- Ir Ovot
Ir Ovot ( _he. עיר אובות, "City of
Oboth ", also New Ein Hatzeva) was an agricultural cooperative (kibbutz) inIsrael , located in the northeasternNegev 'sArabah region, and still refers to a small, unincorporated group of homes, mostly inhabited by a Messianic Jewish group and members of the Evangelical Christian group "Blossoming Rose." Ir Ovot is also the site of an extensive archaeological complex known as Hatzeva Fortress (מצודת חצבה) which dates to the 10th century BCE'sUnited Monarchy /First Temple period.Geography
Ir Ovot is situated around coord|30|48|31.68|N|35|14|44.88|E| south of the
Dead Sea and southeast ofDimona in theArabah valley, an arid plain located below theNegev plateau and south of theJordan Rift Valley within the largerGreat Rift Valley . The settlement abuts theEin Hatzeva bloc of agricultural villages on the opposite side of Highway 90 near theJordan ian border, and is within the boundaries of theTamar Regional Council , though it is no longer a recognised entity.Fact|date=September 2008History
Originally the site of the "Ein Husub" police station during the
British Mandate of Palestine , the location was captured by theIsrael Defense Forces in 1948. The village of Ir Ovot was founded in 1967, in an area deserted apart from a small military base and roadside cafe on the way toEilat . It was founded by a group of American Messianic Jews led by formerlaw student andcourt clerk Simcha Pearlmutter, a Jew fromMiami ,Florida , who that year decided thatJesus was the Messiah, and took a Christian second wife in addition to his Jewish one.cite news| url=http://www.menorah.org.za/simcha_pearlmutter.php| title=Strange voice in the desert| author=Carl Schrag | publisher=The Jerusalem Post |accessdate=2007-09-24| date=April 21, 1990] cite news| url=http://www.haaretz.co.il/hasite/pages/ShArtPE.jhtml?itemNo=290175&contrassID=2&subContrassID=18&sbSubContrassID=2| title=Arava community histories| author=Shiri Lev-Ari|accessdate=2007-09-24| publisher=Haaretz he icon]Oboth (Numbers sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Numbers|chapter=21|verse=10|nobook=; Deuteronomy sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Deuteronomy|chapter=33|verse=44|nobook=) was one of the camping stations used by theIsraelite s during their Exodus fromEgypt .The group was eventually joined by a few Jews and a number of
gentile s who supported the self-styledRabbi Pearlmutter. After disputes with theJewish Agency , Pearlmutter found a political and financial sponsor in the Satmar Hasidic group, despite Pearlmutter's adoption of Christianity. After establishing his alliance with Satmar, Pearlmutter declared himself to be an anti-Zionist. Throughout the 1970s, Ir Ovot, which featured acheder , synagogue, communaldining room , and members' meeting, was considered aHaredi kibbutz , but a 1982 conflict between Pearlmutter and theEdah HaChareidis in Jerusalem led to the departure of his first, Jewish wife, and their children. His second wife remained even after his 2004 death. Officially dissolved as a formal association in the mid-1980s by two court-assigned liquidators, after further conflicts with local government over land leasing rights, the families remained in individual capacities. The village was joined by a German family in 2003, which has since become host for groups from Germany and theNetherlands coming to take part in the agricultural work.Since 1984, the Evangelical Christian "Blossoming Rose" has run a program for seasonal North American Christian volunteering in Ir Ovot's agriculture and operations. They were a driving force in financing and enlarging the archaeological dig, and have embarked on the development of the "Tamar" archaeological park at the site.Fact|date=March 2008
Hatzeva Fortress
First observed and documented by
Alois Musil in 1902, the Roman fortress was identified onFritz Frank 's 1932 travels in the region. In 1934,Nelson Glueck identified the location as a Nabatæancaravanserai coopted by the Romans, but the site's true significance was noted byBenjamin Mazar andMichael Avi-Yonah 's 1950 discovery ofsherd s from theFirst Temple period. In the 1960s, it was first suggested byYohanan Aharoni that the site might be the same as Tamar of theBook of Ezekiel sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Ezekiel|chapter=47|verse=19|nobook= and sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Ezekiel|chapter=48|verse=28|nobook=, andEusebius of Caesarea 's "Tamara". [cite web| url=http://www.blossomingrose.org/restore/tamar/2006-12-31%20news.htm| title=Tamar site's history| publisher=Blossoming Rose ]The first salvage
excavation took place in 1972 under Aharoni andRudolph Cohen 's direction, but much of the work was carried out by Cohen,Yigal Yisrael , and recentlyTali Erickson-Gini , following the 1986 involvement of "Blossoming Rose" in partnership with theIsrael Antiquities Authority ,Jewish National Fund andTamar Regional Council . Known in addition to Tamar as the Hatzeva Fortress, or alternatively identified with Solomon's Tadmor, the site has six strata which indicate EarlyIsraelite , Nabatæan,Edom ite, Roman, and EarlyArab occupations. It includes a 1,000 year oldshade tree , and the largest "Paliurus spina-christi " in Israel.cite web| url=http://www.bibleinterp.com/excavations/Biblical_Tamar_Park.htm| title=Excavation at Biblical Tamar Park| author=Matt VandeBunte |publisher=The Boble and Interpretation |accessdate=2007-09-24|date=March 2004]The area was used for training crews in site conservation before their work on the
Masada site. [cite web| url=http://www.siteconservation.com/en_Conservationprojectsbyregion.htm| title=Conservation projects by region|accessdate=2007-09-24| publisher=Archaeology Conservation Center]10th century BCE
The earliest remains, dating to the Solomonic period of the 10th century BCE, resembles other contemporary Negev plateau fortresses and included period "Negbite" style earthenware. Ranging from tenth to sixth centuries BCE, Negbite was also uncovered at Tel
Kadesh Barnea and Tel el-Kheleifeh; it is probable that this level was destroyed by PharaohShishaq like other sites of that period.9th–8th century BCE
The second layer consists of a very large
Iron Age fortification surrounded by acasemate wall. ThisFirst Temple period building of theKingdom of Judah is almost as large as contemporary cities such asTel Be'er Sheva , and is four times larger than other fortifiedNegev cities at 10,000square metre s.Excavation revealed a four-chambered, north-facing gate complex near the northeastern corner and three storerooms, a pair of
granaries , amoat and adefensive wall . The city was possibly constructed by KingAmaziah of Judah , an 8th century BCE ruler who fortified the Judean kingdom and went to war with neighbouring Edom in the northernArabah , or his sonUzziah whose construction of towers in the desert is mentioned by the secondBook of Chronicles .7th–6th century BCE
A third fortress from the Late First Temple period from the 7th–6th centuries BCE was found, though because only the walls' foundations remain, reconstructing the floor plan has been difficult. However, an eastern wall with two towers set convert|14|m|ft|0 apart was reconstructed.
A pit full of smashed clay and stone, which were reassembled into 74
cultic vessels, was also found, indicating a probable Edomite shrine.Censer s, chalices,altar s and humanfigurine s were unearthed outside the fortress wall on the site's northern edge in 1993, near the foundations of a small building that seems to have been a shrine. Some of thesherd s resemble vessels found in an Edomite shrine atHorvat Qitmit , about convert|45|km|mi|0 to the northwest. A circular stonestamp seal discovered inside the fortress, picturing two men in long robes on either side of an altar, provides another indicator of Edomite origin. The pit recoveries dating to the end of the seventh century could possibly have been destroyed in the campaign of religious reforms spearheaded by KingJosiah mentioned in Book of Kings II.1st–4th century CE
Evidence of Roman administrative and military presence is plentiful, and the junction of the east–west
Incense Road toGaza and the north–south route to theRed Sea probably made it an economically valuable frontier outpost.The Roman Fortress' layout is similar to other imperial outposts in the region. An official Latin inscription that dates several area strongholds to the 3rd century CE was discovered on a large limestone slab at nearby
Yotvata bears. This site was the largest in the area at convert|46|m2|sqft|0, and included four projecting towers on the fortress' corners. Artefacts tell of probably destruction in the middle of the fourth century CE, perhaps by a 344 earthquake, though it was promptly rebuilt with improved, stone flooring and again destroyed two decades later, probably from an earthquake in 363.A thermæ and
caravanserai of the same period were also found, and is similar to the thermæ atAshkelon and others in the nearby country. A row of rooms from an earlier, 1st century BCE to 1st century CE fortress revealed artefacts pointing to a Nabatæan occupation predating Roman annexation. Coins bearing the likeness of Nabatæan kings were found, along with storage jars and other vessels.7th–8th century CE
A building fragment stratum from the Early Arab period was uncovered immediately beneath the ground surface, along with evidence of a farm located above the Roman thermæ's remains and below the modern structures.
References
Further reading
* [http://www.arava.co.il/tourism/welcome.htm?page=http://www.arava.co.il/tourism/trips/family/bokekovot.htm Arava.com] he icon
* [http://www.the-vu.com/Louis03.htm Travel diary of Ir Ovot]
* [http://www.blossomingrose.org/ Blossoming Rose]ee also
*
Biblical archaeology
*Incense Route - Desert Cities in the Negev
*Iudaea Province
*History of ancient Israel and Judah
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