Conceiving the City

Streets and Incipient Urbanism at Early Bronze Age Bet Yerah

Authors

  • Sarit Paz Tel Aviv University
  • Raphael Greenberg Tel Aviv University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v29i2.32572

Keywords:

Early Bronze Age, Tel Bet Yerah, planning, streets, urbanization

Abstract

Early Bronze Age urbanization and urbanism in the Levant have long been important themes in scholarly discussion, with both the nature of the process and its results being the subject of lively debate. We view Early Bronze II (EB II) south Levantine urbanism as a novel ideological construct grounded in heterarchical modes of social organization, rather than a direct development from earlier village-based lifestyles. In the current study we employ a phenomenological approach that enables us to identify an urban habitus and to discuss cognitive aspects of town life, rather than constraining the discussion to urban morphology. Tel Bet Yerah in northern Israel is a good place to approach these issues, as it presents a continuous, extensively excavated Early Bronze Age sequence. One of the most prominent elements of the EB II fortified city is a system of paved streets that constructed space in a clear geometric pattern. The investment in street planning and engineering, alongside other aspects of planning, no doubt played a key role in the inculcation of urban concepts at the site. As shared public spaces, the streets were experienced and modified through the everyday practices of the town’s inhabitants and visitors. It is the negotiation between planning, ideology and practice that makes the streets of Bet Yerah an exemplary case of the role of architecture in promoting and sustaining a new social order.

Author Biographies

  • Sarit Paz, Tel Aviv University
    Sarit Paz (PhD, Tel Aviv University) is a teaching fellow in the Unit of Culture Research at Tel Aviv University. Her current research deals with the identification of diasporas in the archaeological record, focusing on the Early Transcaucasian culture. She headed (with Y. Paz) the excavation of the Early Bronze Age town of Tel Bareqet and has been co-director of the excavations at Tel Bet Yerah since 2007. She is the author of Drums, Women and Goddesses: Drumming and Gender in Iron Age II Israel (Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 232. Fribourg and Gottingen: Academic Press, Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, 2007), and co author of Bet Yerah, the Early Bronze Age Mound I (IAA Reports 30. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority, 2006).
  • Raphael Greenberg, Tel Aviv University
    Raphael Greenberg is Senior Lecturer in Archaeology, Department of Archaeology and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Tel Aviv University, Israel. Main research interests include Levantine Early Bronze Age urbanization and the social context of current archaeological practice. He heads the Tel Bet Yerah Field Project and the comparative technology project for Kura-Araxes pottery and its derivatives. Recent publications include: (ed., with Y. Goren), Transcaucasian Migrants and the Khirbet Kerak Culture in the Third Millennium BCE (Tel Aviv 36.2, 2009) and, with A. Keinan, Israeli Archaeological Activity in the West Bank, 1967-2007: A Sourcebook (Jerusalem: Ostracon, 2009).

Published

2016-12-22

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Paz, S., & Greenberg, R. (2016). Conceiving the City: Streets and Incipient Urbanism at Early Bronze Age Bet Yerah. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 29(2), 197-224. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v29i2.32572