The Jerusalem Post

NEW YORK CITY OF THE BRONZE AGE

- (Assaf Peretz/IAA)

An aerial view of ruins of a 5,000-year-old megalopoli­s that were revealed in the North yesterday. The ruins were exposed in a major excavation project at the Ein Assur site near Harish. The city was the largest in the area during the Bronze Age with about 6,000 people inhabiting it.

The ruins of a 5,000-year-old megalopoli­s were uncovered in northern Israel, the Antiquitie­s Authority announced on Sunday.

The ruins were exposed in a major excavation project in the Ein Assur site near Harish. The city was the largest in the area during the Bronze Age with about 6,000 people inhabiting it, a huge number at the time.

“About the same time that the first pharaoh establishe­d his rule over Egypt, this city was founded,” IAA official Yitzhak Paz explained in an IAA video, calling it “the New York of that era.”

Paz explains that the location offered exceptiona­lly good conditions to settle, such as sources of water and strategic proximity to the ancient commercial routes.

The city was fortified, and its urban design is clearly visible, he added.

The ruins clearly show a web of roads and alleys, as well as the design of the buildings. Among the most unique structures uncovered was a temple where religious rituals were performed. A seal imprint featuring the figure of a stylized man raising his hands in prayer and a head figurine were found at the site.

Moreover, the excavation­s have revealed that 2,000 years earlier, a different village stood on the same site, as stated in the IAA video by archeologi­st Dina Shalem.

According to the authority, the importance of the finding is that it will change everything scholars know about the urbanizati­on process in the Land of Israel.

Thousands of Israeli youth have been worked at the site along with the archeologi­sts, thanks to an IAA program that sends students to work on archaeolog­ical sites for a week.

 ??  ??
 ?? (Assaf Peretz, Clara Amit/IAA) ?? AN AERIAL SHOT of the excavation site. Inset: Figurines found during the dig.
(Assaf Peretz, Clara Amit/IAA) AN AERIAL SHOT of the excavation site. Inset: Figurines found during the dig.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel