The Pottery from Bishop Gobat School, Mount Zion, Jerusalem (original) (raw)

The Pottery Assemblage of Jerusalem’s Neo-Babylonian Destruction Level: A Review and Discussion

Antiguo Oriente 9 (2011), 277-342.

This paper studies the pottery of Jerusalem corresponding to the very Late Iron II (mid 7th to early 6th centuries BCE) that is scattered throughout the modern-day excavation reports. A typology of five functional groups and twenty-five taxonomic subgroups is built, based on pottery retrieved from clear loci that represent the Neo-Babylonian destruction level or shortly before. I will focus attention on the chronology of each pottery type, and how they can be related to parallels in other contemporary sites. The analysis of the resultant pottery types and their distribution in the city confirms that Jerusalem passed through an era of political and economic centralization, urban expansion and industrial development, albeit with few connections with the contemporary interregional trade networks.

Renate Rosenthal-Heginbottom and Yehiel Zelinger, Application-decorated Pottery from Mount Zion, Jerusalem.

In J. Patrich, O. Peleg-Barkat, E. Ben-Yosef (eds.), Arise, Walk Through the Land. Studies in the Archaeology and History of the Land of Israel in Memory of Yizhar Hirschfeld on the Tenth Anniversary of his Demise. Jerusalem 2016, 89*–101*., 2016

1 independent scholar 2 israel Antiquities Authority the present paper is dedicated to the memory of yizhar Hirschfeld, who not only successfully conducted a substantial number of excavations but took great care to publish the results promptly. for their publication he worked with a team of dedicated colleagues engaged in thorough studies of the archaeological basics-the "small finds" and "objects of daily use." such objects are the topic of this paper: application-decorated vessels of the roman and Byzantine periods and their archaeological and historical contexts. our paper will comprise two sections, in the first the presentation and discussion of the application-decorated pottery and in the second the presentation of the stratigraphic evidence and an evaluation of the historical significance.

Early Roman to Medieval-Period Pottery from the Excavation near Warren's Gate, Jerusalem

This report focuses on the pottery assemblage retrieved from the small and deep area (4 × 5 m, depth 8 m) excavated within the Western Wall Tunnels, c. 10 m west of Warren's Gate (see Onn and Weksler-Bdolah, this volume). Notwithstanding the small area excavated, the finds are important as these are the first pottery assemblages retrieved from a stratigraphic excavation near Warren's Gate, adjacent to the Temple Mount. The pottery came from five strata, subdivided into phases, from the lowest Stratum V, dated to the Early Roman period, to surface Stratum I, dated down to the thirteenth or fifteenth centuries CE. Selected sherds from each stratum and phase are illustrated and discussed below. For a summary of all the strata, phases and main loci, including references to the pottery figures presented in this article, see Onn and Weksler-Bdolah, this volume: Table 1. The pottery discussion focuses on dating the vessels from each stratum and phase, by referring to published parallels from well-stratified contexts, predominantly from Jerusalem,