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The catalogue for the exciting exhibition at New York University's
Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, Masters of Fire
presents a comprehensive overview of the little-known yet
extraordinary Chalcolithic culture, which existed in the southern
Levant from 4500-3600 bce. Masters of Fire focuses on the people of
the southern Levant who harnessed the power of metallurgy during
the fourth millennium bce. Artisans produced extraordinary copper
objects while other craftsmen molded pottery and stone into complex
anthropomorphic burial containers, statuettes, and ritual objects.
Taken together, these artifacts reveal the first stratified culture
known in the ancient Near East. Highlights of the exhibition
include a selection of material from the Nahal Mishmar hoard, an
unprecedented collection of copper prestige and ritual objects,
organic materials from the Cave of the Warrior, and an exceptional
group of ritual figurines. Contributors include Thomas E. Levy,
Daniel M. Master, Osnat Misch-Brandl, Yorke M. Rowan, Michael
Sebbane, Dina Shalem, and Orit Shamir. Cover photograph (c) Bruce
M. White, 2016
Combining old surveys with new material from salvage excavations,
The Land behind Ashkelon provides a wide regional context for the
excavations at Tel Ashkelon. This volume is a distillation of
numerous excavations by many talented archaeologists, brought
together by Yaakov Huster, a man who has devoted his life to
preserving the cultural heritage of the Ashkelon region. Yaakov
Huster has not only revisited older surveys but has also taken into
account the enormous amount of new information collected by the
archaeologists of the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) over the
last several decades. This volume synthesizes all available data to
create the most accurate and updated regional survey of the
Ashkelon region to date. As such, it is an invaluable resource to
anyone studying Ashkelon and its hinterland.
The Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon continues its final report
series with a study of the city destroyed in the campaign of the
Babylonian king Nebuchadrezzar in December of 604 B.C. In this era,
Ashkelon’s markets linked land routes from the southeast to a web
of international Mediterranean merchants, and this volume describes
the Iron Age bazaar where shopkeepers sold the goods of Egypt,
Greece, Phoenicia, Cyprus, and Judah. In addition, in another part
of the city, a winery produced a homegrown vintage for distribution
abroad. This volume spans more than 800 full-color pages
illustrating the range of imported and local artifacts recovered by
more than ten years of excavation. The twenty-eight chapters, by
more than two dozen contributors, combine to describe Ashkelon’s
pivotal role in the economy and politics of the late seventh
century B.C. As such, Ashkelon 3: The Seventh Century B.C. is a
indispensable resource for those interested in the Iron Age history
of the Eastern Mediterranean and the study of trade and economy in
the ancient world.
Since 1985, the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon, directed by
Lawrence E. Stager of Harvard University, has been a leading
American archaeological project in Israel. Now, the work of the
project is being collected in ten final report volumes published by
the Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East. The first volume,
Introduction and Overview (1985–2006), spans more than 700
copiously illustrated pages, many in full color, and includes
subjects ranging from microscopic DNA to monumental architecture.
In addition, Volume 1 includes plans and descriptions of every
architectural phase excavated during the course of seventeen field
seasons and reveals the archaeological sequence of the site and
aspects of the city plan from the Bronze Age to Crusader times,
with special emphasis on Canaanite (Bronze Age) and Philistine
(Iron Age) Ashkelon. The chapters in this volume, by more than
three dozen contributors, combine to describe Ashkelon’s cultural
constants and contingencies over la longue durée (3000 BCE to 1500
CE). As a result, Ashkelon 1: Introduction and Overview
(1985–2006) will be an indispensable resource for investigating
the maritime and terrestrial history of the southeastern
Mediterranean littoral.
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