Description


Tell er-Rumeith lies at the eastern edge of the Irbid plain in northern Jordan not far from the Syria border and the present town of Ramtha. The publication presents the most complete corpus of Iron Age pottery for this area and its occupation reflects the Biblical traditions of the region. Tristan Barako and the other authors have used the field notes, reports and photographs of Paul Lapp's excavations in the 1960s to bring together this final report. In Part I of the volume, Barako presents the basic stratigraphy of the site and the corpus of Iron Age pottery that represents its main period of occupation. Part II presents studies of artifacts by a variety of authors, including the post-Iron age pottery, noteworthy presentations of the community health (the human skeleton evidence) and textile production at the site, as well as fascinating collections of figurines, groundstone and other small finds.

Illustrated with 207 b&w illustrations and 38 tables.






Tell er-Rumeith: The Excavations of Paul W. Lapp, 1962 and 1967

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£70.00

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Hardback by Tristan J. Barako , Nancy Lapp

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Tell er-Rumeith lies at the eastern edge of the Irbid plain in northern Jordan not far from the Syria border... Read more

    Publisher: American Society of Overseas Research
    Publication Date: 01/10/2015
    ISBN13: 9780897570893, 978-0897570893
    ISBN10: 897570898

    Number of Pages: 444

    Non Fiction , History

    Description


    Tell er-Rumeith lies at the eastern edge of the Irbid plain in northern Jordan not far from the Syria border and the present town of Ramtha. The publication presents the most complete corpus of Iron Age pottery for this area and its occupation reflects the Biblical traditions of the region. Tristan Barako and the other authors have used the field notes, reports and photographs of Paul Lapp's excavations in the 1960s to bring together this final report. In Part I of the volume, Barako presents the basic stratigraphy of the site and the corpus of Iron Age pottery that represents its main period of occupation. Part II presents studies of artifacts by a variety of authors, including the post-Iron age pottery, noteworthy presentations of the community health (the human skeleton evidence) and textile production at the site, as well as fascinating collections of figurines, groundstone and other small finds.

    Illustrated with 207 b&w illustrations and 38 tables.






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