A Wayside Shrine in Northern Moab: Excavations in Wadi ath-Thamad
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
Major recent excavations have shed much light on the complexity of Iron Age society and religion in southern Palestine, a region where both Judeans and Edomites lived. However, it is not clear whether the religious practices attested at these sites were a reflection of localised customs or were common rituals for peoples of Cisjordan and we do not know their extent. An isolated shrine site at Wadi ath-Thamad Site WT-13 in northern Moab which contained numerous finds of Iron Age figurines and statues has been the subject of detailed excavation. The rich harvest of figurines, ceramic statues, beads, miniature ceramic vessels, architectural models, faunal remains and shells and fossils constitutes the evidence for repeated cultic activities. Although dating to the Iron Age at the time of the consolidation of the kingdom of Moab, there is insufficient evidence at present to determine the full range of cultic practices and deities venerated by the peoples of the lands within ancient Moab and by those visitors to the shrine. The links between WT-13 and the surrounding town sites is only now coming to light with excavation at Atarus and Khirbat al-Mudayna, as well as at the Ammonite site of Tall Damiyah in the Jordan Valley, where a comparable shrine has recently been uncovered. WT-13 clearly serves as a link between the Jordan Valley and the Negev, adding to our knowledge of local and foreign influences in the region during the Iron Age.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 220 x 280mm
Publication Date: 15 Sep 2017
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781785707087
About
P. M. Michèle Daviau (University of Toronto 1990) is professor emerita of Near Eastern Archaeology at Wilfrid Laurier University. She has excavated in North America Israel and Jordan where she directed excavations at Tall Jawa south of Amman and is currently director of the Wadi ath-Thamad Project in northern Moab. She edited The World of the Aramaeans and has published four volumes Excavations at Tall Jawa and is now preparing a study of the Iron Age pottery. She has a special interest in religious iconography and the domestic cult and in the archaeology of Jordan. Margreet L. Steiner (University of Leiden 1994) is an independent scholar in Leiden The Netherlands. She has produced final publications of Kathleen Kenyons excavations in Jerusalem and is the co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Levant (10.000 350 BCE). For the past thirty-five years she has participated in or directed excavations in Jordan Syria Lebanon and the Palestinian Territories. Currently she is co-director of the renewed excavations of Tell Abu Sarbut Jordan. Margreet Steiner has published widely on the archaeology of the Levant.