Tell Tweini - English

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The Syro-Belgian Excavations of Tell Tweini

THE LOCATION OF TELL TWEINI


The mound of Tell Tweini is situated near the modern city of Jebleh, which lies on the Syrian
coast at 28 km South of Lattakia, and roughly 35 km from the ancient city of Ugarit, present
day Ras Shamra. Jebleh is located in a wide, fertile plain and possesses a small fishing
harbour. Within the city limits and in its immediate surroundings, many ancient remains have
survived, such as the archaeological site of Tell Tweini - probably to be indentified with ancient
Gibala - just east of the city. Jebleh itself was built on top of the remains of the Phoenician and
Roman city Gabala, of which the Roman theatre is an impressive reminder. Since 1999, Jebleh
and it surroundings have been the focus of an extensive archaeological and historical research
project, directed by the Syrian Direction Gnrale des Antiquits et des Muses and the
Belgian Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.

EXCAVATIONS AT TELL TWEINI


Tell Tweini is situated no more than 1 km East of the urban centre of Jebleh. The tell lies at
the junction of two streams, called Nahr ar-Rumaila and Nahr al-Fawwar. The river Rumaila
runs from the site to a sandy bay just North of Jebleh, clearly visible from the tell. The tip of
the pear-shaped mound points to the West. Approximately 400 m long and 290 m wide, the tell
with its surface of 11.6 ha rises 15 to 20 m above the surrounding agricultural fields.

The archaeological project at Tell Tweini is a multi-disciplinary one, launched at the request of
the Syrian Department of Antiquities. Prof. Dr. Michel Al-Maqdissi and Prof. Dr. Karel Van
Lerberghe direct the project, the field directors are Dr. Massaoud Badawi and Prof. Dr.
Joachim Bretschneider.
The aim of the project is to study the archaeological layers dating from the 3rd millennium to
the Byzantine era, using the latest scientific techniques and methods. Research focusses on

The Syro-Belgian Excavations of Tell Tweini

the technological developments in the material culture and the different economical strategies
employed by the inhabitants. One goal of the project is to establish a complete chronological
sequence spanning the time from the Early Bronze Age to the end of the Iron Age. During
eight campaigns, from 1999 to 2007, several parts of the tell were investigated: the site has so
far proven to have been inhabited continuously from the Early Bronze Age to the Iron Age.

A SHORT HISTORY OF TELL TWEINI


(from ca 2500 BCE to 638 AD)
The Bronze Age

From the excavation results at Tell Tweini we know that the city was already inhabited during
the 3rd millennium BCE. Soundings on fields A and B exposed remains from the Early Bronze
Age (ca 2500-2300 BCE). The work in these soundings is still ongoing, therefore it is possible
that in the future older layers of occupation will be encountered. In the plain which surrounds
Jebleh remains of Neolithic occupation have yet been found (ca 6th millennium BCE).
Some spectacular tombs, dating to the Middle Bronze Age (1st half of the 2nd millennium BCE),
were found in direct relation to the houses. In this period it was the custom to bury the dead
under the floors of the dwellings. An extraordinary find was the communal tomb dating to ca
1700 BCE. The grave contained the skeletons of 42 adults and 16 infants. Serving as gravegoods were 160 well-preserved ceramic vessels, plates and dishes, several bronze pins and a
figurine. Another inhumation consisted of the grave of a woman and her child. On field B, the
remains of three men were encountered in a silo. Among others, the grave goods included a
fenestrated axe, quite typical for this period. Similar axes have also been discovered at Sukas,
Ugarit and Byblos.

The Syro-Belgian Excavations of Tell Tweini

The first mention of Gibala in a historical text dates to the Late Bronze Age, more precisely in
a text from the Ugarit archives. These particular archives were established between 1350 BCE
and the razing of the city by the Sea Peoples around 1200 BCE. Gibala is mentioned in a
document from the reign of Niqmepa, king of Ugarit. The tablet, written in Akkadian, contains a
treaty between Niqmepa and king AbdiBanati of Sianu, a city South of Ugarit and near Gibala.
In this treaty, the names of places in the kingdoms of Ugarit and Sianu are enumerated. In the
list of cities belonging to the territory of Ugarit the mention gi-ba-la appears. Around 1200 BCE,
the political system of Ugarit collapses under the stress of the Sea PeoplesB invasions.

During the Bronze Age, Gibala had access to the sea through a sea-incursion; this was
brought to light by recent geomorphological and palynological research. This scientific proof
matches the knowledge from the Ugarit texts that Gibala was a harbour-city.

The Iron Age


During the 1st millennium BCE, the dominant influences in Tell Tweini and the nearby
settlements Tell Sukas - Suksu (6 km to the South) and Tell Sianu (7 km to the East) were
Phoenician, Aramaic and Assyrian. The military operations of the Assyrians in the Tweini area
are extensively documented. The destruction layers in the urban part of Tell Sukas can be
linked to the military campaigns of Salmanasser III in 858 or 844 BCE. In 738 BCE,
Tiglatpileser III reached the Mediterranean Sea and thus also Gibala and the land of Hamat.
This Aramaic kingdom was finally incorporated into the Assyrian Empire during the reign of
Sargon II. In the 6th century the Egyptian pharaoh Apries (588 BCE) and the Babylonian king
Nabonidus (550 BCE) have deported prisoners of war from this area. The numerous military
campaigns can be taken as an indication that the political and economical influence of the
Jebleh-plain was held in high regard. Therefore the triangle Gibala-Suksu-Sianu acted as the
primary exchange and trading point between the Eastern Aegean and the Near East.

The Syro-Belgian Excavations of Tell Tweini

After the irregularities at the end of the Late Bronze Age and the subsequent architectural
hiatus, renewed large-scale building activities can be recognized at Tell Tweini at the beginning
of the Iron Age. Once more urban structures covered the entire surface of the tell, as they did
during the Bronze Age. According to the results of the geomagnetic survey, the occupation
phases of the Iron Age (first part of the 1st millennium BCE) have become obvious. On the
map of the city, which allows to identify unexcavated structures, the network of roads, public
and private buildings as well as industrial workshops are clearly discernible.

On the westernmost tip of the tell, at the end of the main street (field B), the Syrian team
investigated a broad-room temple dating to the 7th and 6th century BCE. In the centre of the
excavated area stands a sanctuary, its cella floored with rectangular stone slabs. In front of
this cella the anti-cella is located and the whole construction is encircled by other rooms.
Numerous small finds from the area around the sanctuary could be linked to cultic activities.

From the Iron Age onward, the custom to bury the dead in an urban context disappears,
instead they are buried in necropolisses outside the city limits. These burial grounds are yet to
be discovered at Tweini.

Throughout the Iron Age, the sea-incursion linking Bronze Age Tell Tweini to the sea silted up
and with it the important inner harbour of the site. One of the challenges in the research is to
assess the influence of this loss on the economical development of the city. Towards the end
of the Iron Age, during the 1st millennium BCE, a rise in the agricultural and industrial activities
can be observed. An indication of this can be seen in the countless olive presses on the site,
dating to Iron Age II (8th century BCE). Among other effects, a large public building on the A
field seems to lose its function and is reorganised into several smaller rooms housing industrial
activities. This evolution runs parallel to the conquest of western Syria by the Assyrian king
Sargon II. In the end, the tell is abandoned for a location on the coast with direct access to the
trade routes over sea, the present-day Jebleh or classical Gabala.

The Syro-Belgian Excavations of Tell Tweini

Greeks and Byzantines

The best information for this period can be gleaned from coins struck in Gabala from the final
quarter of the 3rd century BCE on. These coins are clearly linked to the types found at Arados
but here the mention GB appears on the coin, pointing to the Greek letters Gamma and Bta,
the first two consonants of Gabala. The city became independent around the middle of the 1st
century BCE and started its own calendar.

During Byzantine times, Gabala no longer formed part of the province Syria Prima but it was
instead part of a new province, Theodorias. Gabala appears on the Tabula Peutingeriana
together with the cities of Antioch and Laodicea. Also dating to this period are some houses
with nicely finished water installations located on the field B of Tell Tweini. Finaly, in 638 AD
Syria is conquered by caliph MuBawiya.

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