Tall Al-Hamidiya Explained

Tall Al-Hamidiya
Map Type:Syria
Relief:yes
Coordinates:36.7392°N 41.0272°W
Map Size:200
Location:Al-Hasakah Governorate, Syria
Type:settlement
Built:2nd millennium BC
Epochs:Old Babylonian, Mitanni, Middle Assyrian, Neo-Assyrian
Excavations:1926, 1930, 1984-2011
Archaeologists:Maurice Dunand, Antoine Poidebard, Agatha Christie, Max Mallowan, Markus Wäfler, Oskar Kaelin
Condition:Ruined
Ownership:Public
Public Access:Yes

Tall Al-Hamidiya (also Tell Hamidiya, Tell Hamidiye, and Tell Hamidi) is an ancient Near Eastern archeological site the upper Hābūr region of modern-day Syria in the Al-Hasakah Governorate on a loop of the Jaghjagh River. It is located just to the north of the site of Tell Barri, just to the east of the ancient site of Tell Arbid, just to the west of Tell Farfara and 20 kilometers north of Tell Brak (thought to be ancient Nagar/Nawar). It has been suggested as the location of Ta'idu/Taite. If so, it was mentioned as Ta'idu in early 2nd millennium BC Ebla and Mari texts. Later it was a provincial capital of the Middle Bronze Age Mitanni Empire. This identification is based primarily on a few Middle Assyrian Neo-Assyrian sources, as Taite, and the proximity of Kahat, known to have been nearby.[1] Other locations have been proposed for Ta'idu/Taite.[2] [3]

Archaeology

The site was small during the early 2nd millennium BC based on archaeology and possibly textual sources from Ebla and Mari. In the Mitanni period it grew to an very large size at 245 hectares, surrounded by a wall and ditch. It consisted of a 17.6 hectare citadel high mound (including a monumental 3.8 hectare palace and a smaller 1.45 hectare palace) with a 17.5 hectare walled terrace (5.5 meters lower) adjacent to the south and also an extensive Lower Town (another 5 meters lower). The terrace wall has a width of 21 meters and the terrace, with three large buildings, is accessible from the Lower town at three ramps. The citadel has been severely disfigured by intrusive pits of later periods. This city was destroyed and a Middle Assyrian palace built on the remains of the old palace with otherwise minor occupation. If the site is indeed Ta'idu/Taite the destruction would be that reported by Adad-nirari I, early in the 13th century BC. There was also a modest level of occupation in the Neo-Assyrian and Hellenistic/Roman periods. Part of the site was damaged by the Syrian army attempting to build a missile site in 1998.[4] [5] [6]

French archaeologists Maurice Dunand and Antoine Poidebard explored the site in 1926, noting Roman and Byzantine fortifications.[7] [8] The site was "trenched and successive levels from prehistoric times revealed".[9] [10] In the early 1930s the site was visited by Agatha Christie and Max Mallowan.[11] Tall Al-Hamidiya was excavated between 1984 and 2011 by an Archaeological Institute of the University of Bern team led by Markus Wäfler and Oskar Kaelin, in all but five years. Among the finds were stela fragments with the names of Middle Assyrian rulers Shalmaneser I and Tukulti-Ninurta I.[12] [13] [14] [15] In 2010 a geophysical survey covering 41 hectares was completed. Excavation was interrupted after the 2011 season.[16] A number of inscribed bricks, including those of Neo-Assyrian ruler Shalmaneser III (859–824 BC) were found.[17]

Early in the excavations three cuneiform tablet fragments were found and published. They were of the period of Mitanni rulers but of uncertain context. In 2004 three tablets were found in the southwest palace, baked in the fire that destroyed it. There were not published but are described as ration lists. Cuneiform tablets, primarily economic in nature, in "Hurro-Akkadian" and dockets both dated to the Mitanni period were found in the southwest palace in 2007. They are held in the Deir ez-Zor Museum and have been unavailable for study but were hastily photographed first and later partially published. The find consisted of 17 unsealed and undated tablets and 94 dockets discovered discarded in the rubble of the palace. The tablets all dealt with beer rations and the dockets were sealed with typical Mitanni seals. These texts include rations for people "from Muṣri (Egypt), Alašiya (Cyprus), Ugarit, and Arrapha".[18] [19] [20]

History

The site was small but regionally significant in the Old Babylonian period, early in the 2nd millennium BC. With the rise of the Mitanni Empire the site grew much larger and became a provincial capital and later a royal residence. With the fall of the Mitanni, the site was briefly occupied under the Middle Assyrians and later under the Neo-Assyrians. A small amount of construction occurred in the Hellenistic and Roman period, mainly fortifications. There was also some small occupation at the high mound in the Parthian, Sasanian and Early Abbasid periods as well a 19th-century AD cemetery and some building of the French Mandate period.[4]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Roskop, Angela, "Itineraries: Their Forms and Contexts", The Wilderness Itineraries: Genre, Geography, and the Growth of Torah, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, pp. 50-82, 2011
  2. Buccellati, Federico, "Learning New Styles, Quickly: An Examination of the Mittani–Middle Assyrian Transition in Material Culture", Values and Revaluations: The Transformation and Genesis of “Values in Things” from Archaeological and Anthropological Perspectives, edited by Hans Peter Hahn et al., Oxbow Books, pp. 29–46, 2022
  3. Berthon, Rémi, "Small but Varied: The Role of Rural Settlements in the Diversification of Subsistence Practices as Evidenced in the Upper Tigris River Area (Southeastern Turkey) during the Second and First Millennia BCE", Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology & Heritage Studies, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 317–29, 2014
  4. https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/6642/664272726008.pdf
  5. Deckers K Deckers K., "Riverine development in the Tell Hamidi surroundings", Holocene Landscapes through Time in the Fertile Crescent, Subartu 27, Turnhout; Brepols, pp. 85-96, 2011
  6. Riehl, S., "Ostracods and seed remains from the Hamidi sequence", in K. Deckers (Ed.), Holocene landscapes through time in the Fertile Crescent, Subartu 28, Turnhout; Brepols, pp. 97-106, 2011
  7. Poidebard, A., "Statue Trouvée a Tell Brak: Avril 1930.", Syria, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 360–64, 1930
  8. Poidebard, A., "Les Routes Anciennes En Haute-Djezireh", Syria, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 55–65, 1927
  9. "Formosa: Erratum in Mr. de Bunsen’s Paper", The Geographical Journal, vol. 70, no. 5, pp. 505–505, 1927
  10. Mallowan, M. E. L., "The Excavations at Tall Chagar Bazar, and an Archaeological Survey of the Habur Region, 1934-5", Iraq, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 1–85, 1936
  11. Agatha Christie, "Come Tell Me How You Live", Akadine Press, 2002,
  12. Seyyare Eichler, "Tall Al-Hamidiya 1 Vorbericht 1984", Academic Press Fribourg, 1985,
  13. https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/158038/1/Eichler_Wafler_Warburton_1990_Tal_Al-Hamidiya_2.pdf
  14. Markus Wafler, "Tall al-Hamidiya 3 Zur historischen Geographie von Idamaras zur Zeit der Archive von Mari und Subat-enlil/Sehna", Academic Press Fribourg, 2001,
  15. Markus Wafler, "Tall al-Hamidiya 4 Vorbericht 1988–2001", Academic Press Fribourg, 2004,
  16. Wäfler, M. (ed)., "Tall al-Hamidiya 5", Bericht 2002–2011, OpenScienceTechnology GmbH, 2020
  17. Kessler, Karlheinz, "Neue Tontafelfunde aus dem mitannizeitlichen Taidu – Ein Vorbericht", The Archaeology of Political Spaces: The Upper Mesopotamian Piedmont in the Second Millennium BCE, edited by Dominik Bonatz, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, pp. 35-42, 2014
  18. Bonatz, Dominik, and Lutz Martin, "100 Jahre archäologische Feldforschungen in Nordost-Syrien–eine Bilanz", Wiesbaden, 2013
  19. K. Kessler, "Late Bronze Age Texts from Tell Hamidiye", Paper given at the International Work-shop The Archaeology of the Upper Mesopotamian Piedmont in the Second MillenniumBC”, Berlin, January 2010
  20. https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/139700/Rev?sequence=2