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| Wine jars at Tel Kabri [Credit: Eric Cline] |
Altogether, the excavators say, they uncovered at least 120 restorable jars still in situ in four storage rooms in the southern storage area of the palace (including pieces found in the last seasons). They may have also found a fifth storage room in a different building complex located to the northwest. "The rooms have not all been fully excavated," points out Assaf Yasur-Landau of the University of Haifa: the number will probably double when that's done, he adds.
All the jars are undergoing organic residue analysis in order to determine their contents, the excavators told Haaretz. Residue analysis of the jars found in the first storage room during the previous excavation season showed they had contained an aromatic red wine.
Original Canaanite grapes
We don't know who lived at the Tel Kabri palace, which is a vast 6,000 square meters in area, let alone what the place was called at the time – not a shred of written evidence has been found there. We do know that the palace was inhabited continuously for over 250 years, from about 1850 BCE to the 1600s BCE, and that it featured multiple banquet rooms and halls.
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| Tel Kabri, the 4,000-year old remains of a Canaanite palace that is more like ones found at Knossos and Mari than the Levant [Credit: Griffin Aerial Imaging/Skyview Photography] |
The palace at Kabri was a sprawling place with rooms constantly being added to it over the years. The ruler would have lived inside and his subjects would have lived outside, coming to the palace for special occasions like feasts, or to pay taxes or tribute.
Absent findings of writing at the site, its history is being "glued together" through excavations by Yasur-Landau and Eric H. Cline of George Washington University.
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| The Middle Bronze Age Palace in Area D-West at Tel Kabri [Credit: Eric Cline] |
It now looks like the ‘wine cellar’ was actually the northernmost room in a storage complex with at least four rooms in a row.
It can also now be said that the storage rooms had plastered floors and contained a range of types of jars. For example, room 2520 had pithoi (handleless storage jars) of two types, one around one meter tall and smaller, more slender pithoi, up to 80 centimeters in height.
In the center of room 2520, the excavators also found a juglet, two shallow bowls, and a chalice, crushed under the weight of a fallen pithos.
Palatial economy
Another unusual find was the middle of room 2533: an installation made of a sunken half of a pithos, still intact, still holding grape seed remnants, as well as pieces of charcoal. The installation appears to have been used to collect liquids spilled in the room.
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| Large pithoi found at Tel Kabri, in what appears to be one of four (maybe five) storage rooms [Credit: Eric Cline] |
The grape seeds are an incredible find. Not only can they help date the site: their analysis can help us rediscover the original Canaanite grape.
The grapes grown in Israel today are very tasty, but they're strains brought by Baron Edmond James de Rothschild in the late 19th century. The famed wine industry of the Levant, which had existed for millennia, had been wiped out during Islamic rule of the region, starting in the 7th century CE.
Last season the excavators tested the substance found in the large jars from the first storage room and found, as said, evidence of spiced wine.
“This season yielded 80 organic residue analysis (ORA) samples taken from approximately 70 unique vessels," says Yassur-Landau. "Last season's samples were taken from large storage vessels that proved to have contained spiced wine but the 80 samples from this season were more varied, including smaller storage jars with handles possibly used for transport and a larger assortment of fine ware.”
The samples will further the understanding of Canaanite eating habits and augment our understanding of the economy of the time, the archaeologists hope.
“Finding these additional storerooms and the tremendous additional number of jars is wonderful, since it clearly indicates that we are in the storage area of the palace and that it was substantial, and composed of numerous rooms," Cline commented. "I am eagerly awaiting the results of the Organic Residue Analysis from the jars, so we can see if they also held wine, like the ones that we found in 2013, or if they held something else like olive oil."
Author: Julia Fridman | Source: Haaretz [July 28, 2015]









