During the ninth season of excavation at Tell Damiyah (Damiyah Hill) in the central Jordan Valley, a joint project of the Yarmouk University and the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities, a team of researchers uncovered three additional rooms of a religious complex dating to around 700 BC, a Dutch scholar said.
Travellers and traders were welcomed at Tell Damiyah seemingly independent of their cultural and religious background, Petit continued, adding that nothing inside the sanctuary gives a clue about the type of deities that were worshipped.
Erwin and Martijn Kanters scan one of the storage rooms [Credit: Rijksmuseum van Oudheden] |
He added that during the previous season, the team uncovered two rooms of the complex, which contained storage jars filled with burnt food products including barley and wheat.
Clay statue of a female figure with traces of paint [Credit: Rijksmuseum van Oudheden] |
He also noted that inscriptions found at Tell Mazar, which is close to Tell Damiyah, can be dated to the 6th century BC, the Persian period (5th century BC) and the early Hellenistic period (4th-3rd century BC).
The team of researchers from Yarmouk University and the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities working at Tell Damiyah in the central Jordan Valley [Credit: Lucas Petit] |
In Autumn 2019, researchers at the excavation site at Tell Damiyah discovered four sherds with inscriptions, very comparable to those discovered at Tell Mazar, both in terms of inscriptions and date. Research on these objects is ongoing, the archaeologist added.
Author: Saeb Rawashdeh | Source: The Jordan Times [January 20, 2020]
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