Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- I INTRODUCTION TO THE PROBLEMS
- II SOME METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES
- III AROUND THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN IN THE IRON AGE
- IV JORDAN IN THE IRON AGE
- 10 Lowland Edom and the High and Low Chronologies: Edomite state formation, the Bible and recent archaeological research in southern Jordan
- 11 Radiocarbon Dating of the Khirbat en-Nahas Site (Jordan) and Bayesian Modeling of the Results
- 12 Mesha, the Mishor, and the Chronology of Iron Age Madaba
- V ISRAEL IN THE IRON AGE
- VI HISTORICAL CONSIDERATIONS
- VII CONCLUSION
- Index
12 - Mesha, the Mishor, and the Chronology of Iron Age Madaba
from IV - JORDAN IN THE IRON AGE
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- I INTRODUCTION TO THE PROBLEMS
- II SOME METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES
- III AROUND THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN IN THE IRON AGE
- IV JORDAN IN THE IRON AGE
- 10 Lowland Edom and the High and Low Chronologies: Edomite state formation, the Bible and recent archaeological research in southern Jordan
- 11 Radiocarbon Dating of the Khirbat en-Nahas Site (Jordan) and Bayesian Modeling of the Results
- 12 Mesha, the Mishor, and the Chronology of Iron Age Madaba
- V ISRAEL IN THE IRON AGE
- VI HISTORICAL CONSIDERATIONS
- VII CONCLUSION
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Delineating the process by which the Iron Age communities in the central highlands of Jordan coalesced into the culturally and territorially defined polities referred to in ancient Near Eastern sources is not an easy task. By the mid-9th century BCE, however, a mosaic of autonomous regional communities appears to have emerged, as tacitly acknowledged in the contemporary Mesha Inscription. This study presents a summary of the Tall Mādabā Archaeological Project's (TMAP) ongoing investigations of the Iron Age levels at Mādabā, consistently identified in the documentary record as a prominent settlement in the central highland region during this period, including the results of recently analyzed radiocarbon evidence. Though preliminary, it is hoped that these results will contribute toward the continuing effort to gain a better understanding of the historical development of this region, and its broader role in the cultural and political history of the southern Levant.
Introduction
The task of delineating the process by which the Iron Age communities in the central highlands of Jordan coalesced into the culturally and territorially defined polities referred to in the Hebrew Bible and contemporary textual sources is not an easy one. By the mid-9th century BCE, however, a mosaic of autonomous regional communities appears to have emerged, as tacitly acknowledged in the Mesha Inscription by references to ‘the land of Medeba’, ‘the land of ‘Atarot’, and Mesha's own identification with Dibon and its surrounding territory.
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- Information
- The Bible and Radiocarbon DatingArchaeology, Text and Science, pp. 179 - 190Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2005