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In 1998, the Directorate
General of Antiquities of Lebanon authorized the British Museum to begin
excavations on the site of the ancient city of Sidon, 20 km south of the
Lebanese capital Beirut. This was the first opportunity to systematically
excavate Sidon, so well known historically and in ancient texts, but as
yet unexplored because of the densly built up modern city.
Important historical facts were elucidated during the previous excavations
in 1998-2002 and the fifth season during 2003 is no exception. Much new
and important material has emerged about the history of Sidon and the
archaeology of the Lebanon.
The Early
Bronze Age
A new mud brick building consisting of seven rooms from the Early Bronze
Age III was excavated. This building was destroyed in a fire, shown especially
by the burnt mud brick walls and the large amount of collapsed mud brick
fill. Functionally speaking the building was divided into two distinct
spaces: a residential area in the south east with holemouth jars found
in situ and an area in the north west of the building in which some sort
of domestic activity took place. This is shown by a narrow storage space
and by the traces of burning on the floor of rooms which is different
from the fire that destroyed the building. Four other possible storage
spaces were also found west of this building
The Middle
Bronze Age
A further ten Middle Bronze Age burials were discovered this year. The
first was the constructed grave of a warrior, who was buried with a bronze
“duckbill” axe and a spearhead in addition to one pottery
vessel. What distinguished this burial is the amount of silver jewellery
accompanying the deceased. He had a silver band around the head, a silver
bracelet around his ankle, another silver bracelet on his right arm and
a bracelet made of 5 golden beads and 4 carnelian beads on his left arm.
17 silver studs were found aligned in a circle, some on top of the axehead
others on the floor of the grave as if, both studs and axe were fixed
to an element that has disappeared. A bronze ring was also found buried
with two whole caprids. Another constructed grave was excavated containing
just the skeleton of an adult male lying in a flexed position. No artifacts
were found. One burial was dug directly on top of the sand layer. Seven
further Middle Bronze Age burials of children in jars were also found.
Two of them contained Egyptian scarabs and one had a cylinder seal around
the neck. These newly found burials add to the 26 from the previous seasons.
Also associated with the Middle Bronze Age, and above the sand layer
are a plaster and a cobbled floor as well as an assemblage with jar fragments
an incense burner and a plate with marks of black heavy burning. This
plate had probably been placed on the incense burner and had fallen off.
The Late
Bronze Age
One of the main discoveries of this period has been a building of which
only one underground room, a sort of basement room, remains. Later trenches
followed the lines of the walls of the building, which were apparently
torn down in the medieval period when the ramparts and the castle were
built. Of the ancient walls themselves, only the ashlar masonry of one
part of the west wall is preserved. The room measures 4.60 m x 5.70 m
and is 3.70 m below the surface. The floor consists of large paving stones
oriented E-W. A few narrow paving stones laid N-W were found among the
large ones. This building was destroyed by a fierce conflagration. Evidence
of this conflagration is present to about 1.08 m above the level of the
paving stones, which are covered in a thick layer of clay fired in the
conflagration. The building had wooden beams, which were found in a good
state, having been carbonized; some were found to be more than 1.05 m
long. According to calibrated C-14 dating the trees from which these
beams were made were grown around 1390-1120 BC. This Late Bronze Age
building provides evidence of the appearance of technical innovations
that are also found in Syria in the same period. One such innovation
is the use of the dovetail clamp, which is also attested in several loci
at the site of Ugarit in the Late Bronze Age. The finds from the floor
of the building consist mainly of very fragmentary pottery. Most of the
vessels are of local undecorated wares in general use; fragments of Mycenaean
wares were also found. A bone spindle whorl with incised decoration was
found on the floor as was a faience scarab. The base of the scarab bears
an inscription with the name of an almost unknown pharaoh, Djed-kheper-re,
who reigned during the Second Intermediate Period. The presence of four
uraei, looking outwards, away from the the inscribed royal name, should
also be noted. The hypothesis has been put forward that this scarab,
rather than representing an obscure pharaoh, could be attributed to an
Egyptian merchant, trading with Sidon at this time and simply having
the same prenomen as the enigmatic pharaoh of the Second Intermediate
Period. The fact that the royal name was not inscribed within a cartouche
also favours this hypothesis. As things stand at present, there are still
uncertainties that bear on the interpretation of this building, which
we hope to continue excavating next year.
The Iron
Age
There was regular trade between itinerant Phoenician merchants and an
Aegean clientele in the first millennium BC. Greek merchants also visited
Phoenicia, which accounts for the many finds of Euboean pottery types.
The skyphos with pendant circles, of the subprotogeometric style from
Euboea or the northern Cyclades discovered this season, like the earlier
Minoan cup mentioned above, is not just an object of trade, but suggests
special relations in the form of gifts or offerings. This skyphos, a vessel
used for eating and drinking, is one of the earliest exports of Greek
pottery to the eastern Mediterranean in the first millennium BC.
In 2003 domestic installations with a series of plaster floors and a posthole
have been found. Further excavations will allow us to establish a stratigraphical
sequence for the 5th-4th century at Sidon.
Conclusion
The excavations at Sidon are of great interest for more than one reason:
the archaeological complexity and richness of each stage of the development
of the city is at last being revealed for the first time by benchmarks
whose existence has until now only been suspected. This excavation is,
after Beirut, only the second systematic urban excavation in Lebanon. The
possibilities here, unlike those at Beirut, are limitless. This project
is the only one of its kind in that the excavation is taking place on land
expropriated by the state for the sole purpose of archaeological research.
This means that part of the ancient city could be incorporated into the
urban landscape at the centre of the medieval city. It would to some extent
be possible in the future to see parts of Canaanite and Phoenician Sidon.
The principal objective of our work, however, has been the establishment
for the first time of a stratigraphical sequence and the provision of reference
material dating from the beginning of the third millennium to the end of
the second millennium, with some material from the first millennium BC.
This sequence has a number of individual characteristics, but is distinguished
by a continuous development and a gradual evolution. The locally made pottery
shows the original character and the true rhythm in the development of
southern Lebanon. The Minoan, Mycenaean and Euboean imports underline the
importance of the sea and Mediterranean contacts to Sidon throughout its
history, and provide evidence that clarifies the nature of these exchanges:
their ceremonial aspect, as in the case of the Minoan cup and the Euboean
skyphos, and their more commercial aspect linked to trade as in the case
of the Mycenaean pottery. These are just a few of the elements that will
contribute to the development of our knowledge of Sidon and that will lay
the foundations for a chronological sequence for the Lebanon.
The continuation of this work will make it possible to clarify many matters
relating to the typology and the dating of material found in neighbouring
countries. In all, the material found at Sidon attests above all to affinities
and contacts with Palestine, less frequently with Syria, but what is most
important is that it is truly an intermediary between these two cultures.
One of the main objectives of the programme of excavation undertaken since
1998 was to elucidate the stratigraphy of Sidon in the third millennium
BC. This objective has been attained, and the publication has been submitted.
The objective now is to greatly extend the area of excavation of each
level so as to reveal the plan of the ancient city and better to understand
the general organization of the habitat. Continuing excavation of the
Middle Bronze Age levels should lead to a refinement of the dating of
the types of graves as well as to elucidate the stratigraphy of Sidon
in the second millennium BC. The excavation of the Late Bronze Age building,
securely dated by C-14 analysis, will be completed and the Late Bronze
Age and Iron Age levels will be explored more widely.
The scientific potential of the excavations is exceptional. In short,
and without any doubt, everything remains to be done at Sidon. |