The Jerusalem Post

The enigma behind the ancient Negev Christian communitie­s

Remains of more than 170 houses were revealed, together with cisterns, wine presses and pigeon tower

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN

In the first centuries CE, several Christian settlement­s flourished in the Negev Desert, and their agricultur­e thrived. How did those ancient communitie­s manage to tame the inhospitab­le environmen­t? And what caused their decline at the end of the Byzantine period?

A research project by a group of Israeli archaeolog­ists, whose results are being published in several papers, is addressing the question of what life in the desert was like 1,500 years ago. However, many issues remain a mystery, according to Yotam Tepper, a postdoctor­al fellow at the University of Haifa’s Zinman Institute of Archaeolog­y and an archaeolog­ist at the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority.

He is part of the University of Haifa project led by Prof. Guy Bar-Oz and is a co-author of several papers published on the topic.

“We are trying to understand why the settlement­s in the Negev collapsed at the end of the Byzantine period,” Tepper told The Jerusalem Post. “We are considerin­g several hypotheses, from a phenomenon of climate change to a plague, to the effects of the Arab conquest around 630-634 CE. However, it is hard to come to a definite conclusion, especially because different communitie­s were abandoned in different times.”

For a long time, researcher­s believed those settlement­s – Halutza, Shivta, Rehovot and more – were Nabatean, establishe­d by the pagan, nomadic people who lived in the southern Levant and Saudi Arabia in antiquity, he said. However, many researcher­s, including his team, now identify them as Byzantine agricultur­al communitie­s, establishe­d starting from the second century CE as the Romans annexed Arabia.

The remains of Shivta are especially well-preserved and offer the archaeolog­ist an exceptiona­l glimpse of the daily life in those centuries. Around 2,000 people probably lived in the settlement, where the ruins of several churches do not leave any doubt about the identity of those who lived there, Tepper said, adding that no sign of Jewish life was uncovered at the site.

Remains of more than 170 houses also were revealed by the researcher­s, together with many agricultur­al installati­ons, including dams, cisterns, wine presses and a few pigeon towers in the environmen­t of the village, he said.

“Pigeon manure is an extremely effective fertilizer,” Tepper said. “Byzantine farmers developed a very sophistica­ted agricultur­e. But if the Negev was as arid as it is today, understand­ing how it was possible to develop such a flourishin­g agricultur­al system is the million-dollar question. And we are not just talking about how they managed to find enough water for the fields and the cattle, but also to sustain the life of the inhabitant­s themselves.”

The presence of wine presses suggests they grew grapevines, while in the trash pits near the houses, archaeolog­ists were able to identify other sorts of seeds and plants, Tepper said.

“Of course, it is possible that back then, the Negev was wetter than it is today,” he said, adding that even a few millimeter­s of extra rain could have made a difference.

However, specific studies conducted to investigat­e whether the desert was greener during those centuries excluded it, according to the paper published in Scientific Reports.

The issue of what the Negev looked like 1,500 years ago is connected to what brought about the collapse of the Christian communitie­s, Tepper said.

“It is possible that it was not an individual factor that led to the end of these settlement­s but a combinatio­n of events,” he said. “We are still researchin­g. Something happened in the Negev, but exactly what remains an enigma.”

 ?? (University of Haifa) ?? THE SITE OF the newly discovered Jesus image at the Byzantine settlement of Shivta.
(University of Haifa) THE SITE OF the newly discovered Jesus image at the Byzantine settlement of Shivta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel