3,000-year-old
wheat traces said to support biblical account of Israelite conquest
Archaeologist Amnon Ben-Tur claims
find at Tel Hazor is a remnant of Joshua’s military campaign in 13th century
BCE
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Ancient
city at Tel Hazor (photo credit: CC BY ritculio, Flickr)
3,000 YEAR old wheat SUPPORT Jewish conquest of Land of Israel
Traces of burnt wheat found in Israel ’s
Upper Galilee are evidence of the
13th-century-BCE Israelite conquest of the Promised Land, an archeologist said.
Tel Hazor, a national park, has long been recognized as one of the
country’s most important archaeological sites. From the 18th to the 9th
centuries BCE, it was the largest fortified city in the country and had
commercial ties with both Babylon and Syria . The Book
of Joshua describes Hazor as the “head” of several kingdoms that united to
fight the Israelites. In 2005, Tel Hazor was designated a UNESCO World Heritage
Site.
In recent years, the archaeological digs at Tel Hazor revealed a
monumental structure, which scholars believe was the royal castle of Hazor ,
dating back to the Canaanite Period (third to second millennium BCE).
This season, the excavation, which is being conducted under the auspices
of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel Nature and Parks
Authority, uncovered a storage room in the castle. In the room were 14 large
clay jugs containing seeds of burnt wheat.
Professor Amnon Ben-Tur of the Hebrew University
has been in charge of the Hazor excavations since 1990. In an interview with
Ynet, Ben-Tur said that the jugs were destroyed around the 13th century
BCE, a period, he said, which coincided with the biblical account of Joshua’s
capture of Hazor. According to Chapter 11 in the Book of Joshua,
Hazor was the only city in the Land
of Israel that was
destroyed by fire during the conquest.
Ben-Tur’s assessment regarding the destruction of Hazor is far from being
a foregone conclusion in the archaeological world. Scholars are at odds as to
when Hazor was destroyed and by whom. While the most widely accepted school of
thought accepts the theory that Hazor was destroyed by the Israelites in or
around the 13th century BCE, there are many scholars who hold that Hazor was
destroyed by either the Egyptians, the Sea Peoples, or nomadic tribes that wandered the
region at the time.
Ben-Tur disagreed, noting that Hazor was not included in any of the
lists of Israelite cities destroyed by the
Pharaohs. Furthermore, Ben-Tur holds that the Sea Peoples traditionally stayed
close to the coastline, and would not have conquered a city as far inland as
Hazor.
Ben-Tur said that the recent discovery at Hazor “sheds even more light on
Israelite history.”