TY - JOUR
T1 - The Early Iron Age Cemetery of Ḥorvat Tevet
T2 - Life and Death in a Rural Community in the Jezreel Valley
AU - Weitzel, Jordan
AU - Covello-Paran, Karen
AU - Bezzel, Hannes
AU - Lipschits, Oded
AU - Sergi, Omer
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Am. J. Archaeol. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - Recent salvage excavations at Ḥorvat Tevet in northern Israel revealed a cemetery consisting of at least 25 burials dated to the Iron I period (11th-10th centuries BCE). In this article, the burial practices employed in this cemetery are analyzed in order to shed light on the social complexity, economy, and funerary rituals of a rural community in the Jezreel Valley in the period between the collapse of Egyptian rule in Canaan and the formation of early monarchic Israel. Based on the finds in the graves and variations between graves, it is concluded that the site was home to a community characterized by minimal wealth accumulation, limited social division, and few long-distance trade contacts, though there are implications that the site had connections with the Beth-Shean Valley. This evidence is then contextualized in light of mortuary data from the Late Bronze II-Iron IIA Jezreel Valley in order to define aspects of continuity and change during the transition from Canaanite city-states to territorial polities.
AB - Recent salvage excavations at Ḥorvat Tevet in northern Israel revealed a cemetery consisting of at least 25 burials dated to the Iron I period (11th-10th centuries BCE). In this article, the burial practices employed in this cemetery are analyzed in order to shed light on the social complexity, economy, and funerary rituals of a rural community in the Jezreel Valley in the period between the collapse of Egyptian rule in Canaan and the formation of early monarchic Israel. Based on the finds in the graves and variations between graves, it is concluded that the site was home to a community characterized by minimal wealth accumulation, limited social division, and few long-distance trade contacts, though there are implications that the site had connections with the Beth-Shean Valley. This evidence is then contextualized in light of mortuary data from the Late Bronze II-Iron IIA Jezreel Valley in order to define aspects of continuity and change during the transition from Canaanite city-states to territorial polities.
KW - EGYPT
KW - ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations
KW - RURAL development
KW - FUNERALS
KW - CEMETERIES
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186619419&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/728777
DO - 10.1086/728777
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SN - 0002-9114
VL - 128
SP - 145
EP - 166
JO - American Journal of Archaeology
JF - American Journal of Archaeology
IS - 2
ER -