Flint Knapping and the Early Bronze Age I Temple of Megiddo, Israel

Some Aspects of the Organization of Late Prehistoric Cult

Authors

  • Ron Shimelmitz University of Haifa
  • Matthew J Adams W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v27i1.51

Keywords:

Early Bronze Age, evolution of cult, Levant, lithic technology, Megiddo

Abstract

The Early Bronze (EB) Ib Temple of Megiddo Level J-4, with its complex architecture, marks an important threshold in the development of complex societies that characterized the Early Bronze Age of the Levant. The temple was abandoned at the end of the EB Ib, leaving behind few traces of the activities performed within—the primary remains being deposits of animal bone sacrificial waste found in different localities within the structure and its vicinity. Chipped stone tools and production waste were found together with these and other deposits nearby. Considering the paucity of other finds among the temple’s assemblages, the chipped stone items constitute important evidence for activities within its vicinity, and perhaps its role in relation to the community within which it functioned. The lithic assemblage includes a wide range of tool types and waste indicating that knapping and a variety of activities occurred nearby the temple. The range of activities represented is characteristic of earlier Neolithic and Chalcolithic, as well as Bronze Age, cult buildings in the Mediterranean world. Overall, the architectural and lithic evidence demonstrates that while the Great Temple of J-4 represents major innovations in the organization of cult that will become characteristic of the Bronze Age, there were also certain profane activities associated with the temple, as in other early sacred spaces. Furthermore, this study emphasizes the potential that lithic assemblages have for contributing to the understanding of the dynamic roles of cult buildings in general from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age and how the mundane and sacred commingle.

Author Biographies

  • Ron Shimelmitz, University of Haifa
    Ron Shimelmitz’s interests concern the evolution of human behavior and he is an expert in lithic technology. Currently his main focus is the study of Tabun Cave, covering the transition between the Lower and Middle Paleolithic. He also conducts research on the organization of lithic production from protohistoric periods, with the aim of uncovering various aspects in the formation of complex societies. He is a coexcavator of Sefunim Cave, Mount Carmel and Giv’at Kipod.
  • Matthew J Adams, W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research
    Matthew Adams is the incoming Dorot Director of the W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem (2014). While he has broad interests in space and time throughout the ancient world, his primary research focus is on the development of urban communities in 3rd millennium Egypt and the Levant. His early work focused on the Early Dynastic to Middle Kingdom stratigraphic sequence at Mendes,Egypt. As a member of the Megiddo Expedition in Israel, he has recently overseen the publication of the Early and Middle Bronze Age cult and palatial area at Megiddo. Now Director of the Jezreel Valley Regional Project, he and his team are engaged in survey and excavation projects at sites from a variety of periods.

Published

2014-06-06

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Shimelmitz, R., & Adams, M. J. (2014). Flint Knapping and the Early Bronze Age I Temple of Megiddo, Israel: Some Aspects of the Organization of Late Prehistoric Cult. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 27(1), 51-78. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v27i1.51