|
1.
Introduction: the Seventh Season (2011) at Khirbet al-Batrawy
The
seventh season of archaeological investigations and restorations at
Khirbet al-Batrawy (Lat. 32°05’,218” N, Long. 36°04’,237” E), the Early
Bronze Age II-III (3000-2300 BC) major city in Upper Wadi az-Zarqa
discovered in 2004 (Nigro 2006; 2007; 2009; 2010a; 2010b; Nigro ed.
2006; 2008; Nigro - Sala 2009), was carried out under the aegis of the
Department of Antiquities of Jordan between May 12th and June
12th 2011, and it was focused on Area B South, where,
underneath EB IVB (2200-2000 BC) dwellings and installations inside the
main collapsed EB II-III City-Wall, a further portion of EB IIIB
(2500-2300 BC) Palace B was uncovered, recovering a number of items from
its rooms. The excavation area was expanded towards the west in square
BmII7 and towards to the south in squares BmII8, northern half of BmII9,
BnII8, and northern half of BnII9.
Moreover,
the seventh season (2011) was devoted to the restoration of the western
wall of the Eastern Pavilion (B1) and of part of the Western Pavilion
(B3) of the Palace, as well as on the repair of some looters damages on
the City-Wall in Area B North, and on the Broad Room Temple in Area F.
2. Area B South – EB
IVB (2200-2000 BC) dwellings
The
exploration of the EB IVB (2200-2000 BC) village continued during the
2011 season towards the south in squares BmII8, northern half of BmII9,
BnII8, and northern half of BnII9. Only the most recent occupational
phase (2a-d) of the EB IVB rural village was uncovered in this area (Nigro
2007:352-353; Nigro ed. 2008:129-133),
thus suggesting that the original camp-site (Nigro ed. 2008:134-136,
164-167) arose just inside the northern edge of the ruins of the
previous EB IIIB city, and it extended southwards only in its final
stage of life, when it became a more consistent hamlet. At least two
rectangular elongated units (L.1140 in BmII8 + BnII8, L.1174 to the
south in BmII9) were uncovered, with a working compound (L.1030) hosting
a round platform (B.1136) in the middle. Domestic installations for food
preparation were distinguished both in L.1140 (platform B.1138, cist
S.1113) and in L.1174 (square platform B.1176, cist S.1169). Among
findings a flint knife was found belonging to a distinguished EB IV
type.
3.
Area B South – Palace of the copper axes (Palace B)
The
exploration of EB IIIB (2500-2300 BC) Palace B (“Palace of the copper
axes”) was resumed in the seventh season, completing the uncovering of
pillared hall L.1040 in square BmII7, which revealed some very
interesting architectural features. A major door (L.1150) opened at the
mid of the western wall (W.1133), emphasized by an inner step made of
two big yellowish mudbricks adopting the cubit of 0.52 x 0.26 x 0.13 m.
Four pillar bases were arrayed along the edge of the bedrock, which was
the flooring of the southern higher half of the hall (four round
cup-marks and a channel were cut into the bedrock). The westernmost base
(B.1168) was a rectangular limestone slab connected to a built up
installation flanking the door; the second one (B.1166) was a round flat
stone; the third one (B.1108), with a roughly rectangular shape, was
encircled by small stones; while the fourth one (B.1106), set into a
circle of limestone chops, had a roughly circular shape. In the
south-western corner of the hall, another huge pithos was retrieved
(1040/18), next to a square slab (B.1186), with a flint blade and some
animal bones nearby. In between the SW corner and door L.1150, the burnt
traces of a wooden bench or shelf were visible, around 0.4 m wide and 2
m long.
A second
door (L.1160), 0.9 m wide, was opened roughly at the mid of the southern
wall (W.1101) of the pillared hall. It also had a step inside the hall
consisting of a yellowish mudbrick of the same series of door L.1150.
Just west of this step, a medium size jar was found with the plastic
figure of a punctured snake applied upon the shoulders (1054/4). A third
door (L.1158) was in the south-eastern corner of the hall, introducing
to the south into a rectangular room (L.1120) stretching NE-SW. Another
decorated vessel (1054/1) was found in front of this door, which was
approached through a step in the emerging bedrock: a medium size jar,
incised with metopae on the shoulders, separated by a herringbone
motive, in which respectively a snake and a scorpion were represented.
The
rectangular room L.1120 (in squares BnII8+BnII9+BmII9) was 2.3-2.6 m
wide and around 6.3 m long, with several peculiar installations. Two
stone circles flanked the eastern face of the NNW-SSE wall (W.1149)
separating L.1120 from the large hall west of it (L.1110). In between
these two installations, two jars were aligned (one hole-mouth), and the
upside down neck of a pithos emerged in the collapse layer (a second
upside down complete neck was found southwards). The eastern wall of
Pavilion B3 (W.1159 + W.1123) appeared to have been refurbished in its
northern section (W.1159). The southern half of room L.1120 was filled
up with a layer of intermingled burnt plasters, bricks and carbonized
wooden beams (of which several samples were collected for analyses),
incorporating a series of pottery vessels, some of which, like a large
squat vat (1124/9), and a medium jar (1124/18), had presumably fallen
down from the upper storey or a balcony. Along the western face of
W.1159 remains of a wooden structure (a shelf or a balcony), around 0.35
m wide, were detected. Other jars, hole-mouth jars and red-burnished
jugs were found in this area, where the bedrock floor was at a higher
elevation. Another distinguished find is a basalt stone potter’s wheel
(KB.11.B.110), which, with the specimen retrieved in 2010, testifies to
the accumulation of such advanced tools into the palace.
South of
pillared hall L.1040 and west of room L.1120 (in squares BmII8 + BmII9),
there was another huge hall (L.1110), with a central roughly circular
stone base (W.1163) and another slab or base (W.1183) against the
western face of the eastern wall (W.1149), possibly supporting the beams
of the ceilings retrieved carbonized just south of this alignment. Like
pillared hall L.1040, also hall L.1110 had two different floor
elevations in the northern and southern half, corresponding to a
regularized step in the bedrock. The whole room was buried underneath a
layer of burnt material (F.1128), wooden beams, fallen down stones,
bricks and plaster, and, of course, a great number of pottery vessels
and items, smashed on the floor or, in some cases, floating into the
destruction layer. Against the western face of wall W.1149, a square
device (B.1189), made by a vertical slab and a mudbrick, a small stone
bench, and, to the south, by the vertically cut bedrock, possibly was a
seat or a niche. Underneath this device and leaning on its base, there
was a jar with 584 beads made of carnelian, bone, sea-shell and rock
crystal inside. The jar belonged to a row of eight medium size jars
displaced in a double east-west row roughly at the middle of the room,
including hole-mouth and flaring rim jars, in correspondence of the
distinct step of the bedrock crossing the room. One of the jars had also
a bone ring and a group of sea-shells necklace inside, while two other
had small cups at their foot. Against the eastern side of the central
pillar base a sliced flint core and a sickle made of arrayed Canaanean
blades were retrieved, together with several animal bones, a wooden
tray, and a bowl with inturned rim. A second sickle of the same type was
found north of device B.1189. In the middle of the room, just upon the
rock step, there was a red-burnished jug characterized by a highly
polished body with net-burnishing on the shoulders. Further clusters of
smashed jars and other vessels were uncovered west, north, and
north-west of the central pillar. All of these finds were immerged in a
soft layer of ashes, charcoals, charred wooden beams and broken bricks,
while in the western section a big yellowish mudbrick, like those
employed as footsteps in the doors of pillared hall L.1040, was visible.
The southern side of the room hosted a stone-built bench (B.1188) in a
niche in the wall, with a pithos inside it, probably used as a water
container. Moreover, in the passage of door L.1160 two jars were found
with a small cylindrical cup/measure associated to. Finally, just inside
the door itself, to the west, in a cavity of bedrock, a copper axe (the
fifth) was found (KB.11.B.120), of the same simple type of the other
specimens retrieved in 2010.
4. Area B South -
restoration of EB IIIB Palace B
During
the seventh season (2011) restoration works were carried on in Area B
South and B North, continuing the protection of Palace B from the east
to the west and that of the EB II-III Main City Wall.
Stone
walls of Palace B, usually preserved more than 1 m high, were restored
with antique-like lime mortar, creating a cap on top, and mending the
upper part of the walls with this material. The structure of Eastern
Pavilion B1 were completely protected, as well as those of the Western
Pavilion, which included also the restoration of the jambs of doors
L.1150, L.1158 and L.1160, and of the central pillar bases.
As
regards the Main City-Wall, a further stretch of this structure was
restored, especially on the outer face, where a section had collapsed in
antiquity.
A major
commitment of the Expedition was the restoration of more than one
hundred complete pottery vessels found also this year into the Palace,
as well as the continuation of mending and restoration of ceramic
vessels and items retrieved during the 2010 season, which followed that
of the renowned copper axes retrieved in the last season, restored and
set on display in Rome in February – April 2011 in Musei Capitolini, now
in the National Archaeological Museum of Amman.
5. Conclusions
The seventh season (2011) of
excavations and restorations at Khirbet al-Batrawy, as well as the
prompt publication of preliminary reports on the extraordinary findings
of the sixth season (2010), made it clear that this Early Bronze Age
city, and basically its Palace and Temple, vividly illustrate Jordanian
culture and society in the 3rd millennium BC. A further
effort is expected to restore, file, and study all findings from Palace
B, their historical significance, and their connection with other
civilizations of the ancient Near East. Moreover, further excavations
are needed to complete the exploration of such an interesting context,
which was kept safe due to a violent destruction occurred towards 2300
BC, and to the massive city-wall which retained it. Results of studies
and analyses will provide a fresh set of data on the Palace and its
economic realm, which all these finds, as well as faunal and
paleobotanic remains, pottery, etc., constantly recall. They will
provide a variety of inputs for interpretive and explanatory models,
aiming at a deepest and more careful historical reconstruction.
Rome “La Sapienza”
University Expedition was able to face the challenge of such a discovery
thanks to the kind continuous cooperation of the Department of
Antiquities and to the financial support of the Italian Ministry of
Foreign Affair. To both Institutions, my deepest thank is addressed.
Bibliographic References
L.
Nigro, In the Palace of the Copper Axes/Nel Palazzo delle Asce di
Rame. Khirbet al-Batrawy: the discovery of a forgotten city of the III
millennium BC in Jordan/Khirbet al-Batrawy: la scoperta di una città
dimenticata del III millennio a.C. in Giordania (= Rome «La
Sapienza» Studies on the Archaeology of Palestine & Transjordan, Colour
Monographs I), Rome 2010.
L. Nigro, “Nel palazzo delle asce di rame”, in Archeo 304 (giugno
2010), pp. 42-53.
L. Nigro, “Quattro asce di rame dal Palazzo B di Khirbet al-Batrawy
(Bronzo Antico IIIB, 2500-2300 a.C.)”, in Scienze dell’Antichità
16 (2010), pp. 561-572.
L. Nigro, “Between the Desert and the Jordan: Early Urbanization in the
Upper Wadi az-Zarqa - the EB II-III fortified town of Khirbet al-Batrawy”,
in P. Matthiae et al.
(eds), 6 ICAANE. Proceedings of the 6th International
Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. 5 May – 10 May
2008, “Sapienza”, Università di Roma,
Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 2010,
Vol. 2, pp. 431-458.
L. Nigro, “Khirbet al-Batrawy: a
Case Study of 3rd millennium BC Early Urbanism in North-Central Jordan”,
in F. al-Khraysheh et al. (eds), Studies in the History and
Archaeology of Jordan X, Amman 2009, pp. 657-677.
Catalogue of the exposition “Giordania. Crocevia di popoli e di culture”
(Roma 2009: Civita), held in Rome (Palazzo del Quirinale, Sale delle
Bandiere.
23 October 2009 - 31 January 2010), Rome 2009.
L. Nigro, M. Sala, “Preliminary
Report of the Fourth Season (2008) of Excavations by the University of
Rome “La Sapienza” at Khirbat al-Batrāwī (Upper Wādī az-Zarqā’)”, in
Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 53
(2009), pp. 371-384.
L. Nigro, “Batrawy. Una porta sul
deserto”, in Archeo 298 (dicembre 2009), pp. 72-81.
L. Nigro, “Khirbat al-Batrawi”, in MUNJAZAT 10 (2009), in press.
L. Nigro (ed.),
Khirbet al-Batrawy II.
The EB
II city-gate, the EB II-III fortifications, the EB II-III temple.
Preliminary report of the second (2006) and third (2007) seasons of
excavations
(= Rome «La Sapienza» Studies on the Archaeology of Palestine &
Transjordan, 6), Rome 2008.
L. Nigro, M. Sala, A. Polcaro, “Preliminary
Report of the Third Season of Excavations by the University of Rome “La
Sapienza” at Khirbat al-Batrāwī (Upper Wādī az-Zarqā’)”, in
Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 52
(2008), pp. 209-230.
L. Nigro, “Preliminary Report of
the First Season of Excavations of Rome “La Sapienza” University at
Khirbet al-Batrawy (Upper Wadi az-Zarqa, Jordan)”, in J.M. Córdoba et
al. (eds), Proceedings of the 5th International Congress on the
Archaeology of the Ancient Near East (5-8 April 2006), Madrid 2008,
Volume II, pp. 663-682.
L. Nigro, “Khirbat al-Batrawi”, in
MUNJAZAT 9 (2008), pp. 72-74.
L. Nigro, “Preliminary Report of the Second
Season of Excavations by the University of Rome “La Sapienza” at Khirbat
al-Batrāwī (Upper Wādī az-Zarqā’)”, in
Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 51
(2007), pp. 345-360.
L. Nigro, “Nella città fantasma”, in
Archeo 272 (ottobre 2007), pp. 44-57.
L. Nigro, “Khirbat al-Batrawi”, in
MUNJAZAT 8 (2007), pp. 63-65.
L. Nigro
(ed.), Khirbet al-Batrawy.
An Early Bronze Age Fortified Town in North-Central Jordan. Preliminary
Report of the First Season of Excavations (2005)
(= Rome «La Sapienza» Studies on the Archaeology of Palestine &
Transjordan, 3), Rome 2006.
L. Nigro, “Preliminary Report of the First
Season of Excavations by the University of Rome “La Sapienza” at Khirbat
al-Batrāwī (Upper Wādī az-Zarqā’)”, in
Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 50
(2006), pp. 229-248.
L. Nigro, “Khirbat al-Batrawi”, in
MUNJAZAT 7 (2006), pp. 57-59.
L. Nigro, “Khirbet al-Batrawy: una città
del Bronzo Antico tra il deserto basaltico e la Valle del Giordano”, in
Scienze dell’Antichità 13 (2006), pp. 663-688.
|