Recent Excavations in Israel: A View to the West; Reports on Kabri, Nami, Miqne-Ekron, Dor, and Ashkelon.
Knapp, A. Bernard
This very timely volume contains most of the papers originally
presented in a colloquium at the 1992 annual meeting of the
Archaeological Institute of America. The one-page preface by Gitin is no
substitute for an editorial overview, which would have helped greatly to
set these papers in the desired context of increased communication and
exchange between scholars involved in the archaeology of the Levant and
the Aegean. Nor does the concluding, very basic overview of trade by W.
Dever really come to grips with any current theoretical thinking on
trade, which it purports to do. Moreover, Dever's idiosyncratic and
often opinionated views about Levantine archaeology are becoming
wearisome: it is inappropriate in the extreme to call Martin Bernal a
"charlatan" (p. 118, n. 26), however little one may regard the
most recent, error-prone volume of Black Athena (vol. 2: The
Archaeological and Documentary Evidence [New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers
Univ. Press, 1991]).
What this volume lacks in theoretical perspective, however, it makes
up for marvelously in its presentation of important and recently
excavated material. From my own perspective, none is more significant
than the paper by W. Niemeier on the "Aegean" (his term)
fresco paintings from the late Middle Bronze Age "palace" at
Tel Kabri in Israel. Here we see (black-and-white) plates of this
structure's painted plaster floors with their floral, avian,
maritime, and architectural subjects. Likewise, M. Artzy's paper on
Tel Nami, a key coastal site and trading center of the Middle and Late
Bronze Ages, is very welcome and presents to a wide audience some of the
rich material excavated at this site over the past decade: among the
artifacts, none is more striking than the bronze items (bowls, lamps,
sceptres, incense burners), some of which have stylistic counterparts in
the Late Bronze Age Aegean and Cyprus.
Excavations at Tel Miqne (ancient Ekron) continue to reveal
impressive amounts of Late Helladic (Mycenaean) IIIC:1b material from
early Iron Age levels, as well as the Philistine pottery that followed
it. Trude Dothan tells us this and we are further told that the final
phase of the local Late Bronze culture produced "abundant examples
of imported Cypriote and Mycenaean fragments as well as New kingdom
objects" (p. 42), but unfortunately no illustrations are offered.
In referring to the Aegeanizing, palatial associations of a hearth found
in a monumental structure of the twelfth century B.C., Dothan makes
reference to Cypriot palaces: it would be useful to know which buildings
on Cyprus she regards as palaces, since it is widely accepted that
Cyprus lacks palatial structures of any sort. There can be no doubt,
however, that Miqne/Ekron is a site that represents clearly and with a
great diversity of material evidence the extent of Aegean and Cypriot
contacts with the Levant. We owe our thanks to Dothan for always being
so prompt and omnipresent in the publication and presentation of this
material. Likewise, editor Gitin presents an equally informative and
richly illustrated discussion of the later Iron Age levels at Miqne, in
particular those of the seventh century B.C. As Dever points out, Gitin
presents the only truly "explanatory" model in this volume by
proposing that the economic force behind Ekron's trade in olive oil
- as witnessed by the striking remains of industrial installations with
olive presses, crushing basins, stone weights, and so on - was the
spread of the Neo-Assyrian state and the demand thereby created for
goods and services throughout much of the Levant.
Subsequent papers by E. Stern on Iron Age Tel Dor, with its rich
assemblage of Cypriot and Greek pottery of the eleventh fifth centuries
B.C., and by B. Johnson and L. Stager on the export of wine from
Ashkelon during the Byzantine era, continue and expand chronologically
the theme of "a view to the west." In the end, one can only
agree with Dever (p. 117) that there is a real dearth of viable,
current, regional surveys of production and trade in the eastern
Mediterranean, a gap that the present volume helps to fill only very
partially, and empirically.
All of the rich new material from Tell ed-Dab a and Tel Kabri (some
of the latter presented in this volume), viewed in context with the
well-known finds from Alalakh, demands a thorough reassessment of
east-west relations in the Middle-Late Bronze Ages of the eastern
Mediterranean. Even if we regard the frescoes from Tell ed-Dab a, for
instance, to be Minoan-inspired, the costumes, bull's head, and
many other features make it most unlikely that these images were painted
by Minoan artists. And yet this is the definitive trajectory of
interpretation that has resulted. (See, for example, Ora Negbi,
"The Libyan Landscape from Thera: A Review of Aegean Enterprises
Overseas in the Late Minoan IA Period," Journal of Mediterranean
Archaeology 7 [1994]: 73-122, with critical responses by S. W. Manning
et al. and by Susan Sherratt, in the Journal of Mediterranean
Archaeology 7 [1994]: 219-35 and 237-40, respectively; see also the
papers by M. Bietak, L. Morgan, G. Philip, J. M. Weinstein, and E. H.
Cline, in Egypt, The Aegean and the Levant, ed. W. V. Davies and L.
Schofield [London: British Museum Press, 1995].) I would counter that
these paintings have nothing to do with Minoan artists, but rather form
part of an eastern Mediterranean koine, set in the context of a
prestige-goods exchange system wherein several polities - or individuals
within those polities - emulated high status goods, costumes, and other
powerful individuals. This was a world in which distance and knowledge
of the "exotic" cultures of western Asia provided economic
status and political power to certain individuals or groups on Cyprus or
within the Aegean world. The objects and images, such as those
represented on Minoan, Cycladic, Levantine, and Egyptian frescoes, were
entangled in long-distance trade and played a key role in the
construction and elaboration of social strategies, and of personal,
local, and state-level ideologies.
We have only begun to understand and sort out the implications of
these newly recovered frescoes and floor-paintings for the understanding
of Late Bronze societies in the eastern Mediterranean. Consequently we
need to encourage and support the publication of volumes such as the one
under review, especially considering its reasonable price and high
quality of production. This volume is required reading for anybody
interested in eastern Mediterranean interaction and trade during the
Bronze-Iron Ages.
A. BERNARD KNAPP UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW