- Gezer
:"For the kibbutz, see
Gezer, Israel ; For the Arab village, seeAbu Shusha ; for the regional council seeGezer Regional Council "Gezer ( _he. גזר) was a town in ancient Israel. Scholars believe that Gezer is Tel Gezer (also known as Tell el-Jezer or Abu Shusheh), a site around midway on the route between
Jerusalem andTel Aviv . Today the site is a national park in modernIsrael .Location
Gezer was located on the northern fringe of the
Shephelah , approximately thirty kilometres west ofJerusalem . It was strategically situated at the junction of the international coastal highway and the highway connecting it withJerusalem through the valley ofAjalon . The view from Gezer encompassed the whole Coastal Plain below it, making it a strategic military center. Verification of the identification of this site with Biblical Gezer comes from Hebrew inscriptions found engraved on rocks, several hundred meters from the tel. These inscriptions from the 1st century BCE read "boundary of Gezer."History
Gezer is mentioned in connection with the conquest of the land under the leadership of
Joshua (Joshua 10:33, 12:12), and was home to theLevites . It was noted to be under Philistine rule asDavid is said to have broken their rulership "from Geba to as far as to Gezer". It was the last point to which he pursued the Philistines (2 Sam. 5:25; 1 Chr. 14:16) after the battle ofBaal-perazim . Later the Bible claims thatPharaoh ofEgypt destroyed it (seeSack of Gezer ) and gave it as a dowry toSolomon 's wife.Gezer is mentioned in Egyptian records, such as the writings of
Thutmose III as well as the letters ofAmarna , theAmarna Letters ; and PharaohMerneptah boasted that he "seized Gezer". Amarna letters Gezer-(named "Gazru", notGaza , named "Hazzatu") was ruled by 4 'mayors' during the 20 year Amarna letters period,1350 BC . Archaeological excavation at Gezer has been going on since the early 1900s, and it has become one of the most excavated sites inIsrael .In the modern era, the site was discovered by
Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau in 1871.R. A. Stewart Macalister dug in the site between 1902 and 1907 on behalf of the "Palestine Exploration Fund". Macalister recovered several artifacts discovered several constructions and defenses. He also established Gezer's habitation strata, though they were later found to be mostly incorrect (as well as many of his theories). Other notable archælogical expeditions to the site were made byAlan Rowe (1934), G.E. Wright (1964-5, at the head of the Hebrew Union College expedition), William Dever,Yigael Yadin , as well as theAndrews University .Discoveries
One of the best-known findings is the
Gezer calendar . This is a plaque containing a text appearing to be either a schoolboy's memory exercises, or something designated for the collection of taxes from farmers. Another possibility is that the text was a popular folk song, or child's song, listing the months of the year according to the agricultural seasons. It has proved to be of value by informing modern researchers of ancient Middle Eastern script and language, as well as the agricultural seasons.Other interesting discoveries at the site related to
Biblical archaeology :
*10 monumentalmegalith s possibly comprising aCanaan ite "high place"
*9 inscribed boundary stones, making it the first positively identified Biblical city
*6-chambered gate similar to those found at Hazor and MegiddoThe excavations at Gezer from 1964-1974 were the first to grant academic/college credit to student excavators (now a common practice).
Excavations were renewed in June 2006 by a consortium of institutions under the direction of Steve Ortiz (Southwestern
Baptist Theological Seminary) and Sam Wolff (Israel Antiquities Authority ). The Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project is a multi-disciplinary field project investigating theIron Age history of the ancient biblical city of Tel Gezer.References
External links
* [http://www.gezerproject.org/ Tel Gezer Excavation and Publication Project]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.