsuk Yohanan Hagai and Daniel Warner on behalf of the IAA 77 and the other led by a team of archaeologists from the SWBTS and Andrews University s Institute of Archaeology 78 Gallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Archaeologist or student with large numerous massebot nbsp Excavations at Tel Gezer nbsp High place with cup holders cave mouth nbsp Courses of stone in old tower at Gezer nbsp recessed olive presses look similar to the cup holders at the same site in a polka dot pattern nbsp Approach to Tel Gezer seen in distance nbsp Figurine discovered at Gezer 79 See also editCities of the ancient Near East Archaeology of IsraelReferences edit a b James F Ross May 1967 Gezer in the Tell el Amarna Letters The Biblical Archaeologist 30 2 62 70 doi 10 2307 3210955 JSTOR 3210955 S2CID 165347088 Smith Mark S 2002 The Early History of God Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 3972 5 Eusebius 2003 Chapmann III R L Taylor J E eds Palestine in the Fourth Century A D The Onomasticon by Eusebius of Caesarea Translated by G S P Freeman Grenville Jerusalem Carta p 42 s v Gazer 1 ISBN 965 220 500 1 OCLC 937002750 a b c Finkelstein I n d Tel Gezer In Sefi Ben Yosef ed Israel Guide Judaea A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country in Hebrew Vol 9 Jerusalem Keter Publishing House p 314 OCLC 745203905 Chavalas Mark W Spring 2001 Review of David Solomon and Egypt A Reassessment by Paul S Ash Journal of Biblical Literature 120 1 152 doi 10 2307 3268603 JSTOR 3268603 Lipinski Edward 2006 On the Skirts of Canaan in the Iron Age Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta Leuven Belgium Peeters pp 96 97 ISBN 978 90 429 1798 9 Ortiz Steven M 2023 Gezer Destructions A Case Study of a Border City In Ben Yosef Erez Jones Ian W N eds And in Length of Days Understanding Job 12 12 Essays on Archaeology in the Eastern Mediterranean and Beyond in Honor of Thomas E Levy Springer Nature pp 731 745 ISBN 978 3 031 27330 8 a b c Webster Lyndelle C Wolff Samuel R Ortiz Steven M Barbosa Marcella Coyle Cameron Arbino Gary P Dee Michael W Hua Quan et al 2023 11 15 The chronology of Gezer from the end of the late bronze age to iron age II A meeting point for radiocarbon archaeology egyptology and the Bible PLOS ONE 18 11 e0293119 Bibcode 2023PLoSO 1893119W doi 10 1371 journal pone 0293119 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 10651010 PMID 37967047 Kitchen K A 2003 On the Reliability of the Old Testament William B Eerdmans Publishing p 109 Kitchen K A 2003 On the Reliability of the Old Testament William B Eerdmans Publishing pp 109 526 Kitchen K A 2003 On the Reliability of the Old Testament William B Eerdmans Publishing pp 109 10 Ash Paul S November 1999 David Solomon and Egypt A Reassessment JSOT Supplement Sheffield Academic Press pp 38 46 ISBN 978 1 84127 021 0 Mitchell Eric Dodd R Adam Coyle S Cameron 2014 More Boundary of Gezer Inscriptions One New and Another Rediscovered Israel Exploration Journal 64 2 191 207 JSTOR 43855662 Tel Gezer Israel Antiquities Authority a b c d Gibson Shimon 2007 Gezer Encyclopedia Judaica 2nd ed 22 Nov 2023 lt https www encyclopedia com gt a b Gezer Ancient Importance to Israel Allaboutarchaeology org Archived from the original on 8 February 2015 Retrieved 2 January 2015 a b Finkelstein I n d Tel Gezer In Sefi Ben Yosef ed Israel Guide Judaea A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country in Hebrew Vol 9 Jerusalem Keter Publishing House p 313 OCLC 745203905 a b c Macalister R A Stewart 1912 The Excavation of Gezer 1902 1905 and 1907 1909 PDF Vol 1 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund pp 235 256 OCLC 1424889375 Tel Gezer Tel el Jazari Ancient Village or Settlement The Megalithic Portal a b Finkelstein I n d Tel Gezer In Sefi Ben Yosef ed Israel Guide Judaea A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country in Hebrew Vol 9 Jerusalem Keter Publishing House p 317 OCLC 745203905 Fortifications of the Middle Bronze Age IIB and of the Late Bronze Age are visible on the southern slope of the mound The gate is typical of the Middle Bronze Age IIB and similar ones have been discovered in many sites in the Land of Israel and in Syria It consists of two large brick towers and between them there is a direct passage to the interior of the city between three pairs of matching pillars Ussishkin David 2006 On the History of the High Place at Gezer In Czerny E Hein I Hunger H Melman D Schwab A eds Studies in Honour of Manfred Bietak Vol II Leuven Peeters Publishers pp 411 416 Retrieved 30 May 2015 Macalister R A Stewart 1912 The Excavation of Gezer 1902 1905 and 1907 1909 PDF Vol 2 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund pp 385 387 OCLC 1424889375 Gilat The Nelson Glueck School of Biblical Archaeology Retrieved 2 June 2020 Dever William G The Middle Bronze Age High Place at Gezer Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research vol 371 pp 17 57 May 2014 a b Gauthier Henri 1928 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 5 p 164 Wallis Budge E A 1920 An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary with an index of English words king list and geological list with indexes list of hieroglyphic characters coptic and semitic alphabets etc Vol II John Murray p 1043 Moran William L ed 1992 The Amarna Letters Baltimore London Johns Hopkins University Press pp 253 298 306 ff 340 ISBN 0 8018 4251 4 a b Philippe Bohstrom 2 July 2017 First Discovery of Bodies in Biblical Gezer From Fiery Destruction 3 200 Years Ago Haaretz Retrieved 30 May 2020 Shapira Ran 2013 10 24 Hidden secret of Gezer A pre Solomonic city beneath the ruins Haaretz Archived from the original on 2013 11 27 Retrieved 2013 11 27 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Haaretz published October 24 2013 retrieved November 27 2013 First Discovery of Bodies in Biblical Gezer from Fiery Destruction 3 200 Years Ago Haaretz Ortiz Steven Wolff Samuel 2019 A reevaluation of Gezer in the Late Bronze Age in light of renewed excavations and recent scholarship The Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages of Southern Canaan pp 62 85 doi 10 1515 9783110628371 004 ISBN 9783110628371 S2CID 199253906 Ortiz Steven Wolff Samuel 2021 New Evidence for the 10th Century BCE at Tel Gezer Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology 1 1 221 240 doi 10 52486 01 00001 9 ISSN 2788 8819 S2CID 236231928 Yadin Y 1958 Solomon s City Wall and Gate at Gezer Israel Exploration Journal 8 2 80 86 JSTOR 27924728 Gezer Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2 January 2015 Dever W G 1986 Late Bronze Age and Solomonic Defenses at Gezer New Evidence Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 262 262 26 doi 10 2307 1356977 JSTOR 1356977 a b Finkelstein I n d Tel Gezer In Sefi Ben Yosef ed Israel Guide Judaea A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country in Hebrew Vol 9 Jerusalem Keter Publishing House p 317 OCLC 745203905 Dever W G 1986 Late Bronze Age and Solomonic Defenses at Gezer New Evidence Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 262 262 29 doi 10 2307 1356977 JSTOR 1356977 Ehrlich Carl S November 1996 The Philistines in Transition A History from Ca 1000 730 B C E Brill Academic Publishers pp 192 193 ISBN 978 90 04 10426 6 Ornan Tallay Ortiz Steven Wolff Samuel 2013 A Newly Discovered Neo Assyrian Cylinder Seal from Gezer in Context Israel Exploration Journal 63 1 20 21 JSTOR 43855634 a b Dever W G 1985 Solomonic and Assyrian Period Palaces at Gezer Israel Exploration Journal 35 4 226 JSTOR 27925997 Ortiz Steven Wolff Samuel Arbino Gary 2011 Tel Gezer Preliminary Report Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel 123 Israel Antiquities Authority 4 s v Area B Hellenistic Remains JSTOR 26595238 1 Maccabees 13 43 48 Ortiz Steven Wolff Samuel 2012 Guarding the Border to Jerusalem The Iron Age City of Gezer Near Eastern Archaeology 75 1 The University of Chicago Press 5 doi 10 5615 neareastarch 75 1 0004 The Excavation of Ancient Gezer Reich R 1981 Archaeological Evidence of the Jewish Population at Hasmonean Gezer Israel Exploration Journal 31 1 2 48 52 JSTOR 27925781 Josephus Antiquities 13 9 2 13 259 Meyers Eric M 1999 Sepphoris on the Eve of the Great Revolt Archaeology and Josephus In Meyers Eric M ed Galilee Through the Centuries Confluence of Cultures Duke Judaic Studies Vol 1 Eisenbrauns p 113 ISBN 9781575060408 Retrieved 30 May 2020 a b Finkelstein I n d Tel Gezer In Sefi Ben Yosef ed Israel Guide Judaea A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country in Hebrew Vol 9 Jerusalem Keter Publishing House p 316 OCLC 745203905 Mitchell Eric Zan Jason M Coyle Cameron S Dodd Adam R 2012 Tel Gezer Regional Survey Preliminary Report Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel 124 Israel Antiquities Authority 3 JSTOR 26601667 Bradbury Jim 2004 Montgisard Battle of 25 November 1177 Routledge ISBN 9781134598465 Retrieved 15 December 2017 Macalister R A Stewart 1912 The Excavation of Gezer 1902 1905 and 1907 1909 PDF Vol 1 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund p Preface XI OCLC 1424889375 a b Amanda Borschel Dan 19 July 2017 Biblical account of Gezer s destruction gains ground with torched skeleton finds Times of Israel Retrieved 30 May 2020 a b c nobts edu permanent dead link members bib arch org Gary D Myers Archaeological team moves 230 tons of Israel dig debris baptistpress com USA September 15 2011 NOBTS Rampage a b Rosenberg Stephen Gabriel 28 June 2012 Boundary Stone at Gezer Report from Jerusalem 43 PDF Strata Bulletin of the Anglo Israel Archaeolocial Society 30 London 197 8 ISSN 2042 7867 Retrieved 1 June 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l Jacobson David M 2015 Editorial The Gezer Boundary Inscriptions Palestine Exploration Quarterly 147 2 83 85 doi 10 1179 0031032815Z 000000000133 S2CID 161134724 a b c Kaye Noah 2018 Inscriptions of public character and in architectural context 2746 2776 The boundary stones from Tel Gezer Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae Palaestinae Volume IV Iudaea Idumaea 2649 3324 Walter de Gruyter pp 199 215 ISBN 978 3 11 054421 3 Retrieved 1 June 2020 Paton C 5 July 2017 Israel Ancient Human Remains Discovered in Biblical City 3 200 Years After its Destruction by the Egyptians Newsweek Archived from the original on 14 June 2018 Retrieved 7 July 2017 R A Stewart Macalister The Excavation of Gezer 1902 1905 and 1907 1909 John Murray Albemarle Street West London 1912 Volume 1 1 Volume 2 2 Volume 3 3 R A Stewart Macalister Twenty First Quarterly Report on the Excavation of Gezer Palestine Exploration Quarterly vol 41 iss 2 pp 87 105 1909 P Silberberg Zelwer Les fouilles Edmond de Rothschild in Cahiers Juifs no 23 pp 472 476 June July 1936 Aren M Maier Bronze and Iron Age Tombs at Tel Gezer Israel Finds from Raymond Charles Weill s Excavations in 1914 and 1924 BAR International Series 1206 Archaeopress 2004 ISBN 978 1841715698 Zerlwer Silberberg Paule Les Fouilles de M Raymond Weill a Tell Gezer 1914 et 1924 Le memoire perdu et retrouve de Mme Silberberg Zelwer 1892 1942 Publication de deux campagnes de fouilles archeologiques conduites par M Raymond Weill a Tell Gezer 1913 1924 1942 Jerusalem Centre de recherche francais a Jerusalem 2012 William G Dever G Wright H Lance Gezer I Hebrew Union College Press 1970 ISBN 9780878203000 William G Dever Gezer II Report of the 1967 70 Seasons in Fields I amp II Hebrew Union College Press June 1 1974 ISBN 978 0878203024 Seymour Gitin Gezer III A Ceramic Typology of the Late Iron II Persian and Hellenistic Periods at Tell Gezer Hebrew Union College Press June 1 1990 ISBN 978 9652222022 William G Dever Gezer IV The Nineteen Sixty Nine to Seventy One Seasons in Field Vi the Acropolis Hebrew Union College Press December 1 1988 ISBN 978 0878203048 Joe D Seger Gezer V the field I caves Jerusalem Nelson Glueck School of Biblical Archaeology 1988 Garth Gilmour Gezer VI The Objects from Phases I and II 1964 74 Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns 2014 ISBN 978 1 57506 312 6 Seger J and J W Hardin Gezer VII The Middle Bronze and Later Fortifications in Fields II IV and VIII Winona Lake IN Eisenbrauns 2013 ISBN 978 1 57506 268 6 Younker R W A Preliminary Report of the 1990 Season at Tel Gezer Excavations of the Outer Wall and the Solomonic Gateway July 2 to August 10 1990 Andrews University Seminary Studies vol 29 pp 19 60 1991 http www telgezer com gezer assets File neareastarch 2075 201 200004 20 4 pdf Ortiz Steven Wolff Samuel GUARDING THE BORDER TO JERUSALEM The Iron Age City of Gezer Near Eastern Archaeology Chicago vol 75 iss 1 pp 4 19 Mar 2012 http www telgezer com gezer assets File Gezer 202006 2015 Transformation 20of 20Border pdf Oded Lipschitz and Aren Maeir eds Tel Gezer Excavations 2006 2015 The Transformation of a Border City in The Shephelah during the Iron Age Recent Archaeological Studies Eisenbrauns pp 61 102 2017 S Ortiz S Wolff G Arbino Tel Gezer 2006 2009 in Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel 123 Israel Antiquities Authority 123 2011 Israel Antiquities Authority Excavators and Excavations Permit for Year 2013 Survey Permit A 6744 Israel Antiquities Authority Excavators and Excavations Permit for Year 2013 Survey Permit S 438 Bible side lights from the Mound of Gezer a record of excavation and discovery in Palestine Macalister Robert Alexander Stewart 1870 1950 Free Download Borrow and Streaming Internet Archive Internet Archive 2023 03 25 Retrieved 2024 01 17 Notes edit Some of the tomb types discovered in Gezer include Arcosolium and loculus tombs of which there were five Arcosolium or recessed bench tombs another five distinct simple double arcosolia type and nine loculus or kokhim tombs These are considered to date to the Hellenistic through Byzantine periods during which periods they were most common 49 Further reading editWilliam G Dever Gezer Revisited New Excavations of the Solomonic and Assyrian Period Defenses The Biblical Archaeologist Vol 47 No 4 Dec 1984 pp 206 218 Dever William G Visiting the Real Gezer A Reply to Israel Finkelstein Journal of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv University Volume 30 Number 2 September 2003 pp 259 282 24 Confronting the Past Archaeological and Historical Essays on Ancient Israel Seymour Gitin ed Eisenbrauns January 2006 ISBN 978 1 57506 117 7External links edit nbsp Media related to Gezer at Wikimedia Commons New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary s Official Record of the Tel Gezer Excavation The Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project as of 2021 see also 2010 version Tel Gezer Excavation Ceramic Database Gezer Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 9th ed 1879 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gezer amp oldid 1221188503 Siege of Gezer by Tiglath Pileser III, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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