Tell el-Qudeirat is an archaeological site in the
Sinai
Sinai commonly refers to:
* Sinai Peninsula, Egypt
* Mount Sinai, a mountain in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt
* Biblical Mount Sinai, the site in the Bible where Moses received the Law of God
Sinai may also refer to:
* Sinai, South Dakota, a place ...
, about east of the Egyptian village of
Quseima. It is widely considered to be the location of the biblical
Kadesh Barnea
Kadesh or Qadesh or Cades (in classical Hebrew he, קָדֵשׁ, from the root "holy") is a place-name that occurs several times in the Hebrew Bible, describing a site or sites located south of, or at the southern border of, Canaan and the Kin ...
.
[Drinkard (1990), p. 485.] Recently, some authors have referred to it as Tel Kadesh-barnea.
[Redmount (2001), p. 67.] Moshe Dothan (1965) referred to it as Tel 'Ein el Qudeirat, while in the early twentieth century Woolley and Lawrence used the spelling Tell Ain el Guderat.
''Tell el-Qudeirat'' is the name of the archaeological mound (the "
tell") itself. It sits near ''Ain el-Qudeirat'', which Carol Redmount describes as "the most fertile oasis in northern Sinai".
The ''Ain'' ("spring") flows out of the ground about east of the tell, and the water from it flows west, becoming the ''Wadi el-Qudeirat''. The tell then sits along the northern bank of the wadi, which continues flowing west and then turns toward the north. The tell is located along the southern base of a hill known as ''Jebel el-Qudeirat''.
During the
Iron Age
The Iron Age is the final epoch of the three-age division of the prehistory and protohistory of humanity. It was preceded by the Stone Age (Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic) and the Bronze Age (Chalcolithic). The concept has been mostly appl ...
, Tell el-Qudeirat was a rectangular fortress, and multiple layers of fortifications have been uncovered. The modern site is a ''
tell'', an archaeological mound caused by long-term human habitation. At the lowest level, labelled 4c, are traces of human habitation dated by
Israel Finkelstein
Israel Finkelstein ( he, ישראל פינקלשטיין, born March 29, 1949) is an Israeli archaeologist, professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University and the head of the School of Archaeology and Maritime Cultures at the University of Haifa. Fin ...
to the twelfth to tenth centuries BCE. Carol Redmount, on the other hand, claims that the oldest remains at the site date to the tenth century.
Tell el-Qudeirat is one of scores of permanent settlements which existed in Iron Age II in the
Negev
The Negev or Negeb (; he, הַנֶּגֶב, hanNegév; ar, ٱلنَّقَب, an-Naqab) is a desert and semidesert region of southern Israel. The region's largest city and administrative capital is Beersheba (pop. ), in the north. At its southe ...
Highlands.
Archaeological surveys and interpretation
The first archaeologists to notice the tell were
T. E. Lawrence
Thomas Edward Lawrence (16 August 1888 – 19 May 1935) was a British archaeologist, army officer, diplomat, and writer who became renowned for his role in the Arab Revolt (1916–1918) and the Sinai and Palestine Campaign (1915–1918 ...
("Lawrence of Arabia") and
C. L. Woolley in 1914. They described it as "little mound about 200 feet long and 120 feet broad ... in a heap from twelve to fifteen feet high above the corn-fields." They considered their initial work insufficient to accurately date the remains, but suggested a date somewhere in the neighborhood of 1000 BCE for it and the nearby fortresses at Qasr er-Ruheibeh and Bir Birein. They proposed that Tell el-Qudeirat was the biblical Kadesh-Barnea.
Further work on a limited scale ("soundings") was carried out at the tell by Moshe Dothan in 1956.
Nelson Glueck
Nelson Glueck (June 4, 1900 – February 12, 1971) was an American rabbi, academic and archaeologist. He served as president of Hebrew Union College from 1947 until his death, and his pioneering work in biblical archaeology resulted in the disco ...
(published in 1959), and
Yohanan Aharoni
Yohanan Aharoni (Hebrew:יוחנן אהרוני)(7 June 1919 – 9 February 1976) was an Israeli archaeologist and historical geographer, chairman of the Department of Near East Studies and chairman of the Institute of Archaeology at Tel-Aviv Unive ...
(1967) discovered that a large number of other fortresses from the Iron Age also existed in the area, and proposed that these fortresses were built by Israelite kings to increase their influence over this area toward the southern edge of their dominions. Dothan concluded that the fortress itself existed in the eighth to sixth centuries, with evidence of human settlement at the site both before and after the existence of the fortress.
Rudolph Cohen conducted work on a much larger scale in 1976–1982. Cohen concluded that the site in fact contained remains of three fortresses. The first was built in the tenth century, in an oval shape. The second and third were rectangular. The second was built in the 8th century BCE and destroyed in the 7th century BCE. The third seemed to have been built in the second half of the 6th century BCE, during the reign of king
Josiah
Josiah ( or ) or Yoshiyahu; la, Iosias was the 16th king of Judah (–609 BCE) who, according to the Hebrew Bible, instituted major religious reforms by removing official worship of gods other than Yahweh. Josiah is credited by most biblical s ...
, and was destroyed in 586 BCE when the Babylonians destroyed the
Kingdom of Judah
The Kingdom of Judah ( he, , ''Yəhūdā''; akk, 𒅀𒌑𒁕𒀀𒀀 ''Ya'údâ'' 'ia-ú-da-a-a'' arc, 𐤁𐤉𐤕𐤃𐤅𐤃 ''Bēyt Dāwīḏ'', " House of David") was an Israelite kingdom of the Southern Levant during the Iron Age. Ce ...
. Despite the destruction of this last fortress, people continued to occupy the site for approximately two centuries.
Mordechai Haiman (1994) argued that these settlements were installed by the Israelite
United Monarchy
The United Monarchy () in the Hebrew Bible refers to Israel and Judah under the reigns of Saul, David, and Solomon. It is traditionally dated to have lasted between and . According to the biblical account, on the succession of Solomon's son Re ...
between about 1000 and 925 BCE.
[Haiman (1994), pp. 59, 61.] Haiman held that these sites were abandoned after the kingdom of Israel split and Egypt invaded it around 925 BC. Of these sites, Haiman maintains that only Tell el-Qudeirat and two others were again settled in the eighth century, with Tell el-Qudeirat serving as an outpost of the
Kingdom of Judah
The Kingdom of Judah ( he, , ''Yəhūdā''; akk, 𒅀𒌑𒁕𒀀𒀀 ''Ya'údâ'' 'ia-ú-da-a-a'' arc, 𐤁𐤉𐤕𐤃𐤅𐤃 ''Bēyt Dāwīḏ'', " House of David") was an Israelite kingdom of the Southern Levant during the Iron Age. Ce ...
.
David Ussishkin
David Ussishkin (Hebrew: דוד אוסישקין; born 1935) is an Israeli archaeologist and professor emeritus of archaeology.
Biography
David Ussishkin was born in Jerusalem. Ussishkin is the grandson of the Zionist leader Menachem Ussishkin. H ...
(1995), on the other hand, argued that Cohen's "second" and "third" fortresses in fact constituted a single fort. While Cohen interpreted the fort as an outpost of the kingdom of Judah, Ussishkin suggested, following Nadav Na'aman, that it was not a project of the Judahite government but was perhaps constructed by
Assyria
Assyria (Neo-Assyrian cuneiform: , romanized: ''māt Aššur''; syc, ܐܬܘܪ, ʾāthor) was a major ancient Mesopotamian civilization which existed as a city-state at times controlling regional territories in the indigenous lands of the A ...
ns, later falling into Egyptian hands.
Israel Finkelstein
Israel Finkelstein ( he, ישראל פינקלשטיין, born March 29, 1949) is an Israeli archaeologist, professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University and the head of the School of Archaeology and Maritime Cultures at the University of Haifa. Fin ...
has extended the lines of thinking found in Cohen and Ussishkin, while modifying some of their conclusions. What Cohen saw as an "oval fortress", Finkelstein sees as simply the remains of settlement between the tenth and eighth centuries, prior to any fortress construction. As for the rectangular remains, Finkelstein holds these to have been a single fortress operating from the mid-eighth century to about 600. Later human occupation at the site likely continued into the fourth century.
[Finkelstein (2010), p. 122.]
References
Bibliography
* Cohen, Rudolph. (1979).
The Iron Age Fortresses in the Central Negev. ''Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research'', (236). doi:10.2307/1356668
* Cohen, Rudolph and Hannah Bernick-Greenberg (2007). ''Excavations at Kadesh Barnea (Tell el-Qudeirat)''. Israel Antiquities Authority.
* Dothan, Moshe (1965).
The Fortress at Kadesh-Barnea. ''Israel Exploration Journal'', Vol. 15, No. 3, pp. 134–150.
*
* Finkelstein, Israel (2010).
Kadesh Barnea: A Reevaluation of Its Archaeology and History" ''Tel Aviv'' (volume 37).
* Gilboa, Ayelet; Jull, Timothy A. J.; Sharon, Ilan; & Boaretto, Elisabetta (2009). "Notes on Iron IIA 14C Dates from Tell el-Qudeirat (Kadesh Barnea)", ''Tel Aviv'', 36:1, 82–94, DOI: 10.1179/204047809x439460
* Haiman, Mordechai (1994).
The Iron Age II Sites of the Western Negev Highlands. ''Israel Exploration Journal.'' Vol. 44, No. 1/2, pp. 59, 61.
*
* Haiman, Mordechai (1994)
The Iron Age II Sites of the Western Negev Highlands. ''Israel Exploration Journal.'' Vol. 44, No. 1/2, pp. 36-61
* {{cite book, first=Carol, last=Redmount, editor=Michael David Coogan, chapter=Bitter Lives: Israel in and Out of Egypt, title=The Oxford History of the Biblical World, chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4DVHJRFW3mYC&pg=PA67, year=2001, publisher=Oxford University Press, isbn=978-0-19-513937-2
* Ussishkin, David (1995).
The Rectangular Fortress at Kadesh-Barnea. ''Israel Exploration Journal'', Vol. 45, No. 2/3..
* Woolley, C. Leonard and Lawrence, T. E. (1914).
The Wilderness of Zin''. Palestine Exploration Fund
1914 archaeological discoveries
12th-century BC establishments in Egypt
4th-century BC disestablishments in Egypt
Populated places established in the 2nd millennium BC
Populated places disestablished in the 4th century BC
Ancient Assyrian cities
Archaeological sites in Egypt
Biblical geography
Former populated places in Egypt
Fortifications in Egypt
Iron Age sites in Asia
Kingdom of Israel (united monarchy)
Kingdom of Judah
Sinai Peninsula
Tells (archaeology)