Islamic Tombstones Reused during the Early Islamic Period from Ramla, Capital of Jund Filastin

Authors

  • Amir Gorzalczany Israel Antiquities Authority
  • Hagit Torge Israel Antiquities Authority

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jia.17751

Keywords:

Ramla, reused tombstones, cemeteries, earthquakes, epitaphs

Abstract

In different excavations in Ramla, fragmented Muslim tombstones were uncovered in secondary use, providing a terminus post quem in the mid or late 10th-century AD for their reuse. As showed by the ceramic evidence, the time elapsed between the last interments and the reusing of the tombstones stones as building material was at the most 70 years. Reusing of tombstones is a common archeological occurrence. In most cases, the reutilizing is carried out after a time enough to cut the emotional link between the burial and the builders, or when an ethnical replacement occurred, and new dwellers had no emotional relationship with the previous ones. The phenomenon in Ramla is then an exception. What were the circumstances that led to such an unusual comportment? One possible explanation is the occurrence of a traumatic event, such an earthquake. Following the dates on the stones, it is evident that the event could have occurred only after 961 AD. This could fit the tremor in 1033 AD, two generations after the erection of the tombstones. As for the lifespan of the reconstruction layers, the pottery assemblages related to them, show ceramic types diagnostic to the Fatimid period, not in use in the Crusader period. This, together with the simultaneous abandonment of sites in the city, suggest that the destruction of the reconstruction strata was caused by another catastrophic event, perhaps the 1068 AD tremor. If so, we have a hatch to a well-defined period, limited by two powerful natural catastrophes, that provide termini ante and post quem for the ephemeral reconstruction of the city.

Author Biographies

  • Amir Gorzalczany, Israel Antiquities Authority

    Amir Gorzalczany received his PhD in archaeology from the Tel Aviv University and is currently researcher and works in the IAA Publications Department, where currently heads the Scientific Assessment Branch. His fields of research interest include Islamic archaeology, petrography, industrial archaeology, burial customs, and water management. He is member of the CEHAO (Centro de Estudios Históricos del Antiguo Oriente, Universidad Católica de Buenos Aires) and taught in the Beer Sheva University. He excavated in Ramla, Lod, Jaffa, Palmahim, ʻEin Asawir, and published in journals such as JESHO, Levant, Journal of Mosaics Research, ʿAtiqot, Antiguo Oriente, Strata and Tel Aviv, and a book (in press), In Centrum 1: Motion, Movement and Mobility, of which he is co-editor.

  • Hagit Torge, Israel Antiquities Authority

    Hagit Torgë received her PhD from Bar-Ilan University and is currently a senior research archaeologist in Central District Department of the IAA. Many of her excavations were in Ramla, which was also the subject of her PhD. Her researches include Islamic archaeology and Early Islamic pottery. She excavated in many sites such as Rosh Haʿayin, Shoam and Shiqmona and published in journals such as Israel Exploration Journal, ʿAtiqot and Cathedra.

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Published

2021-04-27

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How to Cite

Gorzalczany, A., & Torgë, H. . (2021). Islamic Tombstones Reused during the Early Islamic Period from Ramla, Capital of Jund Filastin. Journal of Islamic Archaeology, 7(2), 139–156. https://doi.org/10.1558/jia.17751