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Tell Sabi Abyad

Tell Sabi Abyad (Arabic: تل صبي أبيض) is an archaeological site in the Balikh River valley in northern Syria. It lies about 2 kilometers south of Tell Hammam et-Turkman.The site consists of four prehistoric mounds that are numbered Tell Sabi Abyad I to IV. Extensive excavations showed that these sites were inhabited already around 7500 to 5500 BC, although not always at the same time; the settlement shifted back and forth among these four sites.[1]

Tell Sabi Abyad
تل صبي أبيض
Excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad.
Shown within Near East
Tell Sabi Abyad (Syria)
LocationSyria
RegionBalikh River valley
Coordinates36°30′14″N 39°05′35″E / 36.504°N 39.093°E / 36.504; 39.093
Typesettlement
Area11 hectares (27 acres), 15–16 hectares (37–40 acres) (with city walls), 4 hectares (9.9 acres) (outer town)
Height2 metres (6 ft 7 in)
History
Materialclay, limestone
Foundedc. 7550 BC
Abandonedc. 1250 BC
PeriodsPre-Pottery Neolithic B, Neolithic, Transitional Neolithic-Halaf, Early Bronze Age-Halaf, Middle Assyrian period
Site notes
Excavation dates2002–ongoing
ArchaeologistsC. Castel, N. Awad, Peter Akkermans
Conditionruins
ManagementDirectorate-General of Antiquities and Museums
Public accessYes

The earliest pottery of Syria was discovered here; it dates at ca. 6900-6800 BC, and consists of mineral-tempered, and sometimes painted wares.

Excavations

Excavations, by Peter Akkermans under the auspices of the University of Amsterdam, began with a sounding on the Tell Sabi Abyad I in 1986.[2] Actual excavations on the main mound began with a field season in 1988 which focused on the Neolithic areas. Among the finds were several labrets and stamp seals as well as over 1000 unbaked clay sling missiles stored in a container.[3] Two more seasons, in 1991 and 1992, were conducted on the main mound, concentrating on the Middle Assyrian remains at the summit.[4] Surveys were conducted at the fourth mound, but excavations were not possible because of its use as a local cemetery.[5]

Ceramics

It was discovered that around 6700 BC, pottery was already mass-produced.

The pottery of Tell Sabi Abyad is somewhat similar to what was found in the other prehistoric sites in Syria and south-eastern Turkey; for example in Tell Halula, tr:Akarçay Tepe Höyük, de:Mezraa-Teleilat, and Tell Seker al-Aheimar. Yet in Sabi Abyad, the presence of painted pottery is quite unique.[6]

 
Pottery from a grave at Tell Sabi Abyad

Archaeologists discovered what seems like the oldest painted pottery here. Remarkably, the earliest pottery was of a very high quality, and some of it was already painted. Later, the painted pottery was discontinued, and the quality declined.

Our finds at Tell Sabi Abyad show an initial brief phase in which people experimented with painted pottery. This trend did not continue, however. As far as we can see now, people then gave up painting their pottery for centuries. Instead, people concentrated on the production of undecorated, coarse wares. It was not until around 6200 BC that people began to add painted decorations again. The question of why the Neolithic inhabitants of Tell Sabi Abyad initially stopped painting their pottery is unanswered for the time being.[6]

Pottery found at the site includes Dark Faced Burnished Ware and a Fine Ware that resembled Hassuna Ware and Samarra Ware. Bowls and jars often had angled necks and ornate geometric designs, some featuring horned animals. Only around six percent of the pottery found was produced locally.[7]

Cultural changes around 6200 BC

 
Stone palettes at Tell Sabi Abyad.

Significant cultural changes are observed at c. 6200 BC, which seem to be connected to the 8.2 kiloyear event. Nevertheless, the settlement was not abandoned at the time.[8]

Important change took place around 6200 BC, involving new types of architecture, including extensive storehouses and small circular buildings (tholoi); the further development of pottery in many complex and often decorated shapes and wares; the introduction of small transverse arrowheads and short-tanged points; the abundant occurrence of clay spindle whorls, suggestive of changes in textile manufacture; and the introduction of seals and sealings as indicators of property and the organization of controlled storage.[1]

Burnt Village

An unusual "Burnt Village" was discovered here. It was destroyed by a violent fire ca. 6000 BC.

Numerous artefacts were recovered from the burnt buildings; they include pottery and stone vessels, figurines, and all sorts of tools. There were also many storehouses.[1]

A sort of an 'archives' building was found, which contained hundreds of small objects such as ceramics, stone shells and axes, bone implements, and male and female clay figurines. Particularly surprising were the over 150 clay sealings with stamp-seal impressions, as well as the small counting stones (tokens) -- indicating a very early, well-developed registration and administration system.

Clay tokens

 
Skeletons and pottery in Tell Sabi Abyad.
 
Skeleton and pottery in Tell Sabi Abyad.

The site has revealed the largest collection of clay tokens and sealings yet found at any site, with over two hundred and seventy-five, made by a minimum of sixty-one stamp seals.[7] All the sealings were produced with local clay.[9] Such exchange devices were first found in level III of Mureybet during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A and are well known to have developed in the Neolithic.[7][10]

Tell Sabi Abyad I

 
Area of the fertile crescent, circa 7500 BC, with main sites. Tell Sabi Abyad is one of the important sites of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period. The area of Mesopotamia proper was not yet settled by humans.

Tell Sabi Abyad I, the biggest of the sites (measuring about 240 meters by 170 meters with a height of 10 meters). The mound is actually the result of several smaller mounds merging. It was first occupied between 5200 and 5100 BC during the Neolithic. It showed a later phase of occupation, termed "transitional" by Akkermans, between 5200 and 5100 BC, which was followed by an early Halaf period between 5100 and 5000 BC. Architecture of the 6th-millennium settlement featured multi-room rectangular buildings with round structures called tholoi that were suggested to have been used for storage.[5]

Later remains of a massive structure (23 meters long by 21 meters wide oriented NE-SW) called the "Fortress" were dated to the Middle Assyrian period (Late Bronze Age) between 1550 and 1250 BC.[4] Domestic buildings were also found, suggesting that the settlement was an Assyrian border town where a garrison was stationed.[5] The Fortress structure contained eight rooms with 2.5-metre-wide (8.2 ft) walls constructed of mud bricks and featured a staircase that led to a second floor.[11] The structure was built on top of an existing Mitanni tower and residence.[12]


Cuneiform tablets

Over 400 cuneiform tablets from the late 13th and twelfth centuries BC have been discovered.

Shortly after 1180 BC, a violent conflagration is attested. Then the attempts were made to partially renovate and reconstruct the buildings. As the cuneiform texts indicate, the Assyrian administrators were still present until the end of the 12th century, although the size of the settlement declined.

Zooarchaeology and archaeobotany

In the Halaf period, Tell Sabi Abyad had a fully developed farming economy with animal domestication of predominantly goats, but also sheep, cattle and pigs. A small number of gazelle were also hunted, although evidence for hunting and fishing is not well attested at the site.[13]

Trees that would have grown at the time included poplar, willow and ash.[13]

Domesticated emmer wheat was the primary crop grown, along with domesticated einkorn, barley and flax. A low number of peas and lentils were found compared to similar sites.[13]

Tell Sabi Abyad II

Tell Sabi Abyad II measured 75 metres (246 ft) by 125 metres (410 ft) by 4.5 metres (15 ft) high. Artefacts found evidenced a very early occupation with calibrated dates of around 7550 and 6850 BC.[5][14]

The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B horizon is present; later the site shows an uninterrupted sequence from the pre-pottery to ceramic phase.[6]

2014 destruction

In 2014, Peter Akkermans revealed that the site and some storage facilities had been plundered as the result of the Syrian Civil War.[15] The site has suffered significant damage from military activity during the Syrian Civil War.[16]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Fieldwork campaign: Tell Sabi Abyad (Syria) universiteitleiden.nl
  2. ^ Peter M. M. G. Akkermans. “Tell Sabi Abyad: 1986 Campaign.” Syria, vol. 65, no. 3/4, 1988, pp. 399–401
  3. ^ Peter M. M. G. Akkermans, and Marie le Mière. “The 1988 Excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad, a Later Neolithic Village in Northern Syria.” American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 96, no. 1, 1992, pp. 1–22
  4. ^ a b [1]Akkermans, Peter MMG, José Limpens, and Richard H. Spoor. "On the frontier of Assyria: excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad, 1991." (1993)
  5. ^ a b c d Gosden, 1999, p. 344.
  6. ^ a b c www.sabi-abyad.nl (archived DEC 14, 2017)
  7. ^ a b c Maisels, 1999, p. 144.
  8. ^ J van der Plicht, P G Akkermans, O Nieuwenhuyse, A Kaneda, A Russell, Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria: Radiocarbon Chronology, Cultural Change, and the 8.2 ka Event RADIOCARBON, Vol 53, Nr 2, 2011, p 229–243
  9. ^ DUISTERMAAT, Kim, and Gerwulf SCHNEIDER. “Chemical Analyses of Sealing Clays and the Use of Administrative Artefacts at Late Neolithic Tell Sabi Abyad (Syria).” Paléorient, vol. 24, no. 1, 1998, pp. 89–106
  10. ^ Sanner, 1991, p. 29.
  11. ^ Lipiński, 2000, p. 122.
  12. ^ [2]Düring, Bleda S., Eva Visser, and Peter MMG Akkermans. "Skeletons in the Fortress: The Late Bronze Age Burials of Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria." Levant 47.1 (2015): 30-50
  13. ^ a b c Maisels, 1993, p. 136.
  14. ^ M. Verhoeven, P.M.M.G. Akkermans (eds.), Tell Sabi Abyad II – The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Settlement - Report on the Excavations of the National Museum of Antiquities Leiden in the Balikh Valley, Syria, (PIHANS vol. 90) VIII, pp. 188, 2000. ISBN 978-90-6258-090-3
  15. ^ Depots of Leiden archaeologists in Syria plundered archaeology.wiki
  16. ^ Casana J, Laugier EJ (2017) Satellite imagery-based monitoring of archaeological site damage in the Syrian civil war. PLoS ONE 12(11): e0188589. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188589

Bibliography

  • VERHOEVEN, Marc. “Traces and Spaces : Microwear Analysis and Spatial Context of Later Neolithic Flint Tools from Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria.” Paléorient, vol. 25, no. 2, 1999, pp. 147–66
  • AKKERMANS, Peter M. M. G. “A LATE NEOLITHIC AND EARLY HALAF VILLAGE AT SABI ABYAD, NORTHERN SYRIA.” Paléorient, vol. 13, no. 1, 1987, pp. 23–40
  • Akkermans, Peter M. M. G., et al. “Investigating the Early Pottery Neolithic of Northern Syria: New Evidence from Tell Sabi Abyad.” American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 110, no. 1, 2006, pp. 123–56
  • Rooijakkers, C. Tineke. “Spinning Animal Fibres at Late Neolithic Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria?” Paléorient, vol. 38, no. 1/2, 2012, pp. 93–109
  • Maria Grazia Masetti-Rouault; Olivier Rouault; M. Wafler (2000). La Djéziré et l'Euphrate syriens de la protohistoire à la fin du second millénaire av. J.C, Tendances dans l'interprétation historique des données nouvelles, (Subartu) - Chapter : Old and New Perspectives on the Origins of the Halaf Culture by Peter Akkermans. pp. 43–44.
  • Gosden, Chris (1999). The Prehistory of Food: Appetites for Change. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-11765-4.
  • Lipiński, Edward (2000). The Aramaeans: Their Ancient History, Culture, Religion. Peeters Publishers. ISBN 978-90-429-0859-8.
  • Maisels, Charles (1993). The Near East: Archaeology in the 'Cradle of Civilization'. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-04742-5.
  • Maisels, Charles (1999). Early Civilizations of the Old World: The Formative Histories of Egypt, the Levant, Mesopotamia, India and China. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-10975-8.
  • Senner, Wayne M. (1991). The Origins of Writing. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-9167-6.

External links

  • Excavations - Tell Sabi Abyad at the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden
  • Sabi Abyad Website
  • Tell Sabi Abyad Project Facebook Page
  • Tell Sabi Abyad on the University of Cologne Radio-carbon CONTEXT database

tell, sabi, abyad, arabic, تل, صبي, أبيض, archaeological, site, balikh, river, valley, northern, syria, lies, about, kilometers, south, tell, hammam, turkman, site, consists, four, prehistoric, mounds, that, numbered, extensive, excavations, showed, that, thes. Tell Sabi Abyad Arabic تل صبي أبيض is an archaeological site in the Balikh River valley in northern Syria It lies about 2 kilometers south of Tell Hammam et Turkman The site consists of four prehistoric mounds that are numbered Tell Sabi Abyad I to IV Extensive excavations showed that these sites were inhabited already around 7500 to 5500 BC although not always at the same time the settlement shifted back and forth among these four sites 1 Tell Sabi Abyadتل صبي أبيضExcavations at Tell Sabi Abyad Shown within Near EastShow map of Near EastTell Sabi Abyad Syria Show map of SyriaLocationSyriaRegionBalikh River valleyCoordinates36 30 14 N 39 05 35 E 36 504 N 39 093 E 36 504 39 093TypesettlementArea11 hectares 27 acres 15 16 hectares 37 40 acres with city walls 4 hectares 9 9 acres outer town Height2 metres 6 ft 7 in HistoryMaterialclay limestoneFoundedc 7550 BCAbandonedc 1250 BCPeriodsPre Pottery Neolithic B Neolithic Transitional Neolithic Halaf Early Bronze Age Halaf Middle Assyrian periodSite notesExcavation dates2002 ongoingArchaeologistsC Castel N Awad Peter AkkermansConditionruinsManagementDirectorate General of Antiquities and MuseumsPublic accessYesThe earliest pottery of Syria was discovered here it dates at ca 6900 6800 BC and consists of mineral tempered and sometimes painted wares Contents 1 Excavations 1 1 Ceramics 1 2 Cultural changes around 6200 BC 1 3 Burnt Village 1 4 Clay tokens 2 Tell Sabi Abyad I 2 1 Cuneiform tablets 2 2 Zooarchaeology and archaeobotany 3 Tell Sabi Abyad II 4 2014 destruction 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksExcavations EditExcavations by Peter Akkermans under the auspices of the University of Amsterdam began with a sounding on the Tell Sabi Abyad I in 1986 2 Actual excavations on the main mound began with a field season in 1988 which focused on the Neolithic areas Among the finds were several labrets and stamp seals as well as over 1000 unbaked clay sling missiles stored in a container 3 Two more seasons in 1991 and 1992 were conducted on the main mound concentrating on the Middle Assyrian remains at the summit 4 Surveys were conducted at the fourth mound but excavations were not possible because of its use as a local cemetery 5 Ceramics Edit It was discovered that around 6700 BC pottery was already mass produced The pottery of Tell Sabi Abyad is somewhat similar to what was found in the other prehistoric sites in Syria and south eastern Turkey for example in Tell Halula tr Akarcay Tepe Hoyuk de Mezraa Teleilat and Tell Seker al Aheimar Yet in Sabi Abyad the presence of painted pottery is quite unique 6 Pottery from a grave at Tell Sabi Abyad Archaeologists discovered what seems like the oldest painted pottery here Remarkably the earliest pottery was of a very high quality and some of it was already painted Later the painted pottery was discontinued and the quality declined Our finds at Tell Sabi Abyad show an initial brief phase in which people experimented with painted pottery This trend did not continue however As far as we can see now people then gave up painting their pottery for centuries Instead people concentrated on the production of undecorated coarse wares It was not until around 6200 BC that people began to add painted decorations again The question of why the Neolithic inhabitants of Tell Sabi Abyad initially stopped painting their pottery is unanswered for the time being 6 Pottery found at the site includes Dark Faced Burnished Ware and a Fine Ware that resembled Hassuna Ware and Samarra Ware Bowls and jars often had angled necks and ornate geometric designs some featuring horned animals Only around six percent of the pottery found was produced locally 7 Cultural changes around 6200 BC Edit Stone palettes at Tell Sabi Abyad Significant cultural changes are observed at c 6200 BC which seem to be connected to the 8 2 kiloyear event Nevertheless the settlement was not abandoned at the time 8 Important change took place around 6200 BC involving new types of architecture including extensive storehouses and small circular buildings tholoi the further development of pottery in many complex and often decorated shapes and wares the introduction of small transverse arrowheads and short tanged points the abundant occurrence of clay spindle whorls suggestive of changes in textile manufacture and the introduction of seals and sealings as indicators of property and the organization of controlled storage 1 Burnt Village Edit An unusual Burnt Village was discovered here It was destroyed by a violent fire ca 6000 BC Numerous artefacts were recovered from the burnt buildings they include pottery and stone vessels figurines and all sorts of tools There were also many storehouses 1 A sort of an archives building was found which contained hundreds of small objects such as ceramics stone shells and axes bone implements and male and female clay figurines Particularly surprising were the over 150 clay sealings with stamp seal impressions as well as the small counting stones tokens indicating a very early well developed registration and administration system Clay tokens Edit Skeletons and pottery in Tell Sabi Abyad Skeleton and pottery in Tell Sabi Abyad The site has revealed the largest collection of clay tokens and sealings yet found at any site with over two hundred and seventy five made by a minimum of sixty one stamp seals 7 All the sealings were produced with local clay 9 Such exchange devices were first found in level III of Mureybet during the Pre Pottery Neolithic A and are well known to have developed in the Neolithic 7 10 Tell Sabi Abyad I Edit Area of the fertile crescent circa 7500 BC with main sites Tell Sabi Abyad is one of the important sites of the Pre Pottery Neolithic period The area of Mesopotamia proper was not yet settled by humans Tell Sabi Abyad I the biggest of the sites measuring about 240 meters by 170 meters with a height of 10 meters The mound is actually the result of several smaller mounds merging It was first occupied between 5200 and 5100 BC during the Neolithic It showed a later phase of occupation termed transitional by Akkermans between 5200 and 5100 BC which was followed by an early Halaf period between 5100 and 5000 BC Architecture of the 6th millennium settlement featured multi room rectangular buildings with round structures called tholoi that were suggested to have been used for storage 5 Later remains of a massive structure 23 meters long by 21 meters wide oriented NE SW called the Fortress were dated to the Middle Assyrian period Late Bronze Age between 1550 and 1250 BC 4 Domestic buildings were also found suggesting that the settlement was an Assyrian border town where a garrison was stationed 5 The Fortress structure contained eight rooms with 2 5 metre wide 8 2 ft walls constructed of mud bricks and featured a staircase that led to a second floor 11 The structure was built on top of an existing Mitanni tower and residence 12 Cuneiform tablets Edit Over 400 cuneiform tablets from the late 13th and twelfth centuries BC have been discovered Shortly after 1180 BC a violent conflagration is attested Then the attempts were made to partially renovate and reconstruct the buildings As the cuneiform texts indicate the Assyrian administrators were still present until the end of the 12th century although the size of the settlement declined Zooarchaeology and archaeobotany Edit In the Halaf period Tell Sabi Abyad had a fully developed farming economy with animal domestication of predominantly goats but also sheep cattle and pigs A small number of gazelle were also hunted although evidence for hunting and fishing is not well attested at the site 13 Trees that would have grown at the time included poplar willow and ash 13 Domesticated emmer wheat was the primary crop grown along with domesticated einkorn barley and flax A low number of peas and lentils were found compared to similar sites 13 Tell Sabi Abyad II EditTell Sabi Abyad II measured 75 metres 246 ft by 125 metres 410 ft by 4 5 metres 15 ft high Artefacts found evidenced a very early occupation with calibrated dates of around 7550 and 6850 BC 5 14 The Pre Pottery Neolithic B horizon is present later the site shows an uninterrupted sequence from the pre pottery to ceramic phase 6 2014 destruction EditIn 2014 Peter Akkermans revealed that the site and some storage facilities had been plundered as the result of the Syrian Civil War 15 The site has suffered significant damage from military activity during the Syrian Civil War 16 See also Edit Asia portal History portalHalaf culture Cities of the ancient Near EastReferences EditCitations Edit a b c Fieldwork campaign Tell Sabi Abyad Syria universiteitleiden nl Peter M M G Akkermans Tell Sabi Abyad 1986 Campaign Syria vol 65 no 3 4 1988 pp 399 401 Peter M M G Akkermans and Marie le Miere The 1988 Excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad a Later Neolithic Village in Northern Syria American Journal of Archaeology vol 96 no 1 1992 pp 1 22 a b 1 Akkermans Peter MMG Jose Limpens and Richard H Spoor On the frontier of Assyria excavations at Tell Sabi Abyad 1991 1993 a b c d Gosden 1999 p 344 a b c The very oldest pottery of Tell Sabi Abyad and of Syria 7000 6700 BC www sabi abyad nl archived DEC 14 2017 a b c Maisels 1999 p 144 J van der Plicht P G Akkermans O Nieuwenhuyse A Kaneda A Russell Tell Sabi Abyad Syria Radiocarbon Chronology Cultural Change and the 8 2 ka Event RADIOCARBON Vol 53 Nr 2 2011 p 229 243 DUISTERMAAT Kim and Gerwulf SCHNEIDER Chemical Analyses of Sealing Clays and the Use of Administrative Artefacts at Late Neolithic Tell Sabi Abyad Syria Paleorient vol 24 no 1 1998 pp 89 106 Sanner 1991 p 29 Lipinski 2000 p 122 2 During Bleda S Eva Visser and Peter MMG Akkermans Skeletons in the Fortress The Late Bronze Age Burials of Tell Sabi Abyad Syria Levant 47 1 2015 30 50 a b c Maisels 1993 p 136 M Verhoeven P M M G Akkermans eds Tell Sabi Abyad II The Pre Pottery Neolithic B Settlement Report on the Excavations of the National Museum of Antiquities Leiden in the Balikh Valley Syria PIHANS vol 90 VIII pp 188 2000 ISBN 978 90 6258 090 3 Depots of Leiden archaeologists in Syria plundered archaeology wiki Casana J Laugier EJ 2017 Satellite imagery based monitoring of archaeological site damage in the Syrian civil war PLoS ONE 12 11 e0188589 https doi org 10 1371 journal pone 0188589 Bibliography Edit VERHOEVEN Marc Traces and Spaces Microwear Analysis and Spatial Context of Later Neolithic Flint Tools from Tell Sabi Abyad Syria Paleorient vol 25 no 2 1999 pp 147 66 AKKERMANS Peter M M G A LATE NEOLITHIC AND EARLY HALAF VILLAGE AT SABI ABYAD NORTHERN SYRIA Paleorient vol 13 no 1 1987 pp 23 40 Akkermans Peter M M G et al Investigating the Early Pottery Neolithic of Northern Syria New Evidence from Tell Sabi Abyad American Journal of Archaeology vol 110 no 1 2006 pp 123 56 Rooijakkers C Tineke Spinning Animal Fibres at Late Neolithic Tell Sabi Abyad Syria Paleorient vol 38 no 1 2 2012 pp 93 109 Maria Grazia Masetti Rouault Olivier Rouault M Wafler 2000 La Djezire et l Euphrate syriens de la protohistoire a la fin du second millenaire av J C Tendances dans l interpretation historique des donnees nouvelles Subartu Chapter Old and New Perspectives on the Origins of the Halaf Culture by Peter Akkermans pp 43 44 Gosden Chris 1999 The Prehistory of Food Appetites for Change Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 11765 4 Lipinski Edward 2000 The Aramaeans Their Ancient History Culture Religion Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 429 0859 8 Maisels Charles 1993 The Near East Archaeology in the Cradle of Civilization Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 04742 5 Maisels Charles 1999 Early Civilizations of the Old World The Formative Histories of Egypt the Levant Mesopotamia India and China Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 10975 8 Senner Wayne M 1991 The Origins of Writing U of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 9167 6 External links EditExcavations Tell Sabi Abyad at the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden Sabi Abyad Website Tell Sabi Abyad Project Facebook Page Tell Sabi Abyad on the University of Cologne Radio carbon CONTEXT database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tell Sabi Abyad amp oldid 1124144958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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