Abstract
Assaf Yasur-Landau, Eric H. Cline and George A. Pierce
Middle Bronze Age Settlement Patterns in the Western Galilee, Israel
Journal of Field Archaeology 33 (2008) 59--83
During the Middle Bronze Age (MB) II period (ca. 1750Ð-1600 B.C.), Tel
Kabri, located in the western Galilee, Israel, was the center of a
thriving polity with economic and cultural connections to Egypt,
Cyprus, and the Aegean. While Kabri and some neighboring sites have
been partially excavated, the rise and fall of the polity has not been
clearly understood. We present evidence from the Kabri Archaeological
Project (KAP) to reconstruct shifting settlement patterns, demography,
and aspects of trade in the Kabri hinterland from MB I to Late Bronze
Age (LB) I. We argue that Kabri, in the northern part of the Acco
plain, follows a different developmental trajectory than does the site
of Acco and its hinterland in the southern part of the plain. Acco was
urbanized early in MB I and developed a mature hinterland that
persisted throughout MB II and into LB I. Kabri did not begin to bloom
until late in the MB I period. Its rapid rise during MB II was
accompanied by the abandonment of village sites far from the center of
the polity and the fortification of nearby settlements. These efforts
to consolidate power and to maintain the flow of goods into the center
did not last long, and the polity of Kabri soon collapsed.
Volume 33 Number 1 (Spring 2008)
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