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New Archaeological Discoveries in Israel Reveal Insights into Early Human Life and Byzantine-Era Christian Artifacts

New York, June 24, 2026 – Israel’s rich history, which spans thousands of years, continues to be revealed through ongoing archaeological work led by the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), the University of Haifa, and independent researchers across the country. So far this year, there have been many groundbreaking discoveries, from 1,500-year-old bronze scales to ancient tunnels unearthed beneath the walls of Jerusalem. These discoveries highlight Israel’s storied and layered history.

“Few places in the world offer the opportunity to witness history being uncovered in real time, and these discoveries highlight the extraordinary depth of Israel’s cultural and historical heritage,” says Yoram Elgrabli, Tourism Commissioner for North America at the Israel Ministry of Tourism. “What makes these findings especially exciting is that they continue to reveal new chapters of a story that spans thousands of years, from the earliest evidence of human life to civilizations and faiths that have shaped our world. There is something truly remarkable about standing in a place where history is still emerging from the ground and helping us better understand our shared past. Whether exploring ancient archaeological sites, world-renowned museums, or the vibrant cities that blend the past with the present, visitors to Israel can experience a destination where every stone has a story to tell. These discoveries inspire curiosity and wonder, offering visitors a deeper connection to the people, cultures and events that have shaped human history.”

Some of the artifacts uncovered by archaeologists and the general public in Israel in 2026 include:

Two 1,700-year-old Roman Marble Statues Discovered Near Binyamina

Two marble statues dating back to the Roman Empire were discovered during an excavation led by the IAA as part of a coastal high-speed railway project. These two sculptures, which depict historical figures from the Greco-Roman world, were found buried in a wine collection pit of a Roman-Byzantine winepress. A Greek inscription bearing the name “Lycurgus” was preserved on one of the statues. These spectacular statues will be unveiled for the first time at the “Center VII -The Domestic House” annual archaeological conference at Tel Aviv’s MUZA – Eretz Israel Museum this month and will be on display to the public throughout the summer months.

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Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority

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Rare 1,500-Year-Old Scale Discovered in Susya

A rare bronze scale pan dating to the late Roman–Byzantine period was uncovered during a community archaeological excavation in the residential and commercial area of ancient Susya, led by the IAA in cooperation with regional partners. The discovery was made when a second-grade participant, together with his father, spotted the artifact during the dig. The object has been identified as part of a portable hanging balance scale (trutina). A system widely used in ancient Israel for commercial weighing, consisting of small bronze pans suspended from a balancing beam. The recovered pan features perforations along its rim used for attachment to suspension cords. Researchers say such scales were common tools in everyday trade, providing insight into the economic activity and measurement practices of the settlement during the period.

A 2,000-Year-Old Ancient Sling Bullet Discovered Near the Sea of Galilee

Archaeologists from the University of Haifa uncovered a rare Hellenistic-period sling bullet near the ancient city of Hippos, bearing the Greek inscription “Learn,” believed to be a taunting or sarcastic message directed at an enemy.  Researchers note that during the Hellenistic period sling bullets were typically mass-produced by casting lead into simple stone molds, a method that allowed for rapid production even during military campaigns. The find offers insight into both the psychological aspects of ancient warfare and the use of slings as effective long-range weapons, likely employed by Hippos’ defenders during periods of conflict.

A Rare, Pre-Historic Cave Dating 400,000 Years Uncovered Near Haifa

A prehistoric cave dating back between 400,000 and 250,000 years was recently uncovered on the outskirts of the town of Fureidis, south of Haifa. The excavation of the cave depicts a time capsule that remained sealed for hundreds of thousands of years since the time of the Acheulo-Yabrudian culture, a time just before modern humans became dominant in the world. The site, among the most significant of its kind, offers new insight into early human life at a critical point in human evolution.

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Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority

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Ancient Tunnels Uncovered Beneath the Soil of Jerusalem

An excavation led by the IAA led to a monumental discovery of ancient tunnels near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel in Jerusalem. Researchers are still unsure about the purpose of this tunnel which measures approximately 16 by 10 feet, though they believe it was intended to reach a chalk layer suitable for quarrying building stones or producing lime. Possible evidence supporting this interpretation includes a shaft carved into the tunnel’s ceiling, which may have been used for ventilation, as well as quarrying debris discovered on the tunnel floor, although this interpretation, too, remains uncertain.

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Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority

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A 1,300-year-old Marble Bowl Found in the Golan Heights

Discovered in a cathedral in the Golan Heights, a 1,300-year-old marble bowl was found by a team of archaeologists from the University of Haifa. Experts suggest that this bowl was once used as an offering table for early Christian settlers in Israel.

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For more information about Israel’s tourism offerings, visit israel.travel.

About the Israel Ministry of Tourism

The Israel Ministry of Tourism (IMOT) is Israel’s national tourism agency responsible for planning and implementing marketing and promotional initiatives to position Israel as a preferred travel destination. IMOT aims to increase tourism traffic to enhance and diversify the visiting experience. IMOT works to promote Israel’s impressive assortment of historical, cultural, culinary, and religious attractions – each the perfect blend of tradition and modernity. IMOT offices in North America are located in New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Chicago and Toronto. For details on upcoming events and attractions in Israel, visit IMOT’s website at israel.travel. Follow us on Facebook, X and Instagram to receive the latest updates.

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Article Source: Israel Ministry of Tourism news release.

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Ancient tooth protein reveals ‘all-female’ fossil site of extinct human relation

University of York—Scientists have extracted and analysed the first-ever ancient proteins from the fossils of Homo naledi, revealing a potential all female burial site.

The study, published in the journal Cell, raises the possibility that South Africa’s famous Rising Star Cave system could represent the first known example of a sex-specific burial site by a non-Homo sapiens.

Homo naledi, an extinct cousin of modern humans that lived between 335,000 and 241,000 years ago, has puzzled researchers since its initial discovery in 2013. The species possessed an unusual mixture of primitive, ape-like traits alongside human-like features.

But for over a decade, scientists have wondered why the adult fossils recovered from the cave’s Dinaledi Chamber looked so remarkably identical. The remains showed almost none of the physical variations that would be expected between males and females.

To solve this puzzle, researchers from the University of York, the University of Copenhagen, and more than 10 other international institutions, investigated proteins from the skeletal remains. 

Using a minimally destructive acid etching technique, the team extracted microscopic protein fragments, called peptides, from 23 teeth representing at least 20 different individuals.

Researchers analysed the tooth enamel for Amelogenin-Y, a protein uniquely coded by the male Y chromosome.  

The results revealed that the male marker was absent.  To ensure the validity of the results, a team at the University of York’s specialized chemistry facility analysed the amino acids to prove the proteins were genuinely ancient and not the result of modern contamination.

Dr Marc Dickinson, from the University of York’s Department of Chemistry, said: “The lack of male markers with the group is truly fascinating. It is incredibly exciting to gain a window not only into the biology of our ancestors, but also into how they lived. 

“These findings offer rare insights into a culture that has, until now, been difficult to access directly. Advances in ancient protein analysis are opening the door to a far richer and more nuanced understanding of ancient hominins.” 

The findings open up new questions about the culture and social structure of these ancient hominins. If the chamber was reserved exclusively for females, it may imply a level of complex, symbolic mortuary practice previously thought unique to Homo sapiens – modern humans.

The team noted, however, that there could be a biological explanation as well as a cultural one.  It is possible that the Homo naledi population was highly isolated, causing the male-specific Amelogenin-Y gene to mutate or be deleted. 

This would mean males were present, but their teeth simply lacked the typical genetic signature.

Palesa Madupe, who completed the work as part of her postdoctoral research at the University of Copenhagen, said: “Unlike those found in other remains like bone fragments, proteins in tooth enamel are preserved because dental enamel – the hardest tissue in the human body – shields proteins from environmental contamination even for millions of years. 

“This makes them ideal carriers of genetic information from deep time. Our study helps in the long-standing mystery of why Homo naledi lacked significant variation; it’s probably because they could have all belonged to one sex.”

As the largest extinct hominin population ever to undergo protein analysis, these ancient females – or genetically unique males – have prompted a rewrite of what scientists thought they knew about the dawn of human society.

Neandertals in North-Western Europe in focus

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology—A new genetic study* provides the most detailed picture to date of late Neandertal diversity in North-Western Europe. By analysing ancient DNA from remains found in Belgium and France, an international team led by researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig was able to reconstruct the genetic relationships of 27 Neandertals who lived shortly before Neandertals disappeared around 40,000 years ago.

The researchers analyzed the genomes of Neandertals from ten archaeological sites, focusing particularly on the Meuse Basin in Belgium, an area with a high concentration of late Neandertal sites (i.e., those Neandertals who lived towards the end of Neandertal existence) . The dataset includes a new, high-coverage genome from an individual from Goyet Cave who lived around 45,000 years ago. “Until now, we only had four high-quality Neandertal genomes and a limited number of lower-quality ones, so most questions about the regional diversity of Neandertals have been difficult to address,” says first author Alba Bossoms Mesa, a doctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. “By generating genetic data from multiple individuals from the region of present-day Belgium and France, we can now examine late Neandertal populations in much greater detail.”

A connected but diverse population

Previous high-quality genomes had shown that some Neandertal groups, particularly those in the Altai region of Siberia, lived in small, genetically isolated communities, with evidence of mating among close-relatives. In contrast, in this new study the researchers found no evidence for recent mating between close relatives among these late Neandertals of North-Western Europe. Instead, these Neandertals were part of a larger and more well-connected regional population, quite different to what previously seen for Neandertals in Siberia. “Our results show that the picture emerging from one region cannot simply be applied to all Neandertals,” says senior author Benjamin M. Peter, a group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. “The late Neandertals from North-Western Europe appear to have been part of a connected regional population, rather than small, isolated groups with frequent mating between close relatives.”

The study also reveals a more complex population history of Neandertals than previously recognised. “The genetic data show both connection and complexity,” says senior author Mateja Hajdinjak, a group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. “Most late Neandertals from North-Western Europe are closely related at the population level, but some lineages point to much deeper and more diverse Neandertal history.”

The Neandertals in this study lived at a time when early modern humans were already present in parts of Europe. While genetic evidence indicates that Neandertals contributed genetic material to early modern humans, the researchers found no evidence of recent gene flow in the opposite direction. “Our results add to a striking asymmetry,” adds Bossoms Mesa. “We repeatedly find Neandertal ancestry in early modern humans, but so far, we have not found clear evidence of recent modern human ancestry in late Neandertals.”

Rethinking Neandertal extinction

The disappearance of Neandertals has often been linked to small population size, inbreeding, and the accumulation of harmful genetic variants. The new study tested this theory by comparing measures of genetic diversity and genetic load in Neandertal genomes from different time periods and regions. Although all Neandertals had very limited genetic diversity, the researchers found no evidence that the late Neandertals carried an increasing burden of harmful mutations, and when they compared the high quality genome of the Goyet Neandertal, her genome did not show lower diversity than earlier Neandertals.

These results do not rule out the possibility of demographic vulnerability, however, they challenge the idea that Neandertals disappeared mainly because their genomes steadily deteriorated. Instead, late Neandertals in Belgium and France appear to have been part of a connected, genetically diverse regional population during a period of profound ecological and demographic change.

“This study highlights the power of ancient DNA to reveal variation within Neandertals on a much finer scale than was previously possible,” says co-author Janet Kelso, a group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. “Rather than viewing late Neandertals as a single declining population, we are beginning to recognise a more complex picture of regional diversity, connectivity, and population history.”

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Entrance to the Goyet Caves in Belgium.  Credit © Mateja Hajdinjak

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Article Source: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology news release.

Evolution of hominin body size

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences—A study finds trends of increasing body size throughout hominin evolution. Changes in body size were critical components of hominin evolution, influencing brain size, locomotion, and range expansion. However, little consensus exists on how hominin body size evolved. Some hypotheses favor a general overall increase in body size, whereas species with small stature, such as Homo floresiensis, provide counterexamples. Jacob Gardner, Chris Venditti, and colleagues applied Bayesian modeling of evolutionary lineages among 386 specimens of 21 species of hominins. The authors modeled progression of body size over time. Within a single framework, the authors tested multiple hypothesized models of hominin body-size evolution. The modeling showed strong evidence for a marked increase in body size in late Homo species excluding Homo habilis, and moderate evidence for a general size increase over time across all hominin species of up to 0.99 kilograms per million years. Uncertainties in body-size evolution may have arisen due to variation in the methods of body-size estimation, incomplete skeletal samples, and ambiguity regarding species assignment of fossil specimens. According to the authors, the framework accounts for the nonindependent evolution of lineages, variation in body size within species, and other sources of uncertainty, providing clarity on transitions in Homo body-size evolution.

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Homo heidelbergensis. José Luis Filpo Cabana, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons

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Article Source: PNAS news release.

*“Competing models of hominin body size evolution,” by Jacob D. Gardner, Thomas A. Püschel, Suzy White, Manabu Sakamoto, and Chris Venditti. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 22-Jun-2026. https://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.2521732123

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The Literature of Human Origins: Narratives from Excavation and Discovery

The study of human origins in literature connects excavation records with narrative traditions. Archaeological findings shape how early societies are described in written form. These accounts reveal shifting interpretations of identity, memory, and cultural development across time over centuries observed.

Archaeology and Early Narratives

Excavation sites provide fragments of early storytelling practices that merge material evidence with oral tradition and reveal how communities shaped meaning from landscape and artifact over generations These traces remain uneven and partial in record.

Interpretations of early human behavior often rely on translated manuscripts and curated archives where access to knowledge varies widely including collections described as free books that circulate through educational networks and research institutions over time.

Methodologies of Discovery Narratives

Scholars reconstruct ancient events through stratigraphy and linguistic comparison which together form layered narratives that explain human migration patterns and cultural exchange across continents Interpretation depends on context and available evidence in archaeological study practice.

Documentation techniques influence how excavation findings are recorded and later interpreted in academic discourse shaping broader understanding of prehistoric societies and their environments. Field notes and diagrams preserve essential contextual detail for analysis consistently reviewed.

Material and Ethical Dimensions of Interpretation

Excavation narratives often converge in interdisciplinary studies where history and anthropology meet to form cohesive interpretations of human development across regions and time with careful comparative analysis applied in practice.

The following perspectives help structure this discussion further, clearly defined:

Stratigraphic Reading of Sites

Stratigraphic interpretation of excavation layers forms a key method for understanding temporal sequences in human settlements. Each soil layer carries material traces that reflect occupation abandonment and environmental change. Careful documentation allows researchers to reconstruct events without imposing modern assumptions on ancient contexts. The method demands patience and precision as small fragments often shift broader interpretations. Over time stratigraphy becomes a silent record of human activity revealing continuity and disruption in settlement patterns across landscapes and climates in comparative study.

Material Culture Interpretation

Material artifacts provide insight into daily practices and symbolic systems of ancient communities. Objects such as tools pottery and ornaments are examined for function and meaning within their original contexts. Researchers compare stylistic features across regions to identify cultural exchange and independent development. Interpretation requires caution as modern perspectives can distort ancient intentions. Despite limitations material evidence remains one of the most reliable sources for reconstructing human behavior across long spans of time and changing environments in systematic archaeological synthesis.

Ethics of Interpretation and Preservation

Ethical considerations shape how excavation narratives are constructed and shared within academic and public contexts. Decisions about preservation access and representation influence which stories are emphasized and which remain fragmented. Researchers must balance scientific inquiry with respect for cultural heritage and descendant communities. The handling of sensitive materials requires transparency and accountability especially when findings intersect with contested histories Through careful ethical frameworks archaeological work maintains integrity while supporting a broader understanding of human origins and cultural continuity over time.

Contemporary Reflections on Origins Narratives

Modern scholarship continues to refine understanding of early human history by integrating scientific findings with narrative interpretation that bridges gaps between evidence and cultural memory. Collaborative research expands perspectives across multiple disciplines and regions globally.

These evolving interpretations highlight the fluid nature of historical reconstruction where new discoveries continuously reshape established narratives about human origins and development. Ongoing analysis ensures deeper clarity in understanding ancient human pathways over extended periods.

Cover Image Top: Archaeologist at work. James DeMers, Pixabay

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Ritual, Power, and the Weekend Arena

Gary M. Feinman is an archaeologist and the MacArthur curator of anthropology at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.

In a March 2026 paper published in the journal Science Advances, which focused on variability in governance along the autocratic-democratic axis, my coauthors and I found that one of the strongest associations for the 40 case observations, which were part of our study, was between the nature of rituals and the concentration of power.

For this global sample, autocratically organized societies were characterized by spectacles that foment fear and awe, while participatory rituals predominated in more democratically organized contexts. For example, in the region where I study (Oaxaca, Mexico), when governance was typified by distributed power relations, the pre-Hispanic rubber ball game was played in a large court adjacent to a broad, flat open plaza, the Main Plaza at Monte Albán, a space that could accommodate many of the settlement’s inhabitants. Later, however, as political power became more concentrated, the size of ball courts was reduced, access to them became more restricted, and some were even built immediately adjacent to the houses or palaces of ruling families.

Social scientists have long recognized that communal rituals are a universal human experience that binds people together in various ways. Spectacles, often rich in disorienting noise, shock, and awe, tend to captivate observers through the powerful figures at the center of the spectacle, who inspire fear and wonderment, reinforcing authoritarian cults of personality. In contrast, participatory rituals like communal dancing, singing, or chanting tend to instill camaraderie among participants, solidarity, and trust among those involved. As a student of history and a sports fan, the mirrored reflections of the past provide an analytical perspective about the final Knicks game on June 13, a sports agenda that cannot be ignored.

During the 2026 National Basketball Association playoff between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs, Madison Square Garden, the storied home of the Knicks, once again became like a civic commons after a 53-year championship drought. The competitiveness of the Knicks during the playoffs elevated the space from merely being a site of entertainment to a participatory ritual arena. The crowd did not passively observe; it chanted, rose, groaned, anticipated, and collectively willed momentum into existence. One needed to only look at the faces in the stands—season ticket holders and first-timers, celebrities and subway riders alike—to notice that the sight was closer to what might be considered an integrative ritual: one in which meaning is not imposed from above but generated, often with spontaneity, among participants.

Basketball, by definition, is a team sport, but this is typified by the game that the Knicks currently play. It is not about consistent domination by a central figure. Even the most celebrated player, Jalen Brunson, depends on coordination, timing, and trust in his teammates. The drama unfolds collectively, and its outcome remains contingent on who makes a foul shot and who grabs a rebound. Participation matters—not just symbolically but materially. The arena amplifies the idea, however imperfectly enacted, that communal engagement shapes outcomes. And these outcomes transcended the arenas where the Knicks games were played, stimulating joy and collective actions, and bringing people together in the desire for a common outcome.

By contrast, the spectacle of an Ultimate Fighting Championship event, staged in a garish steel cage, on the grounds of the White House on June 14 operated on a fundamentally different ritual logic. It was not designed for mutual participation but for spectacle: with the concentration of attention onto a staged center, where one-on-one conflict and mayhem are distilled into physical dominance and symbolic submission. The audience’s role is not to join but to witness—to be awed, to see blood and hear pain, be unsettled, and ultimately to orient themselves toward the figures who command the stage and oversee the event.

The choice of venue was not incidental. The White House has long functioned as a site of state ritual. But traditionally, those rituals—press briefings, public ceremonies, even contentious protests beyond its gates—are tethered, at least aspirationally, to norms of decorum, accountability, and public engagement. Introducing a choreographed combat spectacle into that space shifts its symbolic significance. It recasts a locus of governance into an arena of performance, where the aesthetic of dominance and self-promotion, by a small network of cronies, overshadows any ethical prospect of leading to wider participation.

This is precisely the distinction our comparative work on governance and ritual helps illuminate. When power is broadly distributed, rituals tend to be inclusive, iterative, and co-constructed. They require participants to see one another as collaborators in a shared process, even when competition is involved. In contrast, when power is tightly concentrated, rituals often become spectacles—staged experiences that reinforce hierarchy, channel emotions toward a focal point, and reduce the audience to spectators instead of actors. The Knicks, for all the commercialism of modern sports, still lean toward the former model. Their playoff games invited identification not with an owner but with a collective—however abstract—called a team, a city, a fan base. Victory was widely shared across an entire metropolitan area, communally. The ritual binds laterally, person-to-person.

A UFC spectacle staged in the orbit of political power points in the other direction. It binds vertically. The emotional energy of the crowd is drawn upward and inward, toward a center that is insulated from participation. The unpredictability of sport is replaced by an orchestrated spectacle; even the violence, ostensibly raw, is framed and contained to produce maximum symbolic effect. None of this is to suggest that one form of ritual is wholly virtuous and the other entirely malign. Spectacle has always been part of human societies, and participatory rituals can exclude to the same extent as they can include. Madison Square Garden is not immune to hierarchy, nor is fandom evenly accessible. But the contrast remains as glaring as instructive because it reveals not just different entertainments, but different models of how people relate to power—and to one another.

At stake is more than this season’s recreational programming. Rituals, whether ancient ball games in Mesoamerica or modern sporting events in New York, are not peripheral to political life; they are constitutive of it. They shape how individuals experience belonging, authority, and agency. They encode assumptions about who acts and who is meant to watch. The event at the White House reinforces values such as “might makes right” and life is a “zero-sum game.”

Alternatively, in an era when democratic practices often feel attenuated, the spaces where participation is still enacted—even imperfectly—carry heightened significance, thereby fostering shared aims and emphasizing the potential win-win-win outcomes that interdependence and collaborative action can generate. The roar of a crowd that believes its collective voice matters stands in quiet contrast to spectacles that ask only for attention, passivity, and allegiance.

We would do well to recognize the difference.

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This article was produced by Human Bridges, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

Cover Image, Top: Part of ancient Maya ballcourt, Chichen Itza. xiquinhosilva, CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons

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Human Origins Destroys Core Fascist Mythology

Yann Perreau is a writer, educator, contemporary art curator, and writing fellow for the Human Bridges project of the Independent Media Institute. He has published several books on art, climateanonymity, and more. His articles have appeared in many publications, including Libération, Art Press, and East of Borneo. He has served as a cultural attaché for both the French Embassy in London and the French Consulate in Los Angeles. He holds an MPhil in art history from Paris’s EHESS.

The deeper we explore humanity’s past, the harder it becomes to sustain some of the most powerful political myths of the modern world.

For more than a century, authoritarian ideologies have sought legitimacy in origin stories: pure people, ancestral homelands, primordial hierarchies, and civilizational destinies. Fascism, in particular, has always been obsessed with beginnings. Whether in Nazi fantasies of Aryan ancestry, myths of ethnic continuity, or contemporary narratives of demographic replacement and civilizational decline, the past is transformed into a source of authority. History becomes destiny. Origins become a source of legitimacy.

Yet archaeology, anthropology, genetics, and evolutionary science increasingly tell a different story. Research across these fields has challenged older assumptions about purity, hierarchy, and human nature. Deep history reveals migration rather than isolation, cooperation rather than perpetual conflict, and experimentation rather than inevitability.

Few 20th-century thinkers saw this more clearly than Georges Bataille, who observed that competing visions of the past often conceal varying perspectives of humanity.

Better known today for his writings on eroticism, sacrifice, and transgression, French philosopher Bataille was also one of the first major European intellectuals to recognize that prehistory could serve as an antidote to fascist mythology. During the 1930s and 1940s, when fascist movements were mobilizing myths of origin on an unprecedented scale, he turned to cave art, ritual, and the earliest traces of human life, immersing himself in the latest archaeological, anthropological, paleontological, and sociological research.

His writings on prehistory drew extensively on the discoveries and debates of his time, delving into philosophical, anthropological, and political interests at once. What distinguishes humans from other animals? How did symbolic thought emerge? What forms of community existed before states, nations, and organized religions? These questions acquired a particular urgency during the rise of Benito Mussolini in Italy and Adolf Hitler in Germany, when competing visions of humanity became a matter of life and death.

Studying cave art and the discoveries emerging from sites such as the Lascaux Cave in France, Bataille became fascinated by a simple fact. The artists who painted the walls left no names. They founded no dynasties. They erected no monuments to rulers or conquerors. But they created some of the most extraordinary images in human history.

For Bataille, the lack of names was not a footnote; it was the point.

The caves revealed forms of collective creation that preceded authorship, ownership, and sovereignty. Art appeared not as an expression of individual genius or political authority but as a shared symbolic activity through which a community understood itself and its place in the world.

Instead of fascism’s cult of leadership, Bataille discovered a humanity whose earliest masterpieces emerged from participation rather than domination, anonymity rather than glory, and collective creation rather than the cult of personality.

The political implications of these observations became increasingly difficult to ignore during the rise of the totalitarian regimes that would engulf much of Europe and Asia. In his 1933 essay “The Psychological Structure of Fascism,” Bataille analyzed the attraction to sovereignty, authority, and charismatic leadership. In 1936, he founded Acéphale, an anti-fascist intellectual group whose symbol was a headless human figure.

The image was deliberately provocative. Against the Führer, Il Duce, Stalin, and every cult of leadership, Bataille proposed a humanity without a head. The figure was less of a political statement than a symbolic reversal of the principles celebrated by totalitarian movements. Against sovereignty, he imagined forms of collective existence that could not be reduced to a single authority. Against hierarchy, he emphasized participation, reciprocity, and shared experiences.

Prehistory became important not because it provided an alternative mythology, but because it revealed a past that resisted mythological simplification. Bataille turned to caves such as Lascaux as they seemed to preserve traces of human existence before nations, before states, and before centralized authority. What he found there was not an original people or an ancestral race, but forms of collective life that escaped the categories through which modern politics often tends to understand itself.

Against Hobbes

In this sense, Bataille’s reading of prehistory amounted to a direct challenge to one of the founding myths of modern political thought. In Leviathan (1651), Thomas Hobbes famously described life before political authority as “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” Human beings, he argued, originally lived in a condition of universal conflict—a “war of all against all”—from which only a sovereign power could rescue them.

This image has shaped centuries of political theory. It continues to influence assumptions about human nature and social order. If conflict is primordial, hierarchy appears necessary. If competition is humanity’s defining characteristic, strong authority becomes easier to justify.

Yet few anthropologists, archaeologists, or evolutionary researchers today would recognize early human societies that were part of Hobbes’s description. Over the past century, discoveries from prehistory have gradually eroded the picture of humanity emerging from a primordial war of all against all. Instead, these findings have shed light on how the social bond preceded sovereignty.

Cooperation and Human Success

Research in the 21st century has begun to explain the reasoning behind this. Far from being a secondary achievement of civilization, cooperation was one of the conditions that made civilization possible. Human infants require years of care, and this knowledge needs to be transmitted across generations. Food sharing, communication, and reciprocity were not late cultural inventions. They were essential to survival.

Increasingly, researchers describe Homo sapiens as a uniquely hyper-cooperative species. In a landmark study published in the journal Nature in 2014, the authors argued that cooperative breeding and exceptional levels of social cooperation played a decisive role in the evolution of human cognition and culture. Shared childcare, collective learning, and social transmission enabled forms of cumulative culture unmatched elsewhere in the animal world.

Human beings did not become cooperative because civilization imposed cooperation upon them: civilization became possible because humans were already cooperative. American anthropologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy makes a similar point in Mothers and Others, stating that networks of care extending far beyond biological parents helped shape human evolution. Humans survived because they learned to depend upon one another.

Developmental and comparative psychologist Michael Tomasello reaches a similar conclusion. In A Natural History of Human Morality, he argues that what distinguishes human cognition is not superior individual intelligence but the capacity for shared intentionality—the ability to coordinate attention, goals, and actions with others. Human intelligence, in this view, is fundamentally social.

A similar intuition reappears today in discussions about artificial intelligence (AI). Blaise Agüera y Arcas, an AI researcher, has argued that intelligence is not simply an individual property but something that emerges through communication, learning, and exchange. Language may be less of an instrument of individual advantage than a technology of collective intelligence.

While Hobbes saw society emerging from conflict, many contemporary scholars suggest that society was shaped by cooperation.

The Archaeology of Possibility

The same shift has transformed our understanding of political development. In The Dawn of Everything, authors David Graeber and David Wengrow challenge the familiar narrative of how human societies progressed through a fixed sequence—bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and states—becoming more hierarchical at every stage.

Drawing on decades of archaeological research, they describe societies that repeatedly experimented with different political arrangements. Some adopted hierarchical structures only temporarily before abandoning them. Others alternated between centralized and decentralized forms of organization according to seasonal rhythms. Large populations sometimes existed without kings, standing armies, or centralized bureaucracies. These accounts make human history look less like a march toward the state and more like a field of political experimentation.

The implications of this outlook extend well beyond archaeology. If hierarchy is not inevitable, authoritarianism can no longer present itself as the culmination of human development. If human beings repeatedly invented different ways of organizing collective life, then political alternatives are not utopian fantasies. They are historical realities. The past does not reveal our destiny, but another possibility of how to exist.

Deep History Against Race

The anti-fascist implications of prehistory became especially visible during the 20th century.

As Nazi scholars attempted to transform archaeology into a science of racial origins, other researchers moved in the opposite direction. In Man Makes Himself, archaeologist V. Gordon Childe emphasized that human progress is a result of innovation, exchange, and collective invention, instead of a biological destiny. Anthropologist Franz Boas’s The Mind of Primitive Man dismantled theories of racial hierarchy and demonstrated that cultural differences were historical rather than biological. Ethnologist Paul Rivet’s studies of migration and the peopling of the Americas highlighted human circulation, encounter, and mixture over purity and permanence in the region. Working in different disciplines, these researchers arrived at a similar conclusion: the deeper one investigates human history, the less sustainable are the ideas of fixed origins and permanent identities.

Advances in the 21st century in genetics have further strengthened this conclusion. Ancient DNA research has transformed our understanding of the past as dramatically as the discovery of cave art transformed our understanding of prehistoric culture a century ago. Across Eurasia and beyond, genetic studies have revealed repeated episodes of migration, admixture, and exchange that challenge older narratives of stable and isolated populations.

Far from revealing isolated groups preserving fixed identities over millennia, genetics shows continuous movement and transformation. Even Homo sapiens bear the marks of encounters with other human groups, including Neanderthals and Denisovans.

The further we travel into the past, the harder it becomes to sustain fantasies of racial purity.

Why Bataille’s Thinking Remains Important

Prehistory does not provide a political program. It does not tell us how contemporary societies should be organized, nor does it reveal a lost golden age. The important point is not that prehistoric humanity was peaceful, egalitarian, or morally superior. Human violence is ancient. So are domination and conflict.

The lesson is something else.

Deep history undermines some of the stories authoritarian ideologies tell us about humanity. Against the myths of racial purity, it reveals a mixture of races. Against myths of primordial hierarchy, it reveals experimentation with political structure. Against myths of sovereign necessity, it reveals human cooperation. Against myths of fixed identity, it reveals transformation.

Bataille understood that prehistory was not simply about origins. It was also about what happens when origin stories lose their authority. Now, with nationalism and authoritarian politics again looking for acknowledgment in ancestry, identity, and destiny, deep history offers a different perspective. The further back we go, the harder it is for fascism to find validity in historical narratives. Instead, what comes into view is a history of movement and exchange, cooperation and shared invention.

Prehistory doesn’t excuse domination. It doesn’t erase it, either. It places domination in perspective. And at a moment when authoritarianism is once again on the rise, the deep past reveals something both humbling and reassuring: our greatest strength has never been purity or domination, but our capacity to cooperate, connect, and depend on one another.

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This article was produced by Human Bridges.

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Mystery of 17th century shipwreck holding 400 gold coins finally solved after 30 years

Bournemouth University—The identity of a centuries-old shipwreck discovered off the south coast of England, holding 400 gold coins has finally been identified as the Dutch trading ship “Dom van Keulen” which left Morocco for the Netherlands in the autumn of 1633.

A new publication* identifies the mysterious wreck that, for almost 30 years, a team of divers and researchers from the British Museum, Bournemouth University (BU) and the South West Maritime Archaeology Group have worked to identify. The book, called ‘From Morocco to the Coast of England: The Story of the Dom van Keulen and its Remarkable Cargo’ reveals that the Dutch ship came across some adverse weather.

Independent Historian, Ian Friel who helped identify the ship has uncovered documents in the National Archive relating to its voyage from Morocco to the Netherlands during which the crew “met with much tempestuous weather”. The ship sprang a leak and sank close to the coastal town of Salcombe, Devon off the south coast of England. All the crew survived.

Dave Parham, Professor of Maritime Archaeology at BU, edited the book alongside Venetia Porter, former Senior Curator for Islamic and Contemporary Middle Eastern Art at the British Museum, who worked with the South West Maritime Archaeology Group to find out more about the cargo and its ship after it was discovered in 1995.

Dave Parham said: “Among its cargo were 150 bags of gum arabic, 64 bags of saltpetre, 320 goat skins and 9,000 Barbary ducats, gold Moroccan coins. It is thought that most of the cargo was salvaged at the time, but more than 400 coins remained on the seabed until they were discovered by the South West Maritime Archaeology Group in 1995.”

Dave continued: “This provides important context for the wealth and architecture of the Sa‘dian Sharifs, the trade in African gold, and tangible evidence of the flourishing 17th-century maritime trade linking Morocco, the Low Countries and Britain.”

The 400 coins which along with other material from the wreck are on display at the British Museum originated from the Barbary Coast, recognized today as Morocco. During the 16th and 17th centuries, Dutch merchants actively traded by exchanging manufactured goods for highly valued, pure West African gold. At this time the Dutch had a large maritime industry and had a global trading empire. Many of the foreign imported ducats were melted down to produce their own Dutch gold coins which became one of the world’s most widely accepted trade currencies.

Very little is known about the appearance or size of the Dom van Keulen and no known paintings of the ship exist. Professor Parham says that the wreck site is about 30 meters long. It lies at a depth of around 18 metres and includes cannons and anchors amongst other small items of cargo. 

Other items brought up from the wreckage and now in the ownership of the British Museum include a pewter bowl and spoon, gold jewelry, a sounding weight in the shape of a fish, a stamp seal, pottery and a gold finger nugget. Head of Research at the British Museum, Jeremy D Hill, said:

“The discovery of African gold from under the sea off the coast of Devon was an amazing discovery that raised so many questions about how it came to be there. Answering those questions has taken a team of experts, working collaboratively. The story can now be told of how a Dutch ship carrying North African gold was wrecked off the English coast, making this a discovery of international importance. It reminds us how much there is still to be found under our seas.”

The book offers a detailed account of the find and the recovery process of the shipwreck. It also provides a cultural history of the Sa’dian Sharifs, an Arab Sharifian dynasty that ruled Morocco at the time the ship’s crew would have been trading with them.

The wreck site is designated under the Protection of Wrecks Act 1973 and is closely managed by Historic England. Diving on the site is restricted to those that hold a license granted by the Secretary of State at DCMS. The wreck is monitored by the National Coastwatch Institution (NCI) Prawle Point station, which overlooks the site. Devon & Cornwall Police’s marine unit also undertake regular patrols in the vicinity as part of Operation Birdie, a national initiative to tackle illegal interference with historic wreck sites.

An Open Access version of the book can be found online with physical copies available for purchase from the British Museum online shop.

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A diver above the wreck site with cannons below on the sea bed.  Credit: Maritime Archaeology Sea Trust (MAST)

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More gold coins and recovered jewellery from the site.  Credit: British Museum

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Examples of the gold coins recovered from the wreck.  Credit: British Museum

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Other recovered artefacts including – pewter bowl and spoon, a ceramic sounding weight shaped as a pilchard, stamp seal and finger nugget. Credit: British Museum

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Article Source: Bournemouth University news release.

*10.48582/eh04-q803 

Microbes frozen in ancient rubbish heaps help reconstruct ancient Greenlanders’ farms, seal hunts, and toilets

Frontiers—Greenland has a long and checkered history of human settlement: several Paleo-Inuit cultures since approximately 2,500 BCE, descendants of Vikings between the tenth and fifteenth centuries, and early modern Danes since 1721. All left their traces on the landscape, for example in the form of ancient domestic rubbish heaps. Composed of waste like animal bones, excrement, mollusk shells, and human artefacts, these middens are a precious resource for archaeologists.

But what can microbiologists contribute to the study of these middens, for example revealing which diseases plagued historic populations, and which animals they kept but perhaps didn’t eat? And now that the Arctic is warming three to four times faster than the global average, could thawing middens be a source of resurgent infectious diseases?

“Here we show that the risk of release of ancient pathogens from ancient middens on Greenland is currently low,” said Dr Frank Møller Aarestrup, a professor at the National Food Institute of Denmark Technical University and corresponding author of the article in Frontiers in Microbiology. “Rather, we found that these middens in the cold Arctic acted like long-term natural experiments. Human- and animal-associated bacterial signals, including opportunistic bacteria and bacteria carrying antibiotic resistance genes, have remained detectable in them many centuries later as the legacy of human activity: for example, livestock farming by the ancient Norse.”

Studying the dustbins of history

In 2020 and 2021 in West and South Greenland, Aarestrup and colleagues collected samples from several middens frozen in time by permafrost and covering 4,500 years of human life in Greenland. These had been identified by the Greenland National Museum and Archives registry. At ancient Norse sites, for example at Kapisilit and Narsarsuaq, they also collected soil samples from historic winter enclosures and summer grazing grounds for livestock. The researchers used DNA sequencing to reconstruct entire bacterial communities. They compared their findings to those in 143 soil samples from areas of permafrost distant from any historical settlements.

The sequencing revealed between 9 and 202 bacterial species per midden, for a total of 1,207 species. Importantly, many of these species were previously undescribed and could only be assigned to broad taxonomic categories like families and orders. “This […] highlights how poorly described Arctic soils and archaeological deposits remain,” wrote the authors.

Middens had significantly richer bacterial communities than surrounding pristine soils, confirming that they preserved the biological legacy of human activity. Middens from the Paleo-Inuit had the most soil-like bacterial communities, indicating that the microbial imprint from humans and animals diminishes over time.

Groups of bacteria known to live on or within animal and human hosts predominated in most middens. These included harmless bacteria from human feces like Clostridium massilliamazonienseClostridium baratii which can cause botulism, and Paeniclostridium sordellii, which can cause life-threatening human diseases like toxic shock syndrome, sepsis, and gas gangrene.

Bacterial communities depended strongly on the type of waste material in each midden. For example, those from early colonial era Nuuk contained decomposing seal skins and were rich in the bacterium Clostridium perfringens, a major cause of food poisoning. Romboutsia species and Paraclostridium sordellii – which live in the gut of many animals – were abundant in middens filled with animal carcasses, while early Norse middens with decomposing bones were rich in unknown species of Proteobacteria and Clostridiaceae.

No reason to worry

The authors also found a great diversity of genes associated with antimicrobial resistance in bacterial genomes from middens. The presence of the same genes in ancient and contemporary soil layers signaled that microbes resistant to antimicrobials can linger in permafrost for centuries. However, the authors concluded from the spatial distribution of these pathogens that they don’t spread far from thawing middens. They thus appear to pose little risk to public health – at least for now.

“The microbiome in thawing permafrost appeared to be rapidly replaced by local contemporary environmental microbes once released into run-offs,” observed co-author Dr Saria Otani, an associate professor at the National Food Institute.

“However, it is not known whether the risk of release of pathogens will increase with increasing temperatures, or whether this might be greater in other Arctic regions. For this reason, it would be prudent to include microbiome characterization as a routine monitoring aspect during archaeological visits,” counseled last author Dr Anders Priemé, a professor at the University of Copenhagen.

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The authors during their fieldwork on Greenland. Credit Louise Hindborg Mortensen

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Article Source: Frontiers news release.

*Microbial composition of archaeological middens: Tracing Human Footprints Through Centuries in Greenland’s Ancient Settlements, Frontiers in Microbiology, 17-Jun-2026.  10.3389/fmicb.2026.1809037 

Bar-Ilan University study suggests 2,700-year-old standing stone (massebah) may provide fresh evidence for King Hezekiah’s religious reforms

Bar-Ilan University—A new study* by Prof. Avraham Faust of Bar-Ilan University’s Department of General History presents intriguing new evidence that may shed light on one of the most debated questions in the study of Israelite religion: did King Hezekiah’s religious reforms actually occur, and did they transform religious practices throughout the Kingdom of Judah?

Published in the Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology, the study focuses on an unusual discovery at Tel ‘Eton in the Judean Lowlands, a large cultic standing stone, or massebah, measuring approximately 1.4 meters (4.6 feet) in height and weighing about 750 kilograms (1,650 pounds). Once prominently displayed inside in a large residence, the stone was later carefully laid on its side and incorporated into a specially constructed stone platform.

According to Faust, the treatment of the stone may reflect broader religious changes that took place in Judah in the late eighth century BCE, possibly during the reign of King Hezekiah.

A Long-Standing Historical Debate

The biblical accounts describe Hezekiah as implementing sweeping religious reforms, including the elimination of local places of worship and the centralization of religious activity in Jerusalem. For decades, scholars have debated whether these reforms occurred as described or whether the biblical texts reflect a later ideological perspective.

Most archaeological discussions of Hezekiah’s reforms have focused on public cultic sites and installations, including the temple at Arad, the dismantled altar at Beersheba, and a few other ritual settings discovered throughout Judah. While these sites have yielded important evidence, their interpretation remains contested.

Faust’s study introduces a different type of evidence — one that may reveal how religious change affected everyday life beyond official places of worship.

A Stone at the Heart of an Important Building

The standing stone was discovered during excavations at Tel ‘Eton, a site identified as an important Judean settlement during the First Temple period. It was found in a large residence known as “Building 101,” often referred to as the Governor’s Residency, which was excavated over the course of ten excavation seasons.

In the building’s earliest phase, the stone stood in the largest room, directly opposite the entrance. Its prominent location ensured that it would have been visible to anyone entering the structure or standing in the adjacent courtyard.

Because the stone served no obvious architectural or practical purpose, and because similar standing stones are widely known from ritual contexts throughout the ancient Near East, the excavators believe it functioned as a cultic object associated with religious activity.

“The location of the stone suggests that it played an important role in the lives of the building’s occupants,” Faust explains.

Canceled, But Not Desecrated

At a later stage, however, the stone’s role changed dramatically. Rather than continuing to display it, the residents laid the standing stone on its side and incorporated it into a stone platform built around it. Significantly, researchers found no evidence that the stone had been intentionally damaged. It was not smashed into pieces or otherwise desecrated.

According to Faust, this distinction may be important. “Those responsible for changing religious practices may have wished to eliminate the stone’s ritual function, and perhaps wanted the old ritual objects desecrated, but the people who carried out the change seem to have treated it with respect,” he says. “They removed it from use without destroying it, effectively neutralizing its cultic significance while preserving the object itself.”

Rare Evidence of Religious Change in the Domestic Sphere

The discovery is particularly noteworthy because evidence for religious reform is usually sought in temples, shrines, and public cultic installations. The number of such settings, however, is quite limited, and because the evidence is not always unequivocal, the debates continue.

The novelty of the new study lies not only in providing additional evidence for religious changes in the late eighth century BCE, apparently during the reign of Hezekiah, but also in drawing attention to domestic cult practices. According to Faust, such evidence is rarely identified archaeologically because ordinary households attract far less scholarly attention than temples. Moreover, when a cult was abandoned, portable ritual objects could simply be removed, leaving little or no archaeological trace.

Connected to Hezekiah’s Reforms?

The standing stone was incorporated into the platform sometime before the destruction of Tel ‘Eton by the Assyrian Empire at the end of the eighth century BCE, a date that broadly coincides with the reign of King Hezekiah.

While the study does not claim definitive proof that the stone was decommissioned as a direct result of Hezekiah’s reforms, Faust argues that the find aligns well with other archaeological evidence from the same period.

Taken together, these discoveries strengthen the possibility that significant religious changes were taking place throughout Judah, affecting both public worship and domestic religious practices.

A New Piece of the Puzzle

Faust emphasizes that understanding religious development in ancient Judah requires looking beyond temples and official cultic centers. Administrative buildings, residences, and other non-ritual spaces may preserve important evidence for how religious life evolved and changed over time.

The standing stone buried at Tel ‘Eton more than 2,700 years ago does not resolve the debate over Hezekiah’s reforms. Yet by documenting the careful decommissioning of a long-venerated cultic object, the discovery offers a rare window into a period of profound religious change and provides a valuable new piece of evidence in one of biblical archaeology’s most enduring debates.

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Location Map of Tel ‘Eton. Credit Tel ‘Eton expedition

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Composite Aerial Photo of Building 101.  Credit Sky View and Griffin Aerial Imaging, edited by Yair Sapir

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Aerial view of Room 101B after the completion of excavations with the big stones left in situ. Inset: the two surviving fragments of the standing stone, digitally rejoined to illustrate their original appearance and dimensions.  Credit Griffin Aerial Imaging; Inset prepared by Dvir Rotem

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Aerial view of Room 101B after the removal of a later stone layer. The large cultic standing stone (massebah) is highlighted by the circle.  Credit Sky View

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Article Source: Bar-Ilan University news release.

*Hezekiah’s Reform? A View from Tel ‘Eton on the Religious Development in Judah, 19-May-2026.

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Ancient fire record rewritten: Researchers push earliest evidence of human fire use back to over a million years

The Hebrew University of JerusalemA new study* has uncovered evidence that early human ancestors were using fire in South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave between 1.07 and 1.79 million years ago, extending the chronology of one of the earliest known records of fire use associated with hominins. By applying a new method that detects traces of burning in fossil bones, researchers found signs of repeated fire use deep inside the cave, far beyond the reach of natural wildfires. The findings suggest that early humans were bringing naturally occurring fire into the cave and maintaining it there, providing new insights into how our ancestors first began to harness one of the most important tools in human history.

A new study has uncovered evidence that early human ancestors were using fire far earlier than previously confirmed, with traces of fire use dating to between 1.07 and 1.79 million years ago in South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave.

The study was part of an ongoing collaboration between Dr. Liora Kolska Horwitz of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s National Natural History Collections (co-director of the Wonderwerk Cave project with Prof Michael Chazan, University of Toronto) and and an international team of researchers from Spain, Argentina, Canada, USA, South Africa, Portugal and Israel. Their research combines methods from archaeology, paleontology, geology and a range of scientific techniques to investigate one of the key developments in human evolution: the use of fire.

The current paper builds on the previous discovery of early fire at Wonderwerk Cave, located in the Kalahari Desert of South Africa, that was dated to ~1 million years ago (published by members of the team in 2012 in PNAS), that provided the oldest evidence for intentional use of fire worldwide.

Continuing research at Wonderwerk Cave has now pushed the date for early fire back further, with new evidence for traces of fire use in archaeological deposits dating between 1.07 and 1.79 million years ago, extending the chronology of one of the earliest known records of fire use associated with hominins. The findings, published in PLOS One, provide new insight into how our ancestors may have interacted with fire long before they learned to create it themselves.

Fire provided warmth, protection from predators, and light after sunset, and eventually enabled cooking. Yet determining exactly when humans first began using fire has remained one of archaeology’s most challenging questions.

“Evidence of fire from such ancient sites is often subtle and difficult to detect,” said the Dr. Kolska Horwitz. “Our study provides new tools for identifying traces of ancient burning and reveals that fire was repeatedly present deep inside Wonderwerk Cave.”

The study also introduces a new method based on the light-emitting properties of burned bone.

When illuminated with specific wavelengths of light, bones that have been exposed to intense heat emit a distinctive glow. By combining this non-destructive luminescence technique with established chemical analyses, researchers were able to identify burned animal bones with a high degree of confidence.

The method is non-invasive, portable, and can be applied to large collections of fossils without damaging them.

The new research applied this method to examine traces of burning on hundreds of tiny fossil bones left behind by owls that once roosted in the cave. Because these remains accumulated naturally on the cave floor, they provide an independent, non-anthropogenic record of ancient events.

The scientists now found clear signs of burning in an archaeological layer associated with artefacts from the initial Acheulean, likely associated with Homo erectus. Importantly, these burned remains were discovered approximately 30 meters inside the cave—far beyond the reach of natural wildfires, and in a layer lacking remains of guano which rules out spontaneous combustion.

The findings do not indicate that these early humans could create fire at will. Instead, the evidence points to the use of naturally occurring fires, such as those sparked by lightning or wildfires on the African savanna. The early humans introduced this fire into the cave on multiple occasions and maintained it there before it eventually died out. The team suggested that they may have used the owl pellets as fuel, resulting in burning of the tiny bones of rodents that were in the pellets.

Nevertheless, bringing fire into a cave and maintaining it represents a significant behavioral achievement.

“These discoveries show that early humans were not simply passive observers of natural fires,” Dr. Kolska Horwitz explained. “They were actively engaging with fire and incorporating it into their lives.”

Beyond extending the record of fire use, the study provides archaeologists with a new tool for investigating how and when humans first began using fire.

As researchers continue to apply this technique at archaeological sites around the world, it may help clarify the origins and development of one of the most consequential technologies in human history.

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Wonderwerk Cave Entrance. Credit  Wonderwerk Cave Project

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White (#5 on right) is the most burnt while yellow-beige (on left #1) is unburnt. Credit  Wonderwerk Cave Project

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Modern Barn Owl Pellet from Floor of Wonderwerk.  Credit. Wonderwerk Cave Project

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Article Source: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem news release.

*New evidence for Early Pleistocene use of fire at Wonderwerk Cave (South Africa), PLOS One, 1-Jun-2026. 10.1371/journal.pone.0347480 

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Archaeologists uncover 4,000-year-old evidence of siege warfare in ancient Mesopotamia

University of Central Florida—At Kurd Qaburstan, an ancient site in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, archaeologists have uncovered the first substantial group of cuneiform administrative tablets found in the Erbil region, along with evidence of large-scale destruction, mass graves and citywide fortifications. Together, the discoveries are providing one of the clearest archaeological records yet uncovered of siege warfare and urban life during the Middle Bronze Age. 

“Our 2025 research produced clear archaeological evidence linking the site to the siege of Qabra, beginning with the first significant group of cuneiform tablets found on the Erbil Plain,” says Tiffany Earley-Spadoni, associate professor of history at the University of Central Florida and director of the Kurd Qaburstan project. “Several tablets are dated within days of each other, matching the timeline of the city’s fall.” 
 
The project is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation and conducted in partnership with the Directorate-General of Antiquities and Heritage in the Kurdistan region of Iraq. The funded excavations took place during two summer seasons in 2024 and 2025. 

A Lost Archive Emerges  

Researchers recovered 20 cuneiform tablets and more than 100 administrative sealings from destruction layers within the Lower Town East Palace (FIG 1). The artifacts are being studied by epigraphers Paul Delnero (Johns Hopkins University) and Parker Zane (Yale University), along with art historian Marian Feldman (Johns Hopkins University). 

The texts include palace administrative records and a letter that may reference a high-ranking official connected to Qabra. Some inscriptions may also correspond to the destruction described on the Victory Stele of Dadusha.  

“Most of the tablets are administrative and provide a snapshot of palace life and the economy of the ancient city,” Earley-Spadoni says. “One tablet appears to have been written by a high-ranking official in ancient Qabra.”  

Evidence of Siege Warfare 

Collapsed structures, burned layers and concentrated debris suggest a coordinated and possibly prolonged assault (FIG 2).  

“The two superimposed destructions match the historical sequence of the siege of Qabra and its conquest by Shamshi Addu,” Earley-Spadoni says. “The charred debris, the large number of ceramic vessels and individuals who met untimely deaths and were buried in the destruction layers, provide the clearest archaeological case of Middle Bronze Age siege warfare yet discovered in northern Mesopotamia.” 

The Human Toll of Conflict 

Within the palace destruction layers, researchers discovered the remains of 17 individuals, studied by bioarchaeologist Andrea Zurek-Ost at Michigan State University (FIG 3). 

“The individuals were not formally buried and had no associated grave goods,” Earley-Spadoni says. “Some appear to have been left where they died, including possible palace workers. One individual was found face down over a stone basin.” 

Researchers also uncovered a preserved street with an engineered drainage system and domestic spaces used for food processing and textile production, pointing to sophisticated infrastructure and economic activity. 

Mapping an Ancient City at Scale 

The team also completed a magnetometer survey covering more than 80 hectares (about 180 acres). The survey, which measures changes in Earth’s magnetic field to detect buried structures, was led by Andrew Creekmore III at the University of Northern Colorado. The survey revealed a monumental wall with bastions encircling the site.  

The fortifications correspond with those depicted on the Victory Stele of Dadusha and support the identification of Kurd Qaburstan as the ancient city of Qabra. 

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Broken vessels and other debris from a destruction layer were preserved east of a monumental mudbrick wall in the Lower Town East Palace at Kurd Qaburstan.  Credit:  Photo by Edward Dandrow/Kurd Qaburstan Project

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The spatial arrangement of human remains recovered from a destruction deposit in the Lower Town East Palace at Kurd Qaburstan.  Credit: Photo by Andrea Zurek-Ost/Kurd Qaburstan Project

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A cuneiform tablet from the Lower Town East palace is shown before and after expert conservation. The tablet is part of a group of administrative texts discovered during excavations at Kurd Qaburstan. Credit: Photo by Carmen Gütschow/Kurd Qaburstan Project

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Rewriting the Story of Northern Mesopotamia  

Mesopotamia is often associated with southern cities like Uruk, long viewed as the center of early urban civilization. Discoveries at Kurd Qaburstan are helping highlight the value of northern cities, Earley-Spadoni says. 

“The evidence from Kurd Qaburstan shows that northern cities could be large, complex, and politically significant, with administrative systems, fortifications, and infrastructure comparable to those of the best-known southern sites,” she says.  

These discoveries build on a decade of prior excavation at Kurd Qaburstan by Johns Hopkins University, revealing a city long absent from the historical record. 

“Laboratory investigations are underway, including isotopic and ancient DNA analyses of the 17 individuals,” Earley-Spadoni says. “This work will help researchers understand their origins and relationships.” 

Each discovery brings researchers closer to understanding how this ancient city functioned and how it ultimately fell. 

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This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) under Award No. 2344957. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NSF. Work was conducted with the permission, support, and collaboration of the Directorate-General of Antiquities of the Kurdistan Regional Government, Director-General Kak Kaify Mustafa Ali, and the Erbil Department of Antiquities, Director Kak Nader Babakr. 

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The Mirror of Neolithic Art: How Çatalhöyük Confronts the Hubris of the Modernist Perspective

Erdem Denk is a professor of international law and international relations at Ankara University and the founder of the transdisciplinary research initiative Arkeopolitics, which integrates archaeology, history, political theory, and legal history to reinterpret the long-term dynamics of human societies. His research focuses on the evolution of law and social order since the Paleolithic. He is the author of The 50,000-Year World Order: Societies and Their Laws (2021, in Turkish) and is currently working on three books, in Turkish and English, titled When There Was No StateThe Invention of the State, and The Story of the State.

The theme for an exhibition that opened on June 4, 2026, at Ankara University’s Faculty of Political Science (Mülkiye), World’s First City Plan/Map, as part of my Arkeopolitics initiative, was met with reservations by a group of students from the Middle East Technical University’s faculty of architecture. They questioned how the map—exhibited in the Çatalhöyük section of the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations—could be called a work of art, reflecting the flawed modern perspective.

A young architect candidate objected and said: “Professor, how can this be a map? The houses are seen from above the (plan), but the mountain is seen from the profile (section). There is a serious perspective error here. Furthermore, a ‘mind’ capable of drawing a map could not have developed in that period.”

“In that case, should we also consider Picasso’s works irrational?” I responded.

Even though the hubris of the modern mind did not show at that exact moment, it was actually an “aha!” moment, the impact of which has been felt over time.

The people of Çatalhöyük depicted the world not “as it is”—in the sense we claim to understand today—but “as they felt and conceptualized it.” The truth is that the rational, perspectival gaze, or what we call “as it is,” is nothing more than a form that the modern mind “feels and conceptualizes” the world through. Therefore, the map is a work of art within its own period and context.

The Çatalhöyük Gaze

That bird’s-eye view that we see through drones today was a daily reality for the Çatalhöyük residents. In a settlement with no streets, where entry to houses was through roofs, life flowed on the rooftops. Socializing, working, and playing took place in the shared public space stretching across the roofs. Thus, the artists drawing the city depicted it from the angle they knew best—from above—and it was not a technical inadequacy or deficiency; on the contrary, it was sociological honesty. In fact, the equal stature of all the houses in the drawing also revealed the egalitarian structure of the settlement. They simply did not know (and see!) it any other way.

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Çatalhöyük, 7400 BC, Konya, Turkey. Murat Özsoy 1958. CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons

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As for the mountain being shown from the front, besides its conformity to human vision and reality, it points to a colossal shared/natural constant that either threatened the entire city and/or held it at its skirts to give it its identity.

The claim that the “mountain” was the well-known “leopard skin” was also quite popular for a time, partly fueled by the notion that it could not be a map (so much so that Stephanie Meece wrote in her article that attributing cartography, which she deemed a Western phenomenon, skill, and invention, to Çatalhöyük was absurd). However, other studies replicating how a leopard skin is cut and splayed open have largely marginalized this view. Besides, a shape that erupts is highly likely to be a mountain. Today, we know that Mount Hasan, which looms on the horizon of Çatalhöyük, erupted while the Çatalhöyük settlement existed. We also know that obsidian, the industrial raw material that gave the settlement its character, came from it and other volcanoes in the region.

In short, nothing could be more natural than for the “mountain”—with its socioeconomic and sociopsychological significance for the settlement—to shape the art of the period, including the way it was depicted. Especially considering the importance a mountain (and a cave) held in almost all societies, from Upper Paleolithic shamanism to monotheistic religions.

The only significant complication here lies in the perspective of the depiction: the higher of the mountain’s two cones appears on the right side of the wall painting, whereas it is actually on the left when looking directly from Çatalhöyük, which is located just more than 100 kilometers away from the mountain. Crucially, this higher cone appears on the right only when viewed from Aşıklıhöyük—the pioneering settlement situated almost at the very foothills of the mountain. Given the roughly 150-year historical transition between the two sites, a direct cultural representation from Aşıklıhöyük seems unlikely. Alternatively, since geological hypotheses suggesting a later structural shift or eruption-induced alteration in the crater’s topography are highly implausible, it is far more rational to consider this specific rendering as the perspective or narrative of those who might have traveled directly to the base of the mountain for obsidian extraction.

In this sense, instead of capitulating to the modernist perspective that strips the painting of its cartographic value just because it lacks contemporary conventions, this composition should be recognized as a map in its own right—one that perfectly served the practical and existential needs of its own era. Much like the widely discussed interpretations of Upper Paleolithic cave art—where non-hunting depictions of animals are viewed as markers tracking seasonal paths, or where representations like the “Gargas hands” are interpreted as early “mapping” to signal game and demarcate secure travel routes—this rendering stands as a foundational cartographic practice: a vital transfer of a landscape’s economic and symbolic center of gravity onto a spatial plane.

After all, as we know from the enduring debates surrounding the Mercator projection, the modern era’s two-dimensional cartography is anything but an objective reflection of reality; by stretching the globe from the north, it systematically constructed a deeply Eurocentric worldview that we have long misconstrued as “normal.” Therefore, it is hardly surprising that the bewildered reaction of students seeing the Gall-Peters map on my office wall for the first time mirrors the same cognitive dissonance as the architecture student who confidently dismissed the Çatalhöyük painting for its apparent lack of “proper” perspective. It seems the modern mind simply cannot tolerate any reality that refuses to fit into its indoctrinated geometric grid.

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A rendering of the wall painting from Çatalhüyük.

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The Relationship Between Art and Modernity

What is art? What about perspective and/or intellect? Or let us ask this way: Is the prescribed mode of thought that we call the perspective of the modern mind the only absolute way of seeing and showing reality? After all, wasn’t it the modern mind that warned us against unfalsifiable, single, and absolute truths?

Perhaps the real distortion belongs to the modern mind, which mistakes its own singular, rigid perspective for absolute objective reality. So, who is truly lacking perspective here? The Çatalhöyük artist who integrated multiple dimensions of lived experience onto a single wall, or the modern observer who looks at that wall and sees only a “technical error”?

Fortunately, we have mirrors like the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara—where this unique wall painting is housed—and countless other institutions across every corner of the globe that safeguard the monumental heritage of the Paleolithic and Neolithic eras. These spaces invite us to break free from the shackles of the prescribed modern mind. That is, of course, if we are ready to accept what we so condescendingly label as “prehistory”—believing that history only begins when a society expresses itself through a script we happen to have successfully deciphered—is actually a rich history filled with sophisticated products of intellect and art. After all, Homo sapiens, who have existed for roughly 250,000 years—and the Neanderthals, who went extinct about 40,000 years ago—possessed art and engaged profoundly with their environments, both to share their narratives within, between, and beyond generations, and to survive in a symbiotic relationship with the spaces they inhabited.

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A shorter version of this article was published in Turkish in Ankale Sanat, June 3, 2026. This article was produced by Human Bridges.

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The Archaeology of Ancient Libraries: What Surviving Book Collections Reveal About Lost Civilizations

Books burn. Papyrus rots. Clay tablets get buried under centuries of rubble. And yet, against every expectation, some collections survive — partial, damaged, scattered — and what remains tells us more than we might think….

 

When Shelves Become Ruins

Most people picture a library as a building full of books. Ancient libraries were something stranger. They were political statements, spiritual archives, tools of the empire. The Library of Ashurbanipal in Nineveh, built around 650 BCE, held over 30,000 clay tablets — a deliberate attempt by an Assyrian king to collect all knowledge in the known world.

Archaeologists uncovered it in the 1850s in what is now northern Iraq. Many tablets survived precisely because the library burned — the fire baked the clay hard, preserving texts that might otherwise have crumbled to dust.

What the Tablets Actually Contained

The contents were not what you might expect. Yes, there were royal records and astronomical observations. But there was also poetry, medicine, mythology, and flood narratives that predate the Biblical account by at least a thousand years.

The Epic of Gilgamesh was found here, pieced together from fragments. Without this library’s destruction and burial, that text — one of the oldest stories ever written — would simply not exist today.

The Herculaneum Scrolls

In 79 CE, Mount Vesuvius buried an entire villa near Herculaneum under volcanic material. Inside was a private library of roughly 1,800 papyrus scrolls, now carbonized into brittle black cylinders. For centuries, scholars could do little more than guess at their contents.

That changed. Using multispectral imaging and, more recently, AI-assisted decoding, researchers have begun reading texts previously considered destroyed. In 2023, a team announced the first successful decoding of a substantial portion — an Epicurean philosophical text. The scrolls are still yielding new material.

Libraries as Power

Ancient rulers understood something that is easy to forget: controlling texts means controlling knowledge. The Library of Alexandria, probably founded around 295 BCE under Ptolemy I, was a deliberate political project. Egypt’s rulers reportedly required all ships entering the harbor of Alexandria to surrender any scrolls aboard for copying — and sometimes kept the originals.

At its height, the library may have held between 400,000 and 700,000 scrolls. Estimates vary widely. What is certain is that it functioned as a center for translation, commentary, and scientific research. A sort of ancient version of FictionMe. Since people couldn’t read novels online before, libraries attracted scholars from across the Mediterranean world. It was a long journey, from tablets and leather scrolls to reading apps, and today books are accessible to everyone.

Egypt and the Written Desert

Egypt’s dry climate is the closest thing to a time machine that archaeology has. The sands around Oxyrhynchus, a mid-sized ancient city, have produced over 500,000 papyrus fragments since excavations began in 1896. The collection spans roughly 800 years of history.

Not all of it is literature. Most fragments are receipts, letters, tax records, contracts. But that mundane material is often more revealing than any epic poem. It shows what ordinary people bought, owed, worried about, and argued over.

The Dead Sea Scrolls as Library Remnant

Discovered between 1947 and 1956 in caves near Qumran, the Dead Sea Scrolls represent what may have been the library of a Jewish sect called the Essenes. Around 900 manuscripts survived, dating from roughly 250 BCE to 68 CE.

The scrolls include the oldest known copies of Hebrew Bible texts — some 1,000 years older than what was previously available. They have forced scholars to revise assumptions about how texts were transmitted, copied, and altered over centuries.

What Was Lost and Why It Matters

The destruction of ancient libraries was rarely a single, dramatic event. The great libraries declined gradually—through underfunding, political neglect, fire, conquest, and simple decay. Often, they had no “backup copies.” Yet reading was fashionable both before the Common Era and today, with the growing popularity of the FictionMe iOS app and other platforms. Previously, reading was the preserve of “thinkers” or “sages,” but today it’s simply an interesting pastime for some and a source of knowledge for others.

By some estimates, less than 1% of ancient Greek literature survives. We have 7 complete plays by Sophocles; he wrote around 120. Aristotle’s published works, which ancient sources say were polished and widely read, have almost entirely disappeared — what we have are likely lecture notes.

Reading What Remains

The archaeology of ancient libraries teaches a specific kind of humility. Every surviving text represents an accident of preservation — a lucky fire, a dry cave, a careful copyist in a medieval monastery. What we know about the ancient world is shaped not just by what happened, but by what happened to be written down and then happened to survive.

Scholars today use infrared scanning, DNA analysis of parchment, and machine learning to extract information from damaged materials. The field is moving fast. Texts that were illegible a decade ago are now being read for the first time in two thousand years.

The Libraries Still Being Found

Archaeological work continues. In 2019, researchers identified a library room in the ruins of Herculaneum that had not yet been excavated. In Egypt, new papyrus caches the surface periodically. In Jordan and Israel, caves in desert terrain are still being surveyed.

The archive of the ancient world is not closed. It is incomplete, fragile, and scattered — but still, slowly, being opened.

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Study details epic transportation of Stonehenge stone across ancient Britain

Curtin University—New research by Curtin University has revealed how one of Stonehenge’s most mysterious stones was likely transported hundreds of kilometres across Britain through challenging terrain, highlighting the remarkable capabilities of ancient communities.

Stonehenge’s central Altar Stone is a six-tonne sandstone megalith now believed to have originated in northeast Scotland, around 700km from Salisbury Plain, underscoring the extraordinary scale of its journey.

The new study* builds on earlier findings that ruled out glaciers as the sole mechanism for moving the stones, strengthening the conclusion people were responsible for transporting them across difficult terrain rather than relying on natural Ice Age processes.

Researchers have now focused on what that journey may have looked like, combining mineral grain dating with ice-sheet modelling to pinpoint the stone’s origin and test whether glaciers could have carried it south.

Co-lead author Dr Anthony Clarke, from the Timescales of Minerals Systems Group within Curtin’s School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, said the findings suggest the journey was far from simple and likely required careful planning across multiple stages.

“Rather than being carried naturally by ice, the evidence points to a deliberate, carefully planned movement across a challenging and varied landscape,” Dr Clarke said.

“Our modelling shows glaciers may have transported rocks part of the way during the last Ice Age — potentially as far as Dogger Bank in the North Sea — but not into southern England, meaning the stone would still have needed to be moved hundreds of kilometres by people.

“The research indicates there were no viable glacial pathways linking the source region directly to Stonehenge, reinforcing the conclusion that human transport was required.

“Instead, this suggests the stone was likely moved in stages, potentially combining overland hauling with river or coastal transport where possible.”

Dr Clarke said the findings reveal a level of organisation and cooperation among Neolithic communities not previously fully appreciated.

“Transporting a stone of this size over such a long distance would have required planning, coordination and a deep understanding of the landscape – not to mention tremendous determination,” Dr Clarke said.

“The study demonstrates how combining geological analysis with computer modelling can help resolve long-standing questions about how Stonehenge was built.”

Future research will aim to pinpoint the Altar Stone’s exact source in northeast Scotland and further investigate possible transport routes used by prehistoric communities.

The research was conducted in collaboration with experts from Sheffield Hallam University, the University of Sheffield, Wessex Archaeology, and the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom.

The study, ‘From Highlands to Henge: Refining the Provenance and Transport Pathways of Stonehenge’s Altar Stone’ (DOI:10.1002/jqs.70080), was published in the Journal of Quaternary Science.

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Above and below: Dr Anthony Clarke at Stonehenge.  Credit Curtin University

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Article Source: Curtin University news release.

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Ice Age mystery: Taimering mammoth was likely butchered by hunters and gatherers

Staatliche Naturwissenschaftliche Sammlungen Bayerns—Six years ago, during construction work in Taimering near Regensburg (Bavaria, Germany), employees of the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Historical Monuments (BLfD) discovered a nearly 2.5-meter-long, spirally twisted tusk that belonged to a woolly mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius. Nearby, the archaeologists also found over 70 additional bones and bone fragments, primarily from the ribcage as well as hand and foot bones. Most of the long bones of the large mammal are missing. “The mammoth’s tusk and bones were exceptionally well-preserved due to their millennia-long conservation in the wet soil environment,” says Dr. Christoph Steinmann, deputy head of the Department of Archaeological Heritage Preservation for Lower Bavaria/Upper Palatinate at the BLfD. After its recovery, the find was prepared at the Bavarian State Collections of Natural History (SNSB), and further scientific investigations were coordinated from there.

The palaeontological assessment revealed that all the bones, as well as the tusk, belong to a single, very large but not yet fully grown individual with a shoulder height of about three meters. The Taimering woolly mammoth likely died directly at or at least near its discovery site. The bone surfaces, which have been preserved intact down to the finest detail, rule out both prolonged transport by water and disarticulation by predators. According to the researchers, the animal was buried in the sediments of a pond or a slow-flowing tributary of the prehistoric Danube River during the Ice Age. Radiocarbon dating indicates a geological age of the bones between 27,000 and 25,000 years ago.

Unusual markings on the surface turned out to be cut marks and provide clear evidence of human activity. Numerous such indentations are found exclusively on the ribs—made by Palaeolithic hunters and gatherers who butchered the animal. One of the broad rib bones was even used as a cutting board. Whether the mammoth was killed by humans or had already been dead when people processed the carcass remains unclear, according to lead author Kerstin Pasda from the Institute of Prehistory and Early History at the Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), who conducted the osteoarchaeological analyses of the anthropogenic modifications.

Pollen analyses conducted by Dr. Philipp Stojakowits at the University of Augsburg reveal a great deal to the researchers about the habitat in which the mammoth lived and died. They indicate a herbaceous, tundra-like steppe vegetation with scattered dwarf shrubs. The so-called Mammoth Steppe was a vast treeless ecosystem in Eurasia that, during the peak of the last glacial period from 30,000 to 20,000 years ago, stretched across Europe between the Scandinavian ice sheet and the southern glaciers of the Alps. Its nutrient-rich grasses and dwarf shrubs provided food for a variety of large mammals, including the Taimering mammoth.

The discovery is exceptional in many respects. “First of all, mammoth skeletal remains are extremely rare in our latitudes. We are familiar with finds mainly from regions of Eurasia further to the east,” says PD Dr. Gertrud Rößner, a palaeontologist at the Bavarian State Collections of Natural History. “On the other hand, there is virtually no evidence of human activity in this region from that peak period of the Ice Age. Due to climate change, hunter-gatherer communities in Europe retreated southward and eastward,” add archaeology professors Andreas Maier of the University of Cologne and Thorsten Uthmeier of FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg.

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The mammoth’s tusk at the excavation site in Taimering.  (Photo: BLfD) Credit BLfD

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A staff member of the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Historical Monuments (BLfD) recovering the mammoth’s tusk.  Credit BLfD

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Recovery of the first left rib from the mammoth’s ribcage.  Credit BLfD

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The mammoth’s tusk in the paleontological preparation laboratory of the Bavarian State Collections of Natural History.  Credit K. Hagemann, SNSB

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Participating Institutions
Overall, 14 scientists from various disciplines participated in the mammoth study, including researchers from the Bavarian State Collections of Natural History, the Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Historical Monuments, the Reiss-Engelhorn Museums and the Curt Engelhorn Center for Archaeometry in Mannheim and the University of Augsburg, LMU Munich, and the Universities of Cologne and Bremen, as well as the Museum of Prehistory and Local History in Bottrop.

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Article Source: Staatliche Naturwissenschaftliche Sammlungen Bayerns news release.

*A cold case from the last Glacial Maximum: A partial mammoth skeleton from southern Germany (Danube Valley, Germany) – Part 1: Traces of human activity and archaeological context, Journal of Archaeological Science, 3-Jun-2026. 10.1016/j.jasrep.2026.105839 

How Stone Tools, Fire, and Language Paved the Highway to Artificial Intelligence

Deborah Barsky is a writing fellow for the Human Bridges, a researcher at the Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution, and an associate professor at the Rovira i Virgili University in Tarragona, Spain, with the Open University of Catalonia (UOC). She is the author of Human Prehistory: Exploring the Past to Understand the Future (Cambridge University Press, 2022).

Many people are overwhelmed by the fast-paced evolution of mass communication in a world increasingly shaped by the internet and artificial intelligence (AI). Yet ideas have not always circulated across the globe at lightning speed.

Looking into deep time allows us to view our current mode of existence from a broader perspective and to discern patterns of change that may offer insights into our species’ possible trajectories in the future. We can begin by trying to identify the conditions under which humans developed complex symbolic communication, which is considered unique in the animal kingdom. Today, we have succeeded in transposing incredibly complex digital languages, beyond the grasp of the human mind, into computerized systems capable of processing, storing, and sharing all kinds of information with the push of a button or a click of a mouse.

Human language is at the root of this system. While hardly perceptible in the archaeological record, hominin physiognomy assessed from the fossil record allows us to observe that the capacity to vocalize across a significant range dates back to a very early time period. Physical features linked to resonance complexity and articular precision, like the low positioning of the larynx, an enlarged pharyngeal cavity, and a flexible tongue housed in an ample palate, were already part of the human anatomy by the time Homo erectus emerged in Africa nearly 2 million years ago.

Somatic harmonization, necessary for speech production, is ensured by the tiny and crucial hyoid bone, a floating anchor for the muscles controlling the tongue, throat, and voice box as they work together to regulate sounds emitted during speech. Paleoanthropologists studying the position, geometry, and internal structure of Neanderthal hyoids discovered in archeological sites found them to be nearly identical to those of anatomically modern humans, suggesting that they were already capable of emitting a similarly sophisticated range of sounds. Evidence from Spain also reveals that modern hyoid morphology was present by at least 530,000 years ago, indicating that it could be a derived characteristic shared by modern humans and pre-Neanderthals, which they inherited from their last common ancestor.

The ability to emit a wide range of vocalizations characteristic of modern human language did not appear abruptly, but rather, was favored over millennia by interrelated adaptive elections taking place under the evolutionary orchestration of both natural selection and techno selection. As early as around 7 million years ago, some early primates displayed several craniofacial modifications believed to have evolved, at least in part, to accommodate bipedal locomotion. These included features such as reduced prognathism, more gracile jawbones with smaller teeth, and a restructured skull base, all of which subsequently facilitated the anatomical tweaks necessary to increase the human capacity to pronounce a wide range of sounds.

By the time hominins began systematically making stone tools some 2.6 million years ago, a series of changes in the archaeological record reflected the significance of this adaptive strategy. Around 1.75 million years ago in Africa, these (Oldowan) assemblages were progressively replaced by Acheulian industries comprising tools with wider technological and morphological variability, including skillfully manufactured and (esthetically pleasing) premeditated forms, like spheres and symmetrical pointed tools called handaxes, which required high degrees of dexterity to make.

Observing synapses activated during experimental tool replication has shown that the cognitive processes involved in passing on the skills necessary to make such tools are linked to those activated by language. Furthermore, evidence from ancient DNA analysis suggests that regulatory genetic variants favoring language-producing abilities underwent long-term evolutionary selection in hominin populations, with some of these features predating the divergence of modern humans and Neanderthals.

Fully embracing the advantages offered by their newfound technological proficiency, Acheulian hominins benefited from access to the choicest morsels of meat and viscera to feed their developing brains. They experienced unprecedented demographic expansion and assembled into more complex group settings sheltering numerous individuals. Eventually wielding fire, Acheulian populations spread into new lands within and beyond Africa, utilizing their rapidly developing technologies to confront diverse environmental and social challenges.

Some archaeologists have described this process as a biocultural feedback loop, in which unprecedented cerebral growth (supported by higher protein intake) was linked to toolmaking. This process was catalyzed by increasing social complexity, reinforced by the development of culture, and favored the selection of symbolic communication. Languagethe preponderant expression of symbolic transmissioninitially developed as a survival-related response to effectively transmit technological competence, and ultimately became a means to express multifaceted cultural norms developed to promote social proficiency.

There is no doubt that culture evolves; that it was/is transmitted socially through learning processes that have been intricately developed over time and now extend well past adolescence and, in some cases, beyond the optimal reproductive age for women. Culture is inherently cumulative: it is an aggregate of past human experiences, errors, discoveries, adaptations, and rectifications to deduce scientific and philosophical insights about the universeand our place in it. Symbolic communication, expressed as language and writing, and later also as art and music, reinforces cumulative culture by allowing us to express, preserve, and share knowledge beyond time constraints.

The story of technological evolution following the emergence of the Acheulian reveals two major forces that still operate today: acceleration and complexification. By the end of the Acheulian and into the Middle Paleolithic period and beyond, technological and (linked) social achievements accumulated exponentially, widening the baseline upon which hugely transformative accomplishments emerged. At the same time, populations multiplied, creating interrelational networks that favored reproductive, material, and cultural exchanges.

I have proposed defining this phenomenon as a fractalization process, insofar as each branch replicates the underlying evolutionary patterns, overcoming the constraints of its ancestral source while retaining the full spectrum of human cognitive expression. In this model (that is comparable to biological natural selection), small variations or adjustments can lead to exponentially magnified outcomes through recursive and effectively infinite cycles of reproduction.

By the time our own species came on the scene more than 200,000 years ago, culture had flourished into symbolic material expressions, inexorably linked to the technological and social realities of past human lives. Fire, for example, provided ample fodder for experimenting with the power of transforming existing materials, enabling new capacities during the Neolithic and Metal Ages, with successive discoveries, such as pottery and, eventually, glass and metallurgy, transmuting and enabling new societal paradigms.

Following the shift from hunter-gatherer to production-based lifeways, technological complexity split individual role-playing into distinct occupations, sharpening perceptions about (imagined) interpersonal “value” within social settings. As populations swelled and collective living arrangements expanded, these systems became structured around complex symbolic interactions, material cultures, territorial identities, and hierarchies constructed to sustain group cohesion. Importantly, social organization came to rely upon artificially constructed (symbolic) notions that led regionally assembled groups to contrast their ideas of communal belonging (identity) with those existing in neighboring territories. As competition for land and resources increased, these contrasting symbolic realities became a justification for (sometimes violent) interpopulation conflicts.

Communication networks grew increasingly complex alongside expanding production and territorial markets, accelerating the spread of cultural and material exchanges. Protohistoric societies developed early writing systems based on symbolic signs used as mnemonic strategies to represent ideas and objects. Emerging independently in regions such as Mesopotamia, Egypt, Central America, and China, these systems gradually evolved from pictorial symbols into stylized phonetic and logographic writing largely detached from their original visual meanings.

Throughout human experience, learning has been central to survival, with scientific and behavioral complexification acting as a driving force to develop sophisticated new ways to educate, demonstrate, and train each successive generation to become effective agents of our seemingly unstoppable technological proficiency. Presently, ideas move instantaneously across space and time through global communication networks. Digital platforms make information accessible worldwide, shrinking distances and connecting populations, while promoting mass media and consumer culture. Often shaped by corporate interests that influence production, consumption, and resource distribution in a world driven by digital images and symbolic messaging, global connectivity has become the force shaping human thought and social organization.

Uniformity is increasingly becoming a defining characteristic of human life shaped by digital communication. Despite the technological sophistication of the systems that mediate and transmit human thought, we are adopting simpler forms of communication, homogenizing language, and gradually adapting our patterns of thinking to fit the digital platforms used to express them. The next stage of human evolution involving the merging of human intelligence with AI may already be here. As we become increasingly dependent on computerized tools to function within contemporary social environments, the ability to communicate effectively through digital means is emerging as a fundamental requirement.

At the end of the 1980s, screenwriter Maurice Hurley and the creators of Star Trek showed remarkable foresight in creating the Borg: fictional cybernetic organisms linked through a single collective consciousness in which thoughts and actions are shared and controlled by a powerful centralized computer system. In this dystopian vision of the future, the Borg’s main purpose is to assimilate other species in pursuit of greater knowledge, efficiency, and power. Once assimilated, subjects lose their individuality and become linked to the Collective (or hive mind).

As humanity moves toward a predicted state of post-humanism (human-machine hybridization) and the boundaries between human cognition and machine intelligence become increasingly blurred, it is worth asking whether this vision already mirrors some aspects of our own interconnected and technology-mediated world.

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This article was produced by Human Bridges.

Cover Image, Top: franz26, Pixabay

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Open and Distance Learning: Integrating Artificial Intelligence and Satellite Imagery in Archaeological Studies

For decades, being an archaeologist was an unreachable dream for countless people. Very few of them could access specialized universities and afford expensive travel coupled with lengthy expeditions and excavations. However, with the introduction of AI and the growing access to near real time satellite imagery, even students who live in the farthest and most rural corners of our planet can make a difference. 

If you’re worried about mastering the technologies and learning how to read archaeological data, you can rely on open and distance learning (ODL) programs that can equip you with all the knowledge you need. They help you understand how to access the most current high resolution satellite images available and explore anything you want in close detail, down to 30 cm. How do programs like these work, and what opportunities can you embrace as a modern student with their help? Let’s investigate it all. 

The Role of Real Time Satellite Imagery and AI in Archaeological Studies 

The integration of real time satellite images of the Earth into archaeology has made the latter more accessible than ever before. Even students can identify and explore our cultural heritage now. Specifically, here is what these technologies have enabled: 

  • Detection of buried structures. Quality images help spot the slightest soil discoloration and vegetation anomalies, as well as strange geometrical patterns that can indicate some ancient foundations.  
  • Monitoring of site integrity. A lot of archaeological sites are threatened both overtly and subtly. Apart from locating new undiscovered spots, you can monitor the integrity of the known sites, making sure no looting takes place. 
  • Global and cheap accessibility. As we’ve mentioned, researchers worldwide can get a real time satellite view app and observe the landscape. Students can do the same; it’s cheap and easily accessible. 

AI is also essential. Empirical research proves that it can successfully analyze the habits and patterns of archaeological students and tailor educational content to them. The NLP algorithms can help translate old inscriptions; they are already helping with excavation reports and other historical documents, so the more students learn how to employ AI tools, the better.  

Why Universities Struggle to Incorporate AI and Real Time Satellite Images

Historical archives are there for you to go through them, so what’s the problem? Why are universities struggling with getting real satellite images from space and supplying their students with them? 

  • Cost of data. Since universities have to serve thousands of different students, and the data keeps changing all the time, getting materials from the best real time satellite imagery providers on a large scale is way too expensive. 
  • Infrastructure limitations. To process terabytes of quality images to meet the needs of all the students in every department, universities have to have a lot of servers and cloud resources.   
  • Curriculum indifference. Most archaeology programs are outdated at this point; plenty of professors are traditionalists, and they aren’t interested in making new opportunities widely accessible. 

The irony is that every student can get a real time satellite view now individually, but on a wider educational scale, the system hasn’t been optimized nearly enough. 

Bridging the Gap: Open and Distance Learning

ODL has democratized access to expensive satellite images. These programs rely on cloud-based platforms and openly available datasets, and they train archaeology students worldwide in several areas at once. We’re going to consider all three of them.   

Training Students to Access Satellite Data

ODL courses teach students how to get a satellite view in real time. They explain what tools to use, which platforms to consult, and how to process imagery for archaeological analysis. In addition, they offer practical studies on how to compare datasets from different providers, so you learn how to select the data you need and what to do with it.     

ODL programs can also teach you about SAR systems, which are essential in getting a real time satellite view of Earth regardless of clouds and other weather conditions. All this knowledge is something that a lot of universities fail to provide.  

Applying AI-Powered Pattern Recognition 

Another important field of study is learning how to use AI to detect landscape changes and other patterns. If your university can’t teach you, ODL programs certainly can. 

  • They demonstrate how to use convolutional neural networks to identify anomalies in the images you access.
  • ODL courses use models of archaeological sites to provide practical demonstrations and show what to look out for as you do your research. 
  • Students using the ODC models learn how to apply AI change detection algorithms to observe landscape shifts in real time.

Just using ChatGPT is not enough. AI provides numerous valuable opportunities to everyone studying archaeology, and ODL is a cheap and sure way to embrace them.      

Conducting Virtual Excavations from Anywhere in the World

Apart from teaching how to explore satellite images in real time, ODL courses offer virtual excavations. Students can conduct comparative studies across time, reconstruct ancient landscapes, and even publish their discoveries in relevant journals. Such experiences demolish any geographical and financial barriers, so you can start exploring the sites just with an Internet connection.    

Embracing New Archaeological Opportunities

ODL programs have become the saving bridge between archaeological students and growing opportunities for research and exploration. They have democratized access to the most advanced tools like AI and the best real time satellite images, which inspired the birth of a new generation of archaeologists. 

In 2026, thanks to ODL, it doesn’t matter where you are located and how big your budget is. You can start contributing to our global heritage research today; just find the program you’re interested in and start your explorations.  

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Khirbet Qeiyafa, the Biblical Tradition and King David

Yosef Garfinkel is Yigael Yadin Chair in Archaeology of Eretz Yisrael and Professor of Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is the author of numerous books, articles and papers and is a holder of the Polonsky Book Prize. He is currently excavating at Tel Lachish in Israel.

Khirbet Qeiyafa, in Israel, is located on the summit of a hill that borders the Elah Valley southwest of Jerusalem. This would have been a key strategic location in the biblical Kingdom of Judah, on the main road from Philistia and the coastal plain to Jerusalem and Hebron in the hill country. Even prior to excavation, visitors to Khirbet Qeiyafa could discern a massive city wall, 2–3 m in height, encompassing the summit of the hill. This city wall demarcates an area of 2.3 hectares with a total length of ca. 700 m. Due to the local topography, only the external face of the wall is exposed, the inner part buried under archaeological remains. The base of the wall is composed of cyclopean stones, some weighing 4–5 tons, while its upper part is built with medium-sized stones. Two city gates were already located prior to their excavation, one in the south and one in the west (Figs. 1–3).

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khirbet1

 Fig. 1. Map of the southern Levant and the location of Khirbet Qeiyafa.

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khirbet2

 Fig. 2. Aerial photograph of Khirbet Qeiyafa at the end of the 2012 excavation season, view to the north (sky view).

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Fig. 3. An aerial photo of the Elah Valley and the city wall of Khirbet Qeiyafa in the lower right corner (Photograph by Sky view). 

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The history of research of Khirbet Qeiyafa started in the mid 19th century, when it was reported by the French explorer V. Guerin in the year 1868. In the British Survey of Western Palestine in 1883 Khirbet Qeiyafa was described in only a few words: “heaps of stones”. During the 20th century, the site was neglected; it is not referred to in the works of the leading scholars in the field of biblical historical geography, but is mentioned in a few surveys conducted in the 1980s and 1990s by Y. Dagan and Z. Greenhut. None of these surveys, however, recognized that the site represented a heavily fortified city of the early 10th century B.C. 

Seven excavation seasons (2007–2013) were conducted at Khirbet Qeiyafa by Y. Garfinkel and S. Ganor on behalf of the Institute of Archaeology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In the years 2009–2011 the expedition included M. G. Hasel of the Southern Adventist University. 

A number of periods are represented at the site: Late Chalcolithic, Middle Bronze Age II, Early Iron Age IIA, Late Persian-Early Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Islamic. However, the main period of occupation, with most of the preserved accumulation, belongs to the heavily fortified city of the Iron Age IIA. According to radiometric datings, this city existed in the early 10th century BCE, the time of King David. This writing concentrates only on this phase in the history of Khirbet Qeiyafa.   

 

The 2007–2013 Excavations and Field Results

Thanks to the shallow accumulation and the massive stone construction, it was possible to uncover a large part of the city during a relatively short time. The excavation was carried out in six areas, in which the following remains from the biblical period were discovered (Figs. 4–5):

Area A: In this area, located in the center of the city at its highest point, we uncovered remains of a palace – a large structure with long and exceptionally thick walls – that likely served as the administrative center for the city and the lowlands region.

Area B: In this area, located in the western part of the city, a city gate was found, as well as a casemate wall and dwellings abutting the wall.

Area C: In this area, in the southern part of the site, excavation revealed the second city gate, a gate piazza and six large dwellings abutting the wall.

Area D: This area, in the western part of the city, adjoins Area B. It was excavated by Michael Hasel and his staff from the Southern Adventist University. Here a casemate wall was uncovered along with a large gate piazza that abutted the Area B gate; south of the piazza a dwelling was found abutting the wall. 

Area E: In this area, in the eastern part of the city, a small portion of the casemate wall surrounding the city was found. 

Area F: In this area, located in the northern part of the city, we revealed 50 m of the city wall. Abutting the wall was a large storehouse, which originally contained two rows of large stone pillars.

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 Fig. 4. Plan of the Iron Age city of Khirbet Qeiyafa at the end of the excavation project.

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 Fig. 5: Visualized reconstruction of the city layout and features based on archaeological investigation. Reconstruction by Architect Roy Albag, Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem

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Thanks to the large horizontal exposure we uncovered a large part of the fortifications and entire structures, thus revealing the urban character of the city. Six main components of the city were distinguished:

City Wall

The casemate wall that surrounds the city stood partially exposed before the start of the project, and its outline could clearly be observed. We found that the wall was 4 m wide and was preserved in places to a height of 3 m. At every point where we dug to the base of the wall, we could see that it had been built directly on bedrock. The fortifications consisted of two parallel massive stone walls. Short internal cross-walls divided the city wall into long, narrow rooms. These rooms are called casemates, hence the name of this type of wall (Figs. 6–8).

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Fig. 6. Aerial photograph of Area B showing the thick casemate city wall and houses abutting the casemate city wall. On the right side is the western city gate, with its four-chambers, a drain on the central passageway, and a monumental threshold (photograph by Sky view).

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Fig. 7. Area C: The thick casemate city wall (on the left) and houses abutting the city wall from inside the city (photo by Y. Garfinkel).  

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 Fig. 8. Area C: the thick casemate city wall in the lower part of the picture, and the thin walls of the houses abutting the city wall from inside the city and including the casemates as part of the house (Photograph by Sky view).  

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Two Gates

The entrance to the city was via two gates, one in the south and the other in the west. The two gates were very similar in plan. Each had four chambers and a drainage channel on the left side of the passage (from the perspective of a person entering the city). The main gate was the southern one, its importance highlighted by two huge stones set in the entrance, the larger of which weighed about 8 tons. This is one of the most impressive gate façades from the First Temple period ever discovered. The locations of the gates conform to the network of roads leading from the city. A road from the southern gate leads to the Elah Valley and continues eastward to Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Hebron, while a road from the western gate leads to Philistia and the Mediterranean coast (Figs. 6, 9).

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Fig. 9. The southern gate of Khirbet Qeiyafa, leading down to the valley of Elah. 

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Two Gate Piazzas

Near each gate was a piazza – a broad open area of several hundred square meters – which was separated from the rest of the city by a wall. The southern piazza was about 20 m long and the western piazza about 30 m long. Beside each of the piazzas was a dwelling in which one room, abutting the piazza, had a cultic function. The Bible describes a variety of activities in city gates: markets and commerce, judgment and punishment, political announcements, prophecies and religious activities. In our city we found that a specific and delimited area for such activities was set aside near each gate.

Private Dwellings at the Periphery of the City

Next to the casemate wall were simple dwellings attached to the wall in such a way that the casemate was the back room of the house. The houses adjoin one another other, sharing an outer wall. Some of the houses are the width of one casemate, while others are the width of two or even three casemates. We were able to discern corridors, courtyards and rooms in these houses. The internal division of the houses in the city varied from structure to structure, but the principle in common was usually several dwelling units built around a shared courtyard, each structure apparently serving a number of nuclear families who lived together as an extended family. The structures we uncovered were residential, but in some cases they had additional rooms that served other purposes, such as stables, storerooms and cult rooms (Figs. 7, 10).

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 Fig. 10. Schematic plan of the buildings in Area C. Two cultic rooms were found in this area: Room G in Building C3 and Room G in Building C10.

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Urban planning in which dwellings abutted a casemate wall is known at four additional sites: Tell en-Nasbeh, Beth Shemesh, Tell Beit Mirsim and Beersheba. These sites, like Khirbet Qeiyafa, were within the territory of the Kingdom of Judah as defined in the biblical account. The palace and storehouse at Khirbet Qeiyafa are clear evidence of state-sponsored construction and administrative organization. This is decisive proof of the existence of a kingdom or polity that had established control at strategic geographic points.

Public Storage Building

In the northern part of the city, in Area F, we unearthed a pillared building measuring 6 x 15 m. There were originally two straight rows of large stone columns along the length of the hall, dividing it into three long, narrow spaces. Such pillared buildings have been uncovered in various cities from the First Temple period in the Land of Israel. Such structures, which look very different from dwellings, were typically used as storerooms to hold agricultural products collected as taxes by the state.

The Palace on the City’s Summit

The second large public building was found at the highest point of the site. We uncovered a portion of the palace of what was likely the city’s governor – a large courtyard dwelling that was originally about a thousand square meters in area. Unfortunately, most of the palace was destroyed some 1,400 years after its construction when a fortified farmhouse was constructed here in the Byzantine period. The remains include a row of rooms on the south and another row on the west. There were apparently one or two large courtyards in the center of the structure. Structures of this basic type are known in the Land of Israel in a number of Canaanite palaces from the Late Bronze Age. Their walls are exceptionally thick, two or three times the thickness of the walls of ordinary buildings. At Khirbet Qeiyafa, for example, walls of dwellings are 30–40 cm thick, while the walls of the palace are up to one meter thick. This extraordinary thickness indicates that they supported the weight of a number of stories above the ground floor. Various installations were found near the palace, one of them attesting to a metal industry. Rare pottery vessels such as a black juglet and an alabaster vessel imported from Egypt were also found.

This large structure at Khirbet Qeiyafa is distinctive in four aspects: its location at the highest point in the city, its position in the center of the settlement, its extraordinary size and the thickness of its walls. The elevated location enabled control of the houses in the lower part of city while providing an expansive view from the Mediterranean in the west to the mountains of Hebron and Jerusalem in the east. That would have made it a particularly suitable place for the transmission of fire signals.

The Major Small Finds Categories 

A sudden destruction and abandonment of the city left a very rich assemblage of objects of daily life on the floors and destruction debris in every room. The three largest categories of finds are pottery, stone artifacts, and metal objects (Fig. 11). 

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 Fig. 11. destruction

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Pottery

Hundreds of restorable pottery vessels were found, the best example of early tenth-century B.C. pottery ever found that could be attributed to biblical Judah. Until our excavations, the pottery typology of the early Iron Age IIA was poorly known. Khirbet Qeiyafa completely changed this situation. Of special interest are three categories of pottery vessels (Figs. 12–15):

1. The mass production of jars with finger-impressed handles is the beginning of a long tradition in the region of Judah, when the royal administration marked storage jars on handles. Thus, the nearly 700 impressed jar handles from Khirbet Qeiyafa are not coincidental and reflect the beginning of this very long tradition. 

2. The painted Philistine pottery, known as Ashdod Ware, uncovered at Khirbet Qeiyafa has enabled us to subdivide this pottery tradition into two groups, earlier and later.

3. Four vessels known as “Black Juglets” were found, three of them originating from Trans- Jordan.

4. Two Cypriot juglets connect Khirbet Qeiyafa with the Mediterranean trade and have far-reaching implications for the dating of these juglets at other sites.

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Fig. 12. The typical storage jar of Khirbet Qeiyafa. Many of them were stamped with a finger impression on one or two handles. These jars were probably used for the collection of taxes, in the form of olive oil, wine, and other agricultural products, as were the royal (LMLK) jars of the eighth century BCE (photo by C. Amit, IAA). 

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Fig. 13. The typical finger impression on jar handles from Khirbet Qeiyafa. Nearly 700 such handles were found at the site (photo by C. Amit, IAA)

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Fig. 14. Ashdod Ware I vessels from Khirbet Qeiyafa, imported from the nearby Philistine territory. 

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Fig. 15. A small barrel-shaped juglet of Cypriot Black-on-White ware. 

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Stone Artifacts

Over two hundred stone artifacts were found. These were made from hard limestone, soft limestone, chalk, basalt, beachrock, flint, and other minerals. A few fragments of small alabaster vessels were discovered as well; they are probably indicative of trade relations with Egypt. Basalt is not a local raw material in the Judean Shephelah and had to be imported from volcanic deposits more than 100 kilometers from the site. The appearance of basalt grinding tools at Khirbet Qeiyafa, including quite heavy items, suggests an intensification of economic activities in the early tenth century BCE. 

Metal Objects

Nearly 100 metal objects had been unearthed in the Iron Age city, and over thirty iron and bronze tools, mainly weapons, were uncovered. Two pottery crucibles with bronze slag were found as well, indicating that metal was smelted on site. The dominant use of iron rather than bronze should not be overlooked (Fig. 16). 

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 Fig. 16. Various metal objects: iron knives, large iron swords, a bronze axe and bronze arrowheads.

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Objects of Trade

The large variety of objects imported to Khirbet Qeiyafa points to trade connections with a rather wide geographical spread:

1. Local, regional trade. This category includes trade with the nearby Philistine coastal plain. Petrographic analysis has shown that the Ashdod Ware pottery came from Philistia. In the same way, grinding stones made from beachrock originated from the Mediterranean coast.

2. Interregional trade within the southern Levant. This category includes basalt grinding tools and copper.

3. International trade. This category includes two Cypriot juglets, Egyptian scarabs and amulets, alabaster vessels, tin for the bronze industry, and a miniature gold leaf.

As with all trade, the immediate question is what was given in return. What goods could the inhabitants of Khirbet Qeiyafa have provided to the inhabitants of the Philistine coastal plain? It seems to us that timber may have been a major commodity that was in short supply in Philistia, since the sandy coastal plain is not an appropriate ecological zone for trees. The large population of the Philistine sites of Ashdod, Ashkelon and Gath, would have needed timber for construction, cooking, and heating. This would create the motivation for regional trade connections between Philistia and the Judean Shephelah.

The Inscriptions

Two inscriptions were found during the excavations (Figs. 17–19).  

The Ostracon

This is a large pottery sherd bearing an inscription, written in ink, containing five lines, with a total of some seventy letters. The letters are written in an archaic style in the Canaanite writing tradition (also known as “Proto-Canaanite”). This is the longest inscription in this style ever found, and the longest extant inscription from the 12th to 9th centuries BC in the region. It is also one of only a few inscriptions to be uncovered in clear stratigraphic context and its date, ca. 1000 BC, is certain. Nearly 20 scientific articles had been written on this text,  yet its reading is not clear.  

The Incised Jar

The second inscription was incised before firing from right to left on the shoulder of a pottery storage jar. The letters are large and clear, similar in size and evenly spaced, written by a skilled hand in Canaanite script. A short, straight vertical line (a word divider) appears between each pair of words. The inscription includes a personal name: Eshbaal son of Beda‘. The name Beda‘ is unique, while Eshbaal is known from the Bible but has never yet appeared on an ancient inscription. The few first letters of the inscription are not fully preserved but, in the context of an incised inscription on a large container, it seems that the first word implies that the jar’s contents came from the field/estate of Eshbaal son of Beda‘. 

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 Fig. 17. Photograph of the Khirbet Qeiyafa ostracon taken at the Megavision laboratory.

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Fig. 18. Drawing of the Khirbet Qeiyafa ostracon by Ada Yardeni. 

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 Fig. 19. The ʾIšbaʿal inscription was incised on the storage jar before firing.

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The Cult at Khirbet Qeiyafa 

Substantial data on the cult of the inhabitants were obtained, including: 

Standing Stones. 

The standing stone, the biblical massebah, is one of the more common cultic objects in the ancient Near East. Typically, it is an elongated stone with a rounded top that was placed on its narrow end. In most cases a natural stone was chosen for this purpose and signs of intentional shaping are absent or minimal. Seven standing stones were uncovered in the city.

Cultic Room in Building C3 (Figs. 20–23).  

The room was equipped with special installations and finds, including a bench, a sink-hole with a connection to a drainage system that was found in the adjacent room to the south, two standing stones, an offering table, a rounded installation built of stones and containing a Black Juglet, a rectangular installation in the southeastern corner, and a limestone basin. The room is notable for the rich destruction debris accumulated on its floor, which included, as well as a very large amount of pottery vessels and cultic paraphernalia: a basalt altar, a libation vessel consisting of two conjoined round cups, a seal and an Egyptian scarab.

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Fig. 20. The cultic Room G in Building C3, with the Valley of Elah in the background.   

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 Fig. 21. Two standing stones found in Cultic Room G in Building C3.

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Fig. 22. A basalt altar restored from two parts, each found on a different side of Cultic Room G in Building C3.

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 Fig. 23. Twin-cup pottery libation vessel from Cultic Room G in Building C3.

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Cultic Room in Building D1

Immediately after the western gate piazza, a cultic room was found. This room was furnished with a bench, a standing stone and an offering table, and contained among other finds three iron swords. A libation vessel with two rounded cups of the type found in the cultic room of Building C3 was found in an adjacent room.

Cultic Room in Building C10 (Figs. 24–27). 

Immediately after the southern gate piazza, a cultic room was found. Two exceptional artifacts uncovered in the room are model shrines, one made of clay and the other of limestone:

“Model shrine” made of clay: This item is 11 cm wide and 16 cm high. While the sides and back are simple, the façade is elaborately decorated to resemble a temple entrance, including two lions, two columns, ribbons tied to the columns and four beams above the entrance, above which is a rolled curtain. On the beams are circles scored with vertical parallel lines, apparently representing roofing beams laid perpendicularly to the entrance and extending beyond it. Three birds perch on the roof. Further analysis of the significance and function of this artifact is presented below.

“Model shrine” made of limestone: This artifact, 21 cm wide, 26 cm long and 35 cm high, was carved from a single block of soft limestone. Traces of red paint are visible on the exterior. While the sides and back are simple, the façade is elegantly profiled. In the center of the façade is a large rectangular doorframe, 10 cm wide and 20 cm high, formed by three recessed frames. Between the doorframe and the roof is a row of protruding rectangular elements, each divided by deep incisions into three narrow parallel rectangles. Four of these protruding elements are fully preserved and traces of three others are visible. This is the triglyph, a common element in classical architecture. 

Iconographic analysis of this building model, undertaken by the author and Madeleine Mumcuoglu, enabled us to better interpret the various technical terms in the biblical description of Solomon’s palace and temple (Fig. 28)

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 Fig. 24. The cultic room and nearby city wall casemate in Building C10. Two model shrines were found here, one made from clay, the other from limestone. 

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 Fig. 25. Clay model shrine from Rooms G and H in Building C10, after restoration.

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 Fig. 26. Limestone model shrine from Room G in Building C10, after restoration.

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 Fig. 27. Trigliphes

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 Fig. 28. Reconstruction of Solomon’s temple 

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Khirbet Qeiyafa Dating 

Two radiometric dating projects were conducted by the expedition. Already in the first few years (2008–2010) olive pits from various contexts in the city were processed at Oxford University. The results suggested at the 68.3% confidence level that the destruction of the city took place between 1012 and 967 BC. However, our interpretation of these results has been criticized on the grounds that the olive pits were collected from various contexts and thus should not be averaged. In this view, the earlier dates represent the construction of the city and the later dates represent its destruction. Hence, the single-phase city existed from ca. 1050 to 925 BC. What was needed, according to this critique, was a secure context containing a large number of short-lived samples.

In the 2012 excavation season such a secure context was found: a pottery storage jar containing some 20 burnt olive pits found in the destruction layer of the city. The jar was uncovered in Building C10 near the southern city gate. Firstly, all the olive pits came from a well-controlled context, a closed container that minimized the chance of contamination (isolated olive pits can travel up and down the sediment of a site and the location in which an object is found is not always that of its original deposition). Secondly, the short-lived nature of olives suggests that they were harvested in the very last years before the destruction of the city. After this discovery, a second dating project was initiated.

In the second radiocarbon dating project 17 samples of olive pits were analyzed, 12 at Belfast and 5 at Oxford. The results clearly indicate that the destruction of Khirbet Qeiyafa took place in the first third of the 10th century BC (ca. 1000-970 BCE)

Khirbet Qeiyafa and the Debate over the Historicity of the Hebrew Bible 

In order to understand the contribution of Khirbet Qeiyafa to the debate over the historicity of the Hebrew Bible one must consider the developments in the field of Biblical archaeology and Biblical history in the last 40 years (Fig. 30). This debate can now be divided into three phases, and Khirbet Qeiyafa is at the focus of the second and the third of these (Garfinkel and Ganor 2008, 2009).     

Phase I. The Mythological Paradigm

In the mid-1980s, new approaches developed concerning the historicity of the biblical narrative. The main argument revolved around dating the final writing of the Hebrew Bible. Particularly relevant to our discussion is the narrative of the tenth century BCE, the period known as the United Monarchy. The so-called “Minimalist” school claims that the Hebrew Bible was written in the Hellenistic period, nearly 700 hundred years after the time of David and Solomon, and therefore the description of that era is a purely literary composition. 

In 1993 and 1994, several fragments of an Aramaic stele were found at Tel Dan, dated to the ninth century BCE. This text specifically mentions a king of Israel and a king of the “House of David”, that is, a king of the dynasty of David (Fig. 31). Reference to the “House of David” has consequently been identified on the Mesha Stele, also dated to the ninth century BCE. Thus, there is at least one, and possibly two, clear references to the dynasty of David in the ninth century BCE, only 100–120 years after his reign. This suggests evidence that David was indeed a historical figure and the founding father of a dynasty, contrary to the claims of the Minimalists.

An interesting side-effect of the collapse of the minimalist paradigm was the panic reaction of its proponents, leading to a number of suggestions which now seem ridiculous: “House of David built on sand”, “Did Biran kill King David?” or “Eponymic referent to Yahweh as Godfather”. Another linguistic manipulation suggested that the stele reference should be read as a place-name called Bethdod, in parallel to the known place-name Ashdod. Nowadays, articles of this type can be classified as displaying “Paradigm-Collapse Trauma”—literary compilations of groundless arguments, masquerading as scientific writing through footnotes, references and publication in professional journals.

The Tel Dan stele ended the first phase of the debate regarding the historicity of the Hebrew Bible, clarifying that the mythological paradigm was nothing but a modern myth.      

Phase II. The Low Chronology Paradigm

After the collapse of the mythological paradigm, a new strategy was developed by the Minimalists. This time, the central method was to lower the dating of the transition between Iron Age I and Iron Age II from c. 1000 BCE, as was accepted until then (commonly called “high chronology”), to c. 925 BCE (“low Chronology”). A more extreme approach even lowered the transition to as late as c. 900 BCE (“ultra-low chronology”). 

What was achieved by these low-chronology suggestions? 

The Iron Age I in Judah and Israel was a period of agrarian communities organized in a tribal social organization (described in the biblical tradition as the period of the Judges). The next period, the Iron Age II, was a period of urban society and a centralized state organization (described in the biblical tradition as the period of the Kings). Low chronology placed urbanization only at the end of the tenth century BCE, thereby indicating that David and Solomon were not rulers of a kingdom but local tribe leaders.  

In the last decade, hundreds of organic samples from Iron Age sites were sent for radiometric dating in order to verify or contradict the low chronology. Initially, various methodological problems and mistakes were made regarding radiometric dating of such archeological samples. These include the type of material used for dating, the context from which the sample is retrieved, the selection of dates and statistical analysis.

Once the various problems were understood and corrected, the advocates of low chronology declared without hesitation that the dating results of hundreds of samples clearly supported low chronology.  

This situation is altered completely thanks to the recent excavations at Khirbet Qeiyafa. The site cannot be later than c. 970 BCE. This date fits the period associated with King David (c. 1000–965 BCE) and is too early for King Solomon (c. 965–930 BCE). The fortified city of Khirbet Qeiyafa indicates that the Iron Age IIA in the southern Levant began at the very end of the eleventh century BCE, thus rendering the low chronology paradigm nothing but a modern myth.

In this context, it was indeed a pleasant surprise to see the article by Finkelstein and Piasetzky where they show that Canaanite sites in northern Israel, like Megiddo, have destruction levels dated to c. 1,000 BCE. This is exactly the dating indicated by the traditional high chronology decades ago. Thus, Finkelstein is not only the founding father of low chronology, but also its undertaker. Dating the end of major Iron I sites to c. 1,000 BCE fits perfectly with the dating of Khirbet Qeiyafa. This very early Iron IIA border site was destroyed shortly after its construction.    

Phase III. The Ethnic Identification of Khirbet Qeiyafa

Khirbet Qeiyafa is located on the border between Judah and the Philistine region, and could, therefore, be associated with either of these. If it was a Judaean site it indicates that fortified cities were built in Judah, so David and Solomon were not shepherds living in tents. This situation supports the Biblical tradition. 

Here begins the third phase in the evolution of the minimalist approach. The basic minimalist argument is very simple: even if David was a historical figure (given the Tel Dan stele), and even if the transition from Iron Age I to Iron Age II began at the end of the eleventh century BCE (given the dating of Khirbet Qeiyafa), there was still no kingdom in Judah at the tenth century BCE. For this assumption to be true, Khirbet Qeiyafa must be a non-Judean site. Conversely, the identification of Khirbet Qeiyafa as a Judean city would indicate that David was indeed a meaningful king, who built fortified cities in strategic border locations. Thus, the first attempt of the Minimalists is to classify Khirbet Qeiyafa as a non-Judean city. In this way it was suggested that the site was a Philistine city, a Canaanite city, or a city in the Kingdom of Israel built by King Soul. None of these suggestions however took into consideration the data uncovered at the site of Khirbet Qeiyafa. Needless to say, if the proposed identifications fail, there are still more ethnic candidates for the population of Khirbet Qeiyafa — the various other nations mentioned in the Bible: Hittites, Girgashites, Amorites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites (Deut. 7:1).

The Khirbet Qeiyafa expedition did not take part in the long-standing minimalist debate and has nothing to gain or lose if the site is identified as Judean or Philistine. Thus, we remain open-minded in evaluating the evidence. As it seems now, the identification of Khirbet Qeiyafa as a Judean site is supported by various site characteristics and elements. The main ones are:

1. Settlement pattern: Fortified field cities are known only in Judah. In Philistia, only the five large capital cities were fortified.  

2. Character of the fortifications: Casemate city walls are not known in Philistia, but in Judah.

3. Orientation of the entrance to the city: The main entrance to Khirbet Qeiyafa faced Jerusalem. 

4. No pig or dog bones were found at Khirbet Qeiyafa, while in Philistine Gath, these animals were part of the diet, as indicated by the bone remains found at Tell es-Safi.

5. At Khirbet Qeiyafa, a pottery baking tray was found in each of the buildings uncovered in the 2008 season. Such baking trays were not found at Philistine sites; and

6. The language of the ostracon uncovered at Khirbet Qeiyafa is Hebrew, according to the epigraphist Haggai Misgav. The inscription published from Tell es-Safi (Philistine city of Gath) contain Indo-European names, while the Khirbet Qeiyafa ostracon displays no such names.

The central question regarding Khirbet Qeiyafa is its relationship with the biblical text, which describes state-formation processes in Judah, King David’s activities, and intensive military clashes against the Philistine city of Gath in the Elah Valley. These biblical traditions are contemporaneous with the settlement of the fortified city at Khirbet Qeiyafa. Thus, our excavations have direct implications for these complex matters. If Khirbet Qeiyafa was a Philistine or Canaanite city or belonged to the Kingdom of Israel, it cannot be connected with the traditions about David and state formation in Judah. If, however, Khirbet Qeiyafa was a Judean city, it is of crucial importance for David and state-formation processes in Judah.

When evaluating the various possible interpretations of Khirbet Qeiyafa, the following distinctive components should be considered: 

1. The site was built according to the typical Judaean urban plan, a plan that is not found in any city in the Kingdom of Israel.

2. There are nearly 700 impressed jar handles, a typically Judean administrative device. Impressed jar handles are not found in the Kingdom of Israel in meaningful quantities.

3. The site did not yield the figurines that are characteristic of sites in the Kingdom of Israel in this period.

4. Five early alphabetic (Proto-Canaanite) inscriptions are known today from the tenth century B.C.: three from Khirbet Qeiyafa, one from Beth-Shemesh, and one from Jerusalem. These sites are located in the core area of Judah. Not a single such inscription was found in sites of the Kingdom of Israel.

5. The dominance of iron tools in the assemblage of metal objects is characteristic of Judean sites; in the Kingdom of Israel bronze was dominant at this stage; and

6. The site’s location in the Elah Valley on the main road from the Philistine centers of Ashdod and Ashkelon to Jerusalem had no geopolitical importance for the Kingdom of Israel. In order to defend its supposed territory from Philistine attacks, the northern kingdom would have needed to build fortified cities in the Sorek and Ayalon Valleys.

The material culture of Khirbet Qeiyafa does not accord with the characteristics of the Philistine city states of the coastal plain and lower Shephelah, the Canaanites, or the Kingdom of Israel. On the other hand, all these aspects fit the Kingdom of Judah very well. Indeed, those who raised the idea that Khirbet Qeiyafa could be a site of the Philistines/Canaanites/Kingdom of Israel did not discuss its material culture. 

One should also be aware that the finds at Khirbet Qeiyafa do not imply a large kingdom extending all the way to Megiddo or Hazor. In this phase, even Beersheba and Arad were not yet fortified. Thus, Khirbet Qeiyafa represents the first stage in the development of the Kingdom of Judah, which was at that time a relatively small political unit. 

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 Fig. 30. Three possible models for understanding the establishment of the biblical Kingdom of Judah.

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Archaeology and King David

Until our excavations at Khirbet Qeiyafa it was indeed very difficult to find Judean sites dated to the early 10th century BCE, the time of King David. Thus, it is not surprising that “minimalist” approaches had been developed. However, the new data from Khirbet Qeiyafa open a new horizon for the study of the very early stage of the Judean Kingdom. The combination of the site location, its massive fortifications, its urban planning, its chronology, central production of jars with stamped handles, the writing and seal, all point to an organized state, not an agrarian community. 

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Acknowledgments

The Khirbet Qeiyafa Archaeological Project is directed by Yosef Garfinkel and Saar Ganor on behalf of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Michael G. Hasel on behalf of the Southern Adventist University. Other participating institutions include Oakland University and Virginia Commonwealth University and volunteers from over 15 countries. The project is sponsored mainly by J.B. Silver and the Nathan and Lily Silver Foundation.  

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Unless otherwise noted, figures and images courtesy the author and the Khirbet Qeiyafa Archaeological Project and Insititue of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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This popular account of the Khirbet Qeiyafa project is based on the following scientific publications:  

Y. Garfinkel, 2011. The Davidic Kingdom in Light of the Finds at Khirbet Qeiyafa. City of David Studies of Ancient Jerusalem 6:13*–35* (English), 31–51 (Hebrew)

Y. Garfinkel, 2011. The Birth & Death of Biblical Minimalism. Biblical Archaeology Review 37/3: 46–53.

Y. Garfinkel, 2017. The Ethnic Identification of Khirbet Qeiyafa: Why It Matters? In Lev-Tov, J., Wapnish, P. and Gilbert, A. (eds.) The Wide Lens in Archaeology. Honoring Brian Hesse’s Contributions to Anthropological Archaeology, pp. 149–167. Atlanta: Lockwood Press.

Y. Garfinkel and S. Ganor, 2008. Khirbet Qeiyafa: Sha‘arayim. Journal of Hebrew Scriptures 8: Article 22.  

Y. Garfinkel and S. Ganor, 2009. Khirbet Qeiyafa Vol. 1: Excavation Report 20072008. Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society. 

Y. Garfinkal, S. Ganor and M.G. Hasel, 2014. Khirbet Qeiyafa Vol. 2. The 2009–2013 Excavation Seasons. Stratigraphy and Architecture (Areas B, C, D, E). Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society.

Y. Garfinkel, S. Ganor and M.G. Hasel, in press. Footsteps of King David in the Valley of Elah. London: Thames & Hadson.

Y. Garfinkel, S. Ganor and J.B. Silver, 2017. Did the Ancient City of Khirbet Qeiyafa/Sha’arim have two gates? Biblical Archaeology Review January/February 51/1:37–42, 59.

Y. Garfinkel, M.R. Golub, H. Misgav and S. Ganor, 2015.The ʾIšbaʿal Inscription from Khirbet Qeiyafa. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 373: 217–233.

Y. Garfinkel, M.G. Hasel and M. Klingbeil, 2013. An Ending and a Beginning: Why We’re Leaving Qeiyafa and going to Lachish. Biblical Archaeology Review 39/6: 44–51.

Y. Garfinkel, I. Kreimerman and P. Zilberg, 2016. Debating Khirbet Qeiyafa: A Fortified City in Judah from the Time of King David. Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society.

Y. Garfinkel and M. Mumcuoglu, 2013.Triglyphs and Recessed Doorframes on a Building Model from Khirbet Qeiyafa: New light on Two Technical Terms in the Biblical Descriptions of Solomon’s Palace and Temple. Israel Exploration Journal 63: 135–163.

Y. Garfinkel and M. Mumcuoglu, 2016. Solomon’s Temple and Palace: New Archaeological Discoveries. Jerusalem: Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem & Biblical Archaeology Society.

Y. Garfinkel, K. Streit, S. Ganor and M.G. Hasel, 2012. State Formation in Judah: Biblical Tradition, Modern Historical Theories and Radiometric Dates at Khirbet Qeiyafa. Radiocarbon 54: 359–369.

Y. Garfinkel, K. Streit, S. Ganor and P.J. Reimer, 2015. King David’s City at Khirbet Qeiyafa: Results of the Second Radiocarbon Dating Project. Radiocarbon 57/5: 881–890.

A. Gilboa, 2012. Cypriot Barrel Juglets at Khirbet Qeiyafa and Other Sites in the Levant: Cultural Aspects and Chronological Implications. Tel Aviv 39:133–149.

H.G. Kang and Y. Garfinkel, 2015. Finger-Impressed Jar Handles at Khirbet Qeiyafa: New Light on Administration in the Kingdom of Judah. Levant 47: 186–205.‏

K.H. Keimer, I. Kreimerman and Y. Garfinkel, 2015. From Quarry to Completion: Hirbet Qeiyafa as a Case Study in the Building of Ancient Near Eastern Settelments. Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins 131: 109–128.

M. Mumcuoglu and Y. Garfinkel, 2015. The Puzzling Doorways of Solomon’s Temple. Biblical Archaeology Review 41/4 (Jul/Aug): 34–41.

S. Schroer and S. Münger (eds.), 2017. Khirbet Qeiyafa in the Shephelah. Papers Presented at a Colloquium of the Swiss Society for Ancient Near Eastern Studies Held at the University of Bern, September 6, 2014. Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 282Fribourg (CH): Academic Press.

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Building Fairer Cities: New Insights From Mohenjo-daro

Adam S. Green is a lecturer in sustainability at the University of York. He is an archaeological anthropologist focused on South Asia, specializing in the comparative study of early states through the lenses of technology, the environment, and political economy. Follow him on X @Adam_S_Green.

Inequality and Urbanism

Today’s cities are hotbeds of inequality. Urban real estate is one of the most expensive kinds of land in the world. It attracts billionaires looking to store their wealth and hedge funds looking to garner predictable returns: New York’s avenues, Paris’s thoroughfares, and Dubai’s dazzling skyscrapers are great at making the rich richer. But they raise the cost of urban life for everyone else.

And yet, plenty of people who are not rich flock to cities, driving the ongoing expansion of urbanism across the globe. In the 21st century, humans became an urban species, with more than 50 percent of the global population living in urban areas. This is because the benefits of living in a city—the opportunities provided by dense networks of interaction, cultural production, and heaps of concentrated resources—outweigh the immense cost of urban life. Inequality is the price we pay for the myriad opportunities that cities bring.

But what if we don’t have to pay this cost? Archaeological evidence from South Asia is rewriting that story of urbanism. My new article in Antiquity reveals that inequality was low in one of South Asia’s first cities and that it decreased as its citizens prospered.

The Measure of an Ancient City

In 2021, I joined the GINI Project, a working group devoted to investigating the long-term dynamics of inequality using archaeological data, a project supported by the Coalition for Archaeological Synthesis.

The idea was to systematically compare evidence from archaeological sites like Mohenjo-daro, an early city that seemed to defy the tradeoffs of urbanism, with comparable data from other time periods, to better understand why inequality is skyrocketing today.

The GINI project adopted the “Gini coefficient,” an economic statistic that captures the level of inequality within the distribution of a particular variable, like income or wealth, in a given population. When all the wealth or income is concentrated in a tiny portion of the population, you get a Gini coefficient of 1. When it’s more evenly distributed, you get a Gini coefficient closer to 0. Archaeologists often apply the Gini coefficient to house areas, which provide a reasonable, but far from perfect, proxy of wealth or income within a given society.

I collaborated with Cameron Petrie and Iqtedar Alam, both based at the University of Cambridge, to measure all of Mohenjo-daro’s 309 excavated houses, contributing these measurements to the GINI database, which includes similar measurements from more than 50,000 residences found throughout the archaeological record. These measurements, and the Gini coefficients we can get from them, tell a striking story.

Every House a Palace
Mohenjo-daro was built more than 4,000 years ago in what is today the Sindh Province of Pakistan. It was one of the first cities in the world, emerging after a 1,000 years of village development throughout the broader Indus River Basin, forming part of the expansive Indus (or Harappan) civilization, which stretched from the Arabian Sea to the foothills of the Himalaya.

Excavations at the Mohenjo-daro began nearly a 100 years ago, uncovering the foundations of hundreds of structures arranged along wide streets. What archaeologists found astonished them—a massive public bath, the foundations of an assembly hall, and huge foundation platforms that could have provided a defense against Indus River flooding.

But it was the city’s numerous houses—replete with second stories and private bathing platforms—that made the biggest impression. The first-ever report on the archaeology of the Indus civilization opens with a description of Mohenjo-daro’s “commodious” and “well-built” houses, which rivaled the palaces seen in Egypt or Mesopotamia. Excavators have documented more than 300 residences from Mohenjo-daro, some dating to the earliest phases of the city’s development.

Further research has revealed that the people who built these houses were masters of Bronze Age technology, producing a huge range of sophisticated objects, like small statuettes, beads and bangles, which could be widely distributed amongst its populace. As I’ve argued elsewhere, there is tons of qualitative evidence that Mohenjo-daro reaped the benefits of urbanism without creating a massive wealth gap between houses.

Ever More Equal

By the numbers, Mohenjo-daro was far more equal than other ancient cities. If you calculate a Gini coefficient from all 309 houses at Mohenjo-daro, you get 0.44. We can compare that number to other ancient cities in the GINI database, like that from Knossos in Ancient Greece, famous for its palaces, where the Gini coefficient was a striking 0.86, or Ur and Ugarit in neighboring Mesopotamia, where Gini coefficients were greater than 0.60. The city clearly followed a different trajectory than many others.

However, 0.44 is pretty far from 0; does it really support the idea that Mohenjo-daro was egalitarian?

Comparing the oldest houses to the newest ones reveals an even more interesting story. Mohenjo-daro’s earliest houses, those found in the deepest levels of its DK-G South Neighborhood, had a Gini coefficient of 0.39. These date to the earliest periods of the city’s occupation, perhaps around 2500 BC. Each subsequent wave of house construction lowered the Gini coefficient, and by the city’s latest levels, its Gini coefficient was only 0.23, the same as we find in the world’s earliest farming villages.

Mohenjo-daro was not only more egalitarian than other ancient cities, it also became more equal over time.

Governing an Egalitarian City

We don’t know exactly how Mohenjo-daro’s citizens kept a lid on inequality. Was it an effect of the broader economic system, which perhaps gave all the city’s residents equivalent access to land and fuel for making bricks? Was it more active, perhaps with communities placing an upper limit on the size of residences, or punishing people who tried to make ostentatious houses? We can’t say for sure.

What we do know is that there is strong evidence for governance at Mohenjo-daro. Its houses used the same brick ratios—a level of standardization unprecedented in the Bronze Age. And the city’s houses were full of standardization stamp seals, tools for carrying out different kinds of economic transactions, as well as weights and measures.

These small tools had big effects, facilitating trade and communication across an expansive area. This penchant for setting and agreeing to shared protocols is evident in Mohenjo-daro’s infrastructure as well. The city boasted one of the world’s earliest systems of public drainage, and its houses conformed to a public street plan. This street plan developed over time. At the same time, the Gini coefficient of houses decreased. It does not seem far-fetched to suggest that the same set of rules produced the city’s street plan and leveled differences between residences.

There is also evidence that governance was inclusive or democratic. Public structures, like the Pillared Hall, which could have allowed hundreds of people to deliberate and make decisions about the city, likely helped facilitate this governance, perhaps providing a forum for discussing the distribution of residence area within the city. Archaeologists are becoming more and more aware of such early forms of democratic governance across the globe.

Prospering in a Fairer Society

Mohenjo-daro’s declining inequality also correlates with an increase in the median size of houses, a proxy for productivity in past societies. As inequality dropped, the total resources people could invest in their housing increased. The city appears to have prospered, a pattern corroborated by claims that later levels at Mohenjo-daro have more evidence for craft production than earlier levels. Ensuring that public goods were maintained and ensuring equitable access to housing seems to have been deliberate.

Still, I don’t think Mohenjo-daro’s declining Gini coefficient was an accident—it’s far more likely that its communities made rules that actively shaped the distribution of housing in the city, and that those same rules channeled labor and resources into goods that could be enjoyed by everyone.

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This article is distributed in partnership with the Coalition for Archaeological Synthesis and has been published on its website.

Cover Image, Top: Mohenjo-daro. Saqib Qayyum, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia Commons

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