fbpx
Wikipedia

Tel Tanninim

Tel Tanninim (Hebrew: תל תנינים, lit.'Crocodiles Mound'), in Arabic Tell al-Milāt (lit. 'Mortar Mound'),[1] is an ancient tell (archaeological mound) on the shore of the Mediterranean, near the mouth of Nahal Tanninim ('Crocodiles Stream'), in the vicinity of the modern Arab town of Jisr az-Zarka, Israel.[2]

Tel Tanninim
תל תנינים
Tel Tanninim at the mouth of Nahal Tanninim stream
Shown within Israel
Alternative nameTell al-Milāt / Malāt
LocationNear Jisr az-Zarka, Israel
RegionLevant
Coordinates32°32′19″N 34°54′6″E / 32.53861°N 34.90167°E / 32.53861; 34.90167
TypeSettlement
History
MaterialKurkar (aeolian quartz sandstone with carbonate cement)
Abandoned1265
PeriodsPersian, Hellenistic, Byzantine, Umayyad, Crusader, Ottoman
Site notes
Excavation dates1979, 1996-1999
ArchaeologistsRobert R. Stieglitz
Public accessYes

Names edit

 
El Melat, just north of Caesarea, in the 1858 van de Velde map of Palestine.

The Modern Hebrew names of the mount and the river hark back to the Nile crocodiles that used to live in the river and the now drained nearby Kabbara swamps until the beginning of the 20th century[1]tannin (singular) and tanninim meaning crocodile/s in Hebrew. The Greek name of the Hellenistic town was Krokodeilon polis, 'Crocodiles City' (Strabo and Pliny),[1] also spelled Crocodeilopolis[3] or Crocodilopolis.[2][4]

Migdal Malhā, the Aramaic name from the Byzantine period, as well as the Crusader name, Turris Salinarum, translate to "Saltworks Tower",[1] as does the Arabic correspondent, Burj al-Malih,[5] either referring to the sea salt production, or the salted fish industry developed there.[1] Malh (Arabic: ملح, romanizedmilh) means salt.

The Arabic name Al Malat (Arabic: ملاط) means mortar.[6]

History edit

Archaeological surveys indicate that the mound was occupied from the Persian to the Crusader period, with a gap during the entire Roman period, and intermittent settlement after the Umayyad period until the Crusader resettlement.[1] The first two authors to mention the settlement were the Greek Strabo (63/64 BCE – c. 24 CE) and the Roman Pliny the Elder (23/24–79 CE), both writing during the Roman period.

Persian to Umayyad period edit

The first settlement dates to the Persian period (475-332 BCE), when the northern part of the Palestinian coast was given by the Achaemenid emperor to the king of Sidon, a Phoenician vassal[1] with a strong maritime presence. Phoenician pottery is the earliest found at the site, proving that it was the Phoenicians who established the settlement, but the name they used for it is unknown.[1] The town continued after the conquest by Alexander the Great throughout the Hellenistic period, when it was known as Krokodeilon polis, but ceased to exist around 100 BCE.[1]

Strabo writes in his Geographica (published c. 7 BCE–23 CE) that in his time all that remained of the town was its name.[3] A Roman period road passes near the remains of the ancient city.[citation needed] Remains of a Roman bridge which once crossed the stream were still visible as late as the 19th century.[7]

Archaeological excavations found meager remains of a large Early Byzantine church, whose foundation walls served as a base for Late Byzantine, Early Islamic and Crusader buildings.[1] The Jerusalem Talmud mentions the settlement under the Aramaic name Migdal Malhā (Demai 2:1,22c), meaning 'Saltworks Tower', a name preserved in the Latin form, Turris Salinarum, until the Crusader period.[1] In the Byzantine period this was the northernmost settlement of the municipal area of Caesarea, the provincial capital.[1] Substantial remains were unearthed from the Late Byzantine period, including ponds for the breeding of freshwater fish close to the Tel Tanninim Aqueduct, and ponds for saltwater fish closer to the shore.[1] The aqueduct and fish ponds were built in the fourth century and operated continuously until the end of the seventh century, in the Umayyad period.[1]

It seems that the Sasanian invasion of 614, followed by the Muslim conquest (635-40), led to the decline of the Byzantine settlement.[8] A diminished village survived until the late 7th or early 8th century, after which it was abandoned, except for the sporadic but persistent presence of stone robbers from the mid-8th until the 12th century.[8] One recent suggestion is that the earthquake of 749 might have led to the final destruction of the Byzantine-Umayyad settlement.[8] In spite of its natural and strategic advantages, the site was only resettled in the 12th century.[8]

Crusader period edit

The remains on the tell from the Crusader period include a small tower,[5] a pool and an aqueduct - the only remains from the Crusader castle of Turris Salinarum ('Saltworks Tower'), Burj al-Malih in Arabic.[citation needed] Researchers suppose that the site was utilised for salt production, giving its name to the Crusader castle. The site became abandoned again during the late Middle Ages.[citation needed]

Hugh Grenier, Lord of Caesarea, donated the tower and its mound to the Knights Hospitaller, and in 1182 the gift was confirmed by his son.[9][5] It was destroyed by Baibars in 1265.[5]

Late Ottoman period edit

 
"Tall el Malat" in the Survey of Palestine

In 1834, during the rule of Muhammad Ali of Egypt over the region, the Arab village of Jisr az-Zarka ("Blue [River] Bridge" in Arabic) was established in the vicinity of the tell. Some six decades later, in 1898, the Ottoman authorities built a bridge on top of its ruined Roman precursor over the Crocodiles River near the tell, as part of preparations towards the visit of the German Emperor Wilhelm II, who requested to pass with his convoy from Haifa to Jerusalem along the coastline, rather than use the more inland route.[2][7] In 2020, the meanwhile collapsed Ottoman bridge was restored to its initial form with outmost care for accurate reconstruction.[7]

Damage and exposure edit

Tel Tanninim was the target of looting in the 1990s, and was again damaged in December 2010 by a heavy winter storm.[10] Archaeological remains at the northern part of the mound are exposed to weathering by the sea, which makes protection and conservation measures necessary.[11] An artificial flood plain was set up on the northern side of the restored Ottoman bridge, in order to protect it from high water levels of Nahal Tanninim, .[7]

Archaeological research edit

 
Melat and Zerka in the PEF Survey of Palestine (note the misprint Helat for Melat)[12]

The area, then known as Melat, was examined as part of the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine (1870s).[10][12] No modern archaeological survey of the tell was performed until 1975.[citation needed] In 2004, additional archaeological surveys were made at the site.[citation needed]

In 1979, a salvage excavation performed along the eroded western edge of the tell brought to light significant Byzantine remains.[1]

Between 1996-1999, systematic excavations took place at Tel Tanninim, led by Robert R. Stieglitz of Rutgers University, Newark.[1]

Access edit

Nowadays, the access to the tell passes via Jisr az-Zarka village.[citation needed]

See also edit

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stieglitz, Robert R., Tel Tanninim, 2000, accessed 17 February 2021
  2. ^ a b c Gilad, Moshe (2018-07-24). "Saving the Last Arab Fishing Village in Israel". Haaretz. Retrieved 2019-01-28.
  3. ^ a b Strabo, Geography, Book XVI, Chapter 2, line 27. Accessed 2 June 2020.
  4. ^ "One of the last clean rivers in Israel - Magazine - Jerusalem Post". www.jpost.com. Retrieved 2019-01-28.
  5. ^ a b c d Pringle, Denys (1997). Agricultural and Industrial Installations (p. 14); Burj al-Malih (No. 67, p. 41). Cambridge University Press. pp. 14, 41. ISBN 9780521460101. Retrieved 17 February 2021. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  6. ^ Survey of Western Palestine, Arabic and English name lists, p.140
  7. ^ a b c d Gilad, Moshe (14 January 2021). "Reconstructed Ottoman Bridge in Israel Raises Hackles Over Politicization of Archaeology". Haaretz. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d Taxel, Itamar (January 2013). "The Byzantine-early Islamic transition on the Palestinian coastal plain: a reevaluation of the archaeological evidence". Semitica et Classica. 6: 73-106 [Tel Tanninim, 83–84, fn. 65]. doi:10.1484/J.SEC.1.103728. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  9. ^ John L. LaMonte, "The Lords of Caesarea in the Period of the Crusades", Speculum 22, 2 (1947): 149–51 (subscription or $10 purchase fee, Feb 2021).
  10. ^ a b Tel Tanninim at Bible Walks, accessed 17 February 2021
  11. ^ Galili, Ehud; Zviely, Dov; Bresler, Gidi; Brachya, Valerie; Rosen, Baruch. Erdal Özhan (ed.). "Ancient coastal settlements of Israel: endangered cultural resource". Proceedings of the Second International Conference / Workshop on the State-of-the-Art of ICM [Integrated Coastal Management] in the Mediterranean & the Black Sea, MED & BLACK SEA ICM 08, 14–18 October 2008, Akyaka, Turkey: 147–158 [155]. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  12. ^ a b Survey of Palestine, Samaria, page 33: "El Helat – There are remains here of a small tower on the shore, and of foundations and cisterns built of rubble. Only the rubble remains in the tower, with hard white mortar, possibly once faced with ashlars. There are remains of the piers of a bridge, just north of the present mouth of the Zerka. The work has every appearance of Crusading origin" and page 2: "Nahr ez Zerka is one of the most important streams in Palestine... The stream flows into the sea near el Melat over a stony bed, and was found to have a strong current 5 to 10 yards across, and about 2 feet deep, in October, 1876." Note that Helat is a misprint for Melat (R. Raphael Stieglitz; Ya'el D. Arnon (2006). Tel Tanninim: Excavations at Krokodeilon Polis, 1996-1999. American Schools of Oriental Research. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-89757-072-5. Conder and Kitchener noted ruins at El Helat (a misprint for El Melat)

tanninim, hebrew, תל, תנינים, crocodiles, mound, arabic, tell, milāt, mortar, mound, ancient, tell, archaeological, mound, shore, mediterranean, near, mouth, nahal, tanninim, crocodiles, stream, vicinity, modern, arab, town, jisr, zarka, israel, תל, תנינים, mo. Tel Tanninim Hebrew תל תנינים lit Crocodiles Mound in Arabic Tell al Milat lit Mortar Mound 1 is an ancient tell archaeological mound on the shore of the Mediterranean near the mouth of Nahal Tanninim Crocodiles Stream in the vicinity of the modern Arab town of Jisr az Zarka Israel 2 Tel Tanninimתל תנינים Tel Tanninim at the mouth of Nahal Tanninim streamShown within IsraelAlternative nameTell al Milat MalatLocationNear Jisr az Zarka IsraelRegionLevantCoordinates32 32 19 N 34 54 6 E 32 53861 N 34 90167 E 32 53861 34 90167TypeSettlementHistoryMaterialKurkar aeolian quartz sandstone with carbonate cement Abandoned1265PeriodsPersian Hellenistic Byzantine Umayyad Crusader OttomanSite notesExcavation dates1979 1996 1999ArchaeologistsRobert R StieglitzPublic accessYes Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Persian to Umayyad period 2 2 Crusader period 2 3 Late Ottoman period 3 Damage and exposure 4 Archaeological research 5 Access 6 See also 7 External links 8 ReferencesNames edit nbsp El Melat just north of Caesarea in the 1858 van de Velde map of Palestine The Modern Hebrew names of the mount and the river hark back to the Nile crocodiles that used to live in the river and the now drained nearby Kabbara swamps until the beginning of the 20th century 1 tannin singular and tanninim meaning crocodile s in Hebrew The Greek name of the Hellenistic town was Krokodeilon polis Crocodiles City Strabo and Pliny 1 also spelled Crocodeilopolis 3 or Crocodilopolis 2 4 Migdal Malha the Aramaic name from the Byzantine period as well as the Crusader name Turris Salinarum translate to Saltworks Tower 1 as does the Arabic correspondent Burj al Malih 5 either referring to the sea salt production or the salted fish industry developed there 1 Malh Arabic ملح romanized milh means salt The Arabic name Al Malat Arabic ملاط means mortar 6 History editArchaeological surveys indicate that the mound was occupied from the Persian to the Crusader period with a gap during the entire Roman period and intermittent settlement after the Umayyad period until the Crusader resettlement 1 The first two authors to mention the settlement were the Greek Strabo 63 64 BCE c 24 CE and the Roman Pliny the Elder 23 24 79 CE both writing during the Roman period Persian to Umayyad period edit The first settlement dates to the Persian period 475 332 BCE when the northern part of the Palestinian coast was given by the Achaemenid emperor to the king of Sidon a Phoenician vassal 1 with a strong maritime presence Phoenician pottery is the earliest found at the site proving that it was the Phoenicians who established the settlement but the name they used for it is unknown 1 The town continued after the conquest by Alexander the Great throughout the Hellenistic period when it was known as Krokodeilon polis but ceased to exist around 100 BCE 1 Strabo writes in his Geographica published c 7 BCE 23 CE that in his time all that remained of the town was its name 3 A Roman period road passes near the remains of the ancient city citation needed Remains of a Roman bridge which once crossed the stream were still visible as late as the 19th century 7 Archaeological excavations found meager remains of a large Early Byzantine church whose foundation walls served as a base for Late Byzantine Early Islamic and Crusader buildings 1 The Jerusalem Talmud mentions the settlement under the Aramaic name Migdal Malha Demai 2 1 22c meaning Saltworks Tower a name preserved in the Latin form Turris Salinarum until the Crusader period 1 In the Byzantine period this was the northernmost settlement of the municipal area of Caesarea the provincial capital 1 Substantial remains were unearthed from the Late Byzantine period including ponds for the breeding of freshwater fish close to the Tel Tanninim Aqueduct and ponds for saltwater fish closer to the shore 1 The aqueduct and fish ponds were built in the fourth century and operated continuously until the end of the seventh century in the Umayyad period 1 It seems that the Sasanian invasion of 614 followed by the Muslim conquest 635 40 led to the decline of the Byzantine settlement 8 A diminished village survived until the late 7th or early 8th century after which it was abandoned except for the sporadic but persistent presence of stone robbers from the mid 8th until the 12th century 8 One recent suggestion is that the earthquake of 749 might have led to the final destruction of the Byzantine Umayyad settlement 8 In spite of its natural and strategic advantages the site was only resettled in the 12th century 8 Crusader period edit The remains on the tell from the Crusader period include a small tower 5 a pool and an aqueduct the only remains from the Crusader castle of Turris Salinarum Saltworks Tower Burj al Malih in Arabic citation needed Researchers suppose that the site was utilised for salt production giving its name to the Crusader castle The site became abandoned again during the late Middle Ages citation needed Hugh Grenier Lord of Caesarea donated the tower and its mound to the Knights Hospitaller and in 1182 the gift was confirmed by his son 9 5 It was destroyed by Baibars in 1265 5 Late Ottoman period edit nbsp Tall el Malat in the Survey of Palestine In 1834 during the rule of Muhammad Ali of Egypt over the region the Arab village of Jisr az Zarka Blue River Bridge in Arabic was established in the vicinity of the tell Some six decades later in 1898 the Ottoman authorities built a bridge on top of its ruined Roman precursor over the Crocodiles River near the tell as part of preparations towards the visit of the German Emperor Wilhelm II who requested to pass with his convoy from Haifa to Jerusalem along the coastline rather than use the more inland route 2 7 In 2020 the meanwhile collapsed Ottoman bridge was restored to its initial form with outmost care for accurate reconstruction 7 Damage and exposure editTel Tanninim was the target of looting in the 1990s and was again damaged in December 2010 by a heavy winter storm 10 Archaeological remains at the northern part of the mound are exposed to weathering by the sea which makes protection and conservation measures necessary 11 An artificial flood plain was set up on the northern side of the restored Ottoman bridge in order to protect it from high water levels of Nahal Tanninim 7 Archaeological research edit nbsp Melat and Zerka in the PEF Survey of Palestine note the misprint Helat for Melat 12 The area then known as Melat was examined as part of the PEF s Survey of Western Palestine 1870s 10 12 No modern archaeological survey of the tell was performed until 1975 citation needed In 2004 additional archaeological surveys were made at the site citation needed In 1979 a salvage excavation performed along the eroded western edge of the tell brought to light significant Byzantine remains 1 Between 1996 1999 systematic excavations took place at Tel Tanninim led by Robert R Stieglitz of Rutgers University Newark 1 Access editNowadays the access to the tell passes via Jisr az Zarka village citation needed See also edit nbsp History portal nbsp Ancient Greece portal nbsp Christianity portal Tel Dor Caesarea MaritimaExternal links editFiles on Tell el Malat 1922 45 from the Department of Antiquities Mandate Palestine now at the Israel Antiquities Authority s Scientific Archive 1919 1948References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stieglitz Robert R Tel Tanninim 2000 accessed 17 February 2021 a b c Gilad Moshe 2018 07 24 Saving the Last Arab Fishing Village in Israel Haaretz Retrieved 2019 01 28 a b Strabo Geography Book XVI Chapter 2 line 27 Accessed 2 June 2020 One of the last clean rivers in Israel Magazine Jerusalem Post www jpost com Retrieved 2019 01 28 a b c d Pringle Denys 1997 Agricultural and Industrial Installations p 14 Burj al Malih No 67 p 41 Cambridge University Press pp 14 41 ISBN 9780521460101 Retrieved 17 February 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Survey of Western Palestine Arabic and English name lists p 140 a b c d Gilad Moshe 14 January 2021 Reconstructed Ottoman Bridge in Israel Raises Hackles Over Politicization of Archaeology Haaretz Retrieved 17 February 2021 a b c d Taxel Itamar January 2013 The Byzantine early Islamic transition on the Palestinian coastal plain a reevaluation of the archaeological evidence Semitica et Classica 6 73 106 Tel Tanninim 83 84 fn 65 doi 10 1484 J SEC 1 103728 Retrieved 17 February 2021 John L LaMonte The Lords of Caesarea in the Period of the Crusades Speculum 22 2 1947 149 51 subscription or 10 purchase fee Feb 2021 a b Tel Tanninim at Bible Walks accessed 17 February 2021 Galili Ehud Zviely Dov Bresler Gidi Brachya Valerie Rosen Baruch Erdal Ozhan ed Ancient coastal settlements of Israel endangered cultural resource Proceedings of the Second International Conference Workshop on the State of the Art of ICM Integrated Coastal Management in the Mediterranean amp the Black Sea MED amp BLACK SEA ICM 08 14 18 October 2008 Akyaka Turkey 147 158 155 Retrieved 17 February 2021 a b Survey of Palestine Samaria page 33 El Helat There are remains here of a small tower on the shore and of foundations and cisterns built of rubble Only the rubble remains in the tower with hard white mortar possibly once faced with ashlars There are remains of the piers of a bridge just north of the present mouth of the Zerka The work has every appearance of Crusading origin and page 2 Nahr ez Zerka is one of the most important streams in Palestine The stream flows into the sea near el Melat over a stony bed and was found to have a strong current 5 to 10 yards across and about 2 feet deep in October 1876 Note that Helat is a misprint for Melat R Raphael Stieglitz Ya el D Arnon 2006 Tel Tanninim Excavations at Krokodeilon Polis 1996 1999 American Schools of Oriental Research p 11 ISBN 978 0 89757 072 5 Conder and Kitchener noted ruins at El Helat a misprint for El Melat Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tel Tanninim amp oldid 1207221261, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.