Tel Burna
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Tel Burna (also Tell Bornât) is an archaeological site located in the
Shephelah The Shephelah () or Shfela (), or the Judaean Foothills (), is a transitional region of soft-sloping rolling hills in south-central Israel stretching over between the Judaean Mountains and the Coastal Plain. The different use of the term "Jud ...
(Judean foothills), along the banks of Nahal Guvrin, not far from modern-day Qiryat Gat. Tel Burna is located near Beit Guvrin/
Maresha Maresha was an Iron Age city mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, whose remains have been excavated at Tell Sandahanna (Arabic name), an Tell (archaeology), archaeological mound or 'tell' renamed after its identification to Tel Maresha (). The ancient ...
, Tel Goded,
Lachish Lachish (; ; ) was an ancient Canaanite and later Israelite city in the Shephelah ("lowlands of Judea") region of Canaan on the south bank of the Lakhish River mentioned several times in the Hebrew Bible. The current '' tell'' by that name, kn ...
, Tell es-Safi/ Gath and
Tel Zayit Tel Zayit (, ) is an archaeological tell in the Shephelah, or lowlands, of Israel, about 30 km east of Ashkelon. The site had previously been known as the Arab village of Zayta; its population was moved 1.5 km north during the period ...
(4 kilometers to the west). The site is thought to have been one of a series of sites along the border between Judah and
Philistia Philistia was a confederation of five main cities or pentapolis in the Southwest Levant, made up of principally Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Ekron, Gath, and for a time, Jaffa (part of present-day Tel Aviv-Yafo). Scholars believe the Philist ...
.


Identification

Due to its location, and its prominence in the Iron Ages, W. Albright and Y. Aharoni, among others, have suggested identifying the site with
Libnah Libnah or Lobana (, ''whiteness''; ) was an independent city, probably near the western seaboard of Israel, with its own king at the time of the Israelite conquest of Canaan.Gina Hens-Piazza Abingdon Old Testament Commentaries: 1–2 Kings Abingdon ...
, a site mentioned several times in the Bible, and noted to be one of the
13 Kohanic cities The 13 Kohanic Cities are the 13 cities/villages and their respective peripheral territory listed in the Book of Joshua () as having been allocated by Elazar and Joshua to the kohanim (Israelite priesthood) and their families. The Kohanic cities ...
. Libnah had also revolted against the
Kingdom of Judah The Kingdom of Judah was an Israelites, Israelite kingdom of the Southern Levant during the Iron Age. Centered in the highlands to the west of the Dead Sea, the kingdom's capital was Jerusalem. It was ruled by the Davidic line for four centuries ...
in the 9th century BCE () and where Hamutal, Queen of Judah in the 7th century BCE was born ().
Eusebius Eusebius of Caesarea (30 May AD 339), also known as Eusebius Pamphilius, was a historian of Christianity, exegete, and Christian polemicist from the Roman province of Syria Palaestina. In about AD 314 he became the bishop of Caesarea Maritima. ...
(3rd–4th century CE) in his '' Onomasticon'' mentions the ancient biblical city of Gath (), saying that it was a village formerly inhabited by the Anakim and that the village was still inhabited in his day and situated "not far from Eleutheropolis ( Beit Gubrin) near Diospolis (
Lod Lod (, ), also known as Lydda () and Lidd (, or ), is a city southeast of Tel Aviv and northwest of Jerusalem in the Central District of Israel. It is situated between the lower Shephelah on the east and the coastal plain on the west. The ci ...
), near the fifth milestone from Eleutheropolis." Eusebius' description, who places the village at the 5th-milestone from Beit Gubrin, puts ''Tel Burna'' in approximate position as a contender for the site of ancient Gath, or else Tell ej-Judeideh, as both ruins are principal Bronze Age sites only apart, and situated in the direction of Lod as one sets out from Beit Gubrin. Nearby
Maresha Maresha was an Iron Age city mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, whose remains have been excavated at Tell Sandahanna (Arabic name), an Tell (archaeology), archaeological mound or 'tell' renamed after its identification to Tel Maresha (). The ancient ...
is placed by Eusebius at about 2 milestones from Eleutheropolis ( southeast of Beit Gubrin. If in fact the location of Libnah should be sought out at Tel Burna, the excavations thus far do conform to what is understood about the city from the Biblical texts. Moreover, some recent work in 2013 has led the leader of the excavation, Itzhaq Shai, program director of the Tel Burna Excavation Project, to believe that Tel Burna is the site of the biblical town of
Libnah Libnah or Lobana (, ''whiteness''; ) was an independent city, probably near the western seaboard of Israel, with its own king at the time of the Israelite conquest of Canaan.Gina Hens-Piazza Abingdon Old Testament Commentaries: 1–2 Kings Abingdon ...
.


History

The site was established in the Early Bronze II period and extensively settled in the Middle Bronze, Late Bronze, and Iron Ages (with peak activity in the Early Bronze age and Iron II periods). It was lightly occupied in the Persian and Byzantine periods. During the Late Bronze age occupation began (on virgin soil) on a 40 meter by 100 meter platform below and to the west of the summit. The site reached its maximum occupation are during this period. Large quantities of LBA pottery shards, a 500 square meter cultic structure with a large courtyard containing a standing stone, Cypriot zoomorphic vessels, Mycenaean figurines, a Cypriot three-cupped votive vessel, and a steatite
Mittani Mitanni (–1260 BC), earlier called Ḫabigalbat in old Babylonian texts, ; Hanigalbat or Hani-Rabbat in Assyrian records, or in Egyptian texts, was a Hurrian-speaking state in northern Syria and southeast Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) with In ...
cylinder seal were found. Embedded in the courtyard were two large Cypriot pithoi. After a period of modest use in Iron Age (IIA) occupation expanded in the IIAB-C period (c. 9th to 7th century BC) though restricted only to the summit of the mound which was protected by a
casemate A casemate is a fortified gun emplacement or armoured structure from which guns are fired, in a fortification, warship, or armoured fighting vehicle.Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary When referring to antiquity, the term "casemate wall" ...
fortification wall. The fortification consisted of two parallel walls (2 meters apart) with perpendicular connectors. The other was 2 meters wide and the inner wall 1.5 meters wide, both constructed of large field stones. The fortification encloses a 70 by 70 meter area and has a length of about 270 meters.Shai, Itzhaq, et al., "The Fortifications at Tel Burna: Date, Function and Meaning", Israel Exploration Journal, vol. 62, no. 2, pp. 141–57, 2012 Along the southern section of the wall a monumental city gate with a massive stone tower and buttresses was excavated. Finds included a large number of pottery shards, some with
LMLK seal The LMLK seal appears on the handles of several large storage jars from the Kingdom of Judah, where it was first issued during the reign of Hezekiah around 700 BCE. Seals bearing these four Hebrew letters have been discovered primarily on uneart ...
impressions. In 1948 the site was used as a military outpost in the war.


Archaeology

The site consists of a roughly 70 meter by 70 meter central mound and about a 16 hectare lower town. The site was described by Victor Guérin in 1869 (as Tell Bournat) and then a decade later by Lieutenant Claude Conder of the Palestine Exploration Fund (noting 4 foot high fortification walls). A limited survey of the site occurred in the 1950s. A site survey was conducted in 2009. The first excavations at the site were conducted in the summer of 2010, by a team from the Institute of Archaeology at Ariel University, as part of a long term archaeological project, headed by Itzhaq Shai and Joe Uziel, affiliated with
Bar Ilan University Bar-Ilan University (BIU, , ''Universitat Bar-Ilan'') is a public research university in the Tel Aviv District city of Ramat Gan, Israel. Established in 1955, Bar Ilan is Israel's second-largest academic university institution. It has 20,000 ...
which continues to the present. Among the Iron Age II finds on the summit were six storage silos which went out of use after that time. One silo cuts the inner fortification wall, indicating that the wall had fall out of use by that date. Among the late Iron Age II finds in the backfill of one silo was a jar handle fragment stamped with a private seal "'zr followed by hgy" which the excavators took as two names. Finds included an illustrated
krater A krater or crater (, ; , ) was a large two-handled type of vase in Pottery of ancient Greece, Ancient Greek pottery and metalwork, mostly used for the mixing of wine with water. Form and function At a Greek symposium, kraters were placed in ...
, unique but parallel to the Lachish ewer.


See also

*
Cities of the ancient Near East The earliest cities in history were in the ancient Near East, an area covering roughly that of the modern Middle East: its history began in the 4th millennium BC and ended, depending on the interpretation of the term, either with the conquest by ...


References


Further reading

*Ackermann, Oren, et al., "Deciphering Hidden Ancient Human Physical and Chemical Markers through pOSL and pXRF Analysis: A Case Study at Tel Burna", No. EGU24-14063", Copernicus Meetings, 2024 *Gaastra, Jane S., et al., "Big-cat hunting in the Bronze and Iron Ages of the Near East: a view from Tel Burna", Antiquity 97.395, pp. 1138–1155, 2023 *Greenfield, Tina, McKinny, Chris and Shai, Itzhaq, "'I Can Count All My Bones': A Preliminary Report of the Late Bronze Faunal Remains from Area B1 at Tel Burna, Israel", The Wide Lens in Archaeology. Honoring Brian Hesse's Contributions to Anthropological Archaeology, hrsg. v. Justin Lev-Tov, Paula Hesse, Allan Gilbert (Archaeobiology 2), pp. 419–442, 2017 *McKinny C. and Dagan A., "The Explorations of Tel Burna", 2013 *Orendi A., Šmejda L., McKinny C., Cassuto D., Sharp C. and Shai I., "The Agricultural Landscape of Tel Burna: Ecology and Economy of a Bronze Age/Iron Age Settlement in the Southern Levant", Journal of Landscape Ecology 10/3, pp. 165–188, 2017 *Jon Ross, Kent D. Fowler, Itzhaq Shai, "New fingerprint evidence for female potters in Late Bronze Age Canaan: The demographics of potters and division of labour at Tel Burna", Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, vol. 71, 2023 ISSN 0278-4165 *Shai, Itzhaq, "Tel Burna: A Judahite Fortified Town in the Shephelah", The Shephelah during the Iron Age: Recent Archaeological Studies, edited by Oded Lipschits and Aren M. Maeir, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 45–60, 2017 *Shai, Itzhaq, "Agricultural and Economic Change in the Iron II Judean Shephelah as a Result of Geopolitical Shifts: A View from Tel Burna", “And in Length of Days Understanding”(Job 12: 12) Essays on Archaeology in the Eastern Mediterranean and Beyond in Honor of Thomas E. Levy. Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 711–721, 2023 *Šmejda, L., Hejcman, M., Horák, J. and Shai, I., "Multi-element Mapping of Anthropogenically Modified Soils and Sediments at the Bronze to Iron Ages Site of Tel Burna in the Southern Levant", Quaternary International 483, pp. 111–123, 2018 *Tavger, Aharon, et al., "‘Libnah and ‘Ether’ (Josh 15:42): The Archaeological Survey of Khirbat El-‘Atar in Light of over a Decade of Excavations at Tel Burna", Archaeological Excavations and Research Studies in Southern Israel Collected Papers Volume 5: 18th Annual Southern Conference, edited by Amir Golani et al., Israel Antiquities Authority, pp. 91–116, 2022 *Shai I., "Two Late Bronze Age Ceramic Masks from Tel Burna, Israel" In A. Berlejung and J.E. Filitz eds. The Physicality of the Other Masks from the Ancient Near East and the Eastern Mediterranean (Orientalische Religionen in der Antike 27). Tübingen, pp. 133–139, 2018 *Shai I., Sharp C., de Freitas A., Cassuto D. and McKinny C., "Trade and Exchange in the Southern Levant in the 13th Century BCE: A View from Tel Burna, a Town in the Shephelah, Israel", In A. Cruz and J.F. Gibaja eds. Interchange in Pre- and Protohistory: Case Studies in Iberia, Romania, Turkey and Israel (BAR Int. S. 2891). Oxford, pp. 177–183, 2018


External links


Tel Burna siteFind a Dig: Tel Burna, Israel
{{DEFAULTSORT:Burna Archaeological sites in Israel