The Jerusalem Post

Who’s in charge?

3,500-year-old tablet found depicting brutal power struggle

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN

In quiet days, Tel Jemmeh, just a few kilometers from the Gaza Strip border, stands peaceful and bucolic, caressed by the sun and the hot desert breeze. However, millennia ago, the area was the theater of raging battles between local kings and powers. A unique testimony to the brutality of these conflicts was uncovered by chance recently by six-year-old Imri Elya, a resident of Kibbutz Nirim.

In March, Imri went to visit the Tel Jemmeh archaeolog­ical site in the Western Negev with his family and spotted an unusual object on the ground: a small engraved clay tablet featuring two human figures, a naked captive held by his arm by another man.

The boy’s parents alerted the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority. After analyzing the artifact, which measures 2.8 x 2.8 centimeter­s, the researcher­s determined it probably dates back to the Late Bronze Age, around 3,500 years ago.

The object represents a very unique finding, IAA archaeolog­ist Saar Ganor told The Jerusalem Post.

“Nothing similar was ever uncovered in excavation­s in Israel,” he said. “We are aware that a somewhat similar piece was found in northern Sinai. But we do not exactly know what it looks like, since the excavation was conducted about 100 years ago, and the publicatio­n regarding it is not very accurate.”

Tel Jemmeh was first excavated a century ago. The site was first settled in the Chalcolith­ic period around 6,000 years ago and remained inhabited until the Hellenisti­c period in the first century BCE.

“The most important period in the history of the settlement occurred during the Middle and Late Bronze Age, which started around 3,500 years ago,” Ganor said.

Scholars identify Tel Jemmeh with the powerful Canaanite city of Yurza, which was mentioned in letters from the period uncovered in Egypt in a site called El Amarna.

“The letters were written in Arcadian, which back then was the internatio­nal language, like English today,” he said. “We understand that in that period Egypt ruled over Canaan. However, Canaan was divided in city-states, such as Gaza, Ashkelon, Lachish, each with its local king.”

In Tel Jemmeh, archaeolog­ists uncovered the remains of a palace and monumental buildings, supporting the idea that the settlement was home to a local lord who needed the appropriat­e facilities, he said. About 1,500 people probably resided in the center, but many more likely lived in the surroundin­g fields.

“Maybe the tablet tells us a little bit of what happened when those cities fought each other,” Ganor said.

Ganor and the other IAA archaeolog­ists who studied the artifact, Itamar Weissbein and Oren Shmueli, said the artist appeared to have been influenced by similar representa­tions that were common in ancient Near East art.

The creator seemed to have been careful in portraying the difference­s in ethnic traits between the two men: The captor is wearing a skirt, his face is fuller, and his hair is curly, while the prisoner is much thinner, his arms are tied behind his back with a technique that was depicted on other objects found in Egypt and northern Sinai, in a pose that clearly expresses humiliatio­n and defeat, possibly inspired by what happened in victory parades. The piece might have been part of a larger object.

“This tablet is a small finding but a big story,” Ganor told the Post. “We do not really have so many inscriptio­ns or images to understand what was happening 3,500 years ago. The scene offered by the tablet is brutal and full of ideologica­l meaning.”

For his discovery, Imri received a certificat­e of good citizenshi­p by the IAA.

“Antiquitie­s are our cultural heritage, and each find adds to the entire puzzle of the story of the Land,” Pablo Betzer, an IAA archaeolog­ist from the Southern District, said in a press release. “There is great importance in turning archaeolog­ical findings over to the National Treasures Department to be researched and displayed for the entire public to enjoy. The delivery of the tablet to the Antiquitie­s Authority indicates value education and good citizenshi­p on the part of Imri and his parents. Well done!”

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 ?? (Emil Aladjem, Israel Antiquitie­s Authority) ?? THE TABLET found at Tel Jemmeh in March.
(Emil Aladjem, Israel Antiquitie­s Authority) THE TABLET found at Tel Jemmeh in March.

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