Browse Items (25 total)
- Collection: Prehistory
Yiftael: Early Bronze Age I Architecture
The ancient site of Yiftael, in Lower Galilee, has one of the best preserved Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age I (3150-2850) villages in Galilee. This photograph shows the foundations of the round or elliptical houses that comprised a room that was…
Uruk: Sumerian King List
The Sumerian King List is the name given to a traditional canon of the early kings of Mesopotamia, thought by some scholars to have been composed in the time of Utu-hegal, a king of the city of Uruk who restored Sumerian independence after the…
Tags: Cuneiform, Logographic, Mesopotamia, Sumer, Sumerian, Sumerian King List, Syllabic, Uruk
Tel Megiddo: Cuneiform tablets
The earliest writing preserved from Israel/Palestine are in the form of cuneiform on clay tablets like this one. The cuneiform script and the languages that were written in it (like Akkadian) were developed in Mesopotamia. This tablet fragment…
Tags: Akkadian, Bronze Age, Cuneiform, Gilgamesh, Megiddo, Mesopotamia
Tel Arad: Early Bronze Age tower
This photograph of one of the many the Early Bronze Age towers at Arad reveals defenses typical of the period. The towers, 10-12 feet in diameter and found at 65-80 foot intervals, projected out from the wall, thus exposing any attacker attempting to…
Tags: Arad, Bronze Age, Tower
Tale of Sinuhe
The story of Sinuhe has been preserved on numerous papyri and ostraca. This manuscript is written in an Egyptian script called hieratic, which is closely related to Egyptian hieroglyphs, and dates to the Egyptian 12th Dynasty (ca. 1991-1785 BCE). It…
Tags: Bronze Age, Egyptian, Hieratic, Papyrus, Sinuhe
Sumer: Cuneiform script
Writing was invented in southern Mesopotamia, in the ancient kingdom of Sumer, sometime before 3,000 BCE. Cuneiform, the type of writing seen in column 6 of this slide, was a development from earlier 'logographic' writing, in which signs stood for…
Tags: Cuneiform, Logographic, Mesopotamia, Sumer, Sumerian, Syllabic
Southern Mesopotamia: Cuneiform tablets
The earliest writing was not on paper, but on clay tablets. Instead of a pen, scribes used an instrument called a stylus that was triangular in cross-section. They would press the tip of the stylus into the clay to make the triangular portions of the…
Tags: Cuneiform, Logographic, Mesopotamia, Sumer, Sumerian, Syllabic
Saqqara: Execration Text
This figurine, modeled in unbaked clay, has the form of a kneeling prisoner with his arms tied behind him at the elbows. The writing is hieratic, a script much like Egyptian hieroglyphics; the inscription contains the names of enemies. After it was…
Tags: Bronze Age, Egyptian, Execration text, Hieratic, Saqqara
Rashid: The Rosetta Stone
The Rosetta Stone contains an inscription written in three scripts (Egyptian hieroglyphs, Demotic, and Greek) and allowed the decipherment of hieroglyphs and Demotic. It was found by Napoleon's army in 1799 in the city of Rashid (Rosetta) in the Nile…
Tags: Demotic, Greek, Hellenistic, Hieroglyphs, Inscription, Memphis, Napoleon, Rashid, Rosetta Stone
Northern Negev Desert: Female Figurine
This 12 inch-high figurine depicts a female figure seated on a stool and holding a milk churn on her head. The milk churn is a miniature replica of ceramic churns known from this period. It was found together with several other apparently ritual…
Tags: Ashtaroth, Fertility, Figurine, Negev Desert
Negev Desert: Middle Bronze Age I Architecture - detail
This photograph shows a reconstruction of how the roof was probably built on a Round House. Wooden beams from the trunk of a nearby tamarisk tree were laid like spokes radiating from the central pillar to the outer wall, and broad, flat stones were…
Tags: Architecture, Negev Desert, Round house
Negev Desert: Middle Bronze Age I Architecture
This photograph shows a simple one-room 'round house' in the Negev Desert that was built around 2,000 BCE. The pillar in the middle of the room supported the roof. It seems that they were used only for sleeping quarters: all cooking ovens and other…
Tags: Architecture, Negev Desert, Round house
Near Nahal Tabor: Female Figurine
This 6 inch-high clay figurine dates to the Late Neolithic Age (6,000-5,000 BCE), which is the same time that the earliest baked clay vessels were being made. It is the only complete one of its kind from this period, although fragments have been…
Tags: Fertility, Figurine, Nahal Tabor
Nahal Mishmar: Chalcolithic bronze hoard
These copper objects are part of one of the most famous hoards of objects ever found in the region. The hoard consisted of over 400 items that were found hidden in a cave high in a cliff overlooking Nahal Mishmar, a seasonal river bed near En Gedi,…
Tags: Chalcolithic Period, Hoard, Nahal Mishmar, Ritual
Middle Bronze Age I Pottery
This photograph shows some of the common pottery from the Middle Bronze I period (2,000-1,900 BCE). The basin-shaped vessel in the foreground center with the four pinched corners is an ancient lamp. Oil would be put inside and wicks would run through…
Tags: Bronze Age, Ceramics, Pottery
Jericho: Neolithic Tower
This photograph shows the earliest fortification structure thus far discovered anywhere in the world. It is a circular tower that was probably built around 7,000 BCE and was connected to a massive stone wall. The position of the tower would have…
Female Figurines from the Late Bronze Age
These three figurines are characteristic of Late Bronze Age molded plaque figurines. All tend to be nude and standing in frontal position. They probably represented the Canaanite goddess Ashtaroth in her role as goddess of love and procreation.…
Tags: Ashtaroth, Bronze Age, Fertility, Figurine
Early Bronze Age Pottery
This photograph shows some common every-day pottery from the Early Bronze Age (3,300-2,000 BCE). Because archaeologists find more pottery sherds than anything else in an excavation, it is the main source of information for dating the architecture of…
Tags: Bronze Age, Ceramics, Pottery
A Near Eastern Tel
A tel (sometimes spelled 'tell'), shown in this picture, is a mound holding ancient ruins. Most towns and cities in ancient times were built on the top of a hill because this location offered a defensive advantage. When all or part of a city was…
Tags: Pax Romana, Tel, Tell