Conny Waters – AncientPages.com – Gezer is an ancient southern Levantine city, well known from Egyptian, ᴀssyrian, and Biblical texts and ᴀssociated with stories of power struggles and significant historical figures.
It is also a rich archaeological site with abundant Bronze Age and Iron Age remains and great potential for research into the daily lives of its denizens. Recent excavations at the site have uncovered a continuous stratigraphic sequence that allows for detailed dating and establishing an absolute chronology of events at the site.
Aerial image of the excavations. Image courtesy of the Tandy archaeological expedition to Tel Gezer, CC-BY 4.0
In a new study, Lyndelle Webster of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and colleagues state new dates provide detailed insights into the timing of events in the ancient city of Gezer.
Webster and colleagues obtained 35 radiocarbon dates on organic materials (mostly seeds) from seven distinct stratigraphic layers at Gezer. These dates range from the 13th to the 9th centuries, a time period that covers numerous significant changes in the city, including multiple destructive events, rebuilding episodes, and the fortification of the city. Some of these events have been proposed to be linked to certain stories from ancient texts.
This study provides a detailed dataset that can be used to test proposed correlations between the archaeological record and ancient texts. These dates suggest, for example, that the correlation of a certain destructive episode with the actions of the pharaoh Merneptah is plausible, while the proposed link between another such episode and the campaign of Hazael is not. Ultimately, this new dataset provides an independent source of absolute dates that will allow researchers to better understand the events at Gezer and place them in a regional perspective.
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The authors add: “The development of a radiocarbon-based chronology at Tel Gezer – a site with uniquely rich historical connections – illustrates the crucial role radiocarbon dating can and must play in reconstructing individual site histories, resolving long-running debates and testing possible correlations between archaeological remains and written sources.”
The study was published in the journal PLOS One
Written by Conny Waters – AncientPages.com Staff Writer