Archaeological excavations show that the site (a tell or archaeological mound) was continuously inhabited since the 5th millennium BCE.[5] It appears on the Madaba Map as Saphitha, while the Crusaders called it Blanche Garde.[6][7] It is mentioned by Arab geographers in the 13th and 16th centuries. Under the Ottoman Empire, it was part of the district of Gaza. In modern times, the houses were built of sun-dried brick. The villagers were Muslim and cultivated cereals and orchards.
Today the site, known as Tel Tzafit, is an Israeli national park incorporating archaeological remains which some have identified as the Philistine city of Gath, mentioned in the Bible.[8] The remains of the Crusader fort and the Arab village can also be seen on the tell.[5]
Names
The 6th-century Madaba Map calls it Saphitha.[6][7] In the 19th century the white chalk cliff at the site was seen as the cause for the Arabic name: Tell es-Safi means "clear or bright mound".[9] The name used in the Crusader period was Blanche Garde, the "White Fortress" in French, and Alba Specula or Alba Custodia Latin.[10]
Geography
Tell es-Safi sits on a site 300 feet (91 m) above the plain of Philistia and 700 feet (210 m) above sea level, and its white-faced precipices can be seen from the north and west from several hours distant.[8] Tell es-Safi is situated between the Israeli cities of Ashkelon and Beit Shemesh and is one of the country's largest Bronze and Iron Age sites.[11]
Identification with Gath
Victor Guérin thought that Tell es-Safi was the "watch-tower" mentioned in Joshua 15:38, based on its etymological meaning,[12] but the site is now believed to be the site of the Philistine city of Gath. The identification was opposed by Albright, who noted its proximity to another leading city from the Philistine league, Ekron (Tel Miqne), but later excavations turned up more supportive evidence for Tell es-Safi.[13][14][15]
Schniedewind writes that Gath was important for the Philistines in the eighth century BCE because of its easily defended geographical position. Albright argued that Tell es-Safi was too close to Tel Miqne/Ekron to be Gath. The sites are only 8 km apart. However, both Tell es-Safi and Tel Miqne were major sites in the Middle Bronze through the Iron Age. The agricultural features of this region of the southern coastal plain may be part of the explanation. Additionally, there is no certainty that the two sites flourished simultaneously. Literary sources suggest that Gath flourished in the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages until its destruction by the Assyrians in the late eighth century BCE. The heyday of Ekron was the seventh century BCE, after the site was taken over by the Assyrians as an agricultural administrative center (Dothan and Gitin 1993).[16]
History and archaeology
Excavations at Tell es-Safi since 1996[11] indicate that the site was settled "virtually continuously from the Chalcolithic until the modern periods."[5]
Bronze Age
Canaanite city
The site was already a significant settlement in the Early Bronze Age with an estimated area of 24 hectares. Finds from this period include a hippopotamusivorycylinder seal, found inside a holemouth jar in a well stratified EB III (c. 2700/2600 – 2350 BCE) context. The motif was that of a crouching male lion.[17][18]
Stratigraphic evidence attests to settlement in the Late Bronze and Iron Age (I & II) periods.[5] By the Late Bronze Age the site had reached an extent of 34 hectares. A find of a hieratic inscribed LBA bowl fragment (19th - 20th Dynasty) reflects the Egyptian contacts common in this region during this period.[19]
Iron Age
Philistine presence
There is stratigraphic evidence for settlement in the Iron Age I & II periods.[5] A large city in the Iron Age, the site was "enclosed on three sides by a large man-made siege-moat."[20]
Radiocarbon dating published in 2015 showed an early appearance of Philistinematerial culture in the city.[21] According to 2010 reports, Israeli archaeologists uncovered evidence of the first Philistine settlement in Canaan, as well as a Philistine temple and evidence of a major earthquake in biblical times.[22]
Archaeologists have discovered a horned altar dating to the 9th century BCE. The stone artefact is over 3 feet (one meter) tall, and is the earliest ever found in Philistia. It features a pair of horns, similar to the ancient Israelite altars described in the Hebrew Bible (Exodus 27:1–2; 1 Kings 1:50), the Israelite altars however typically have four horns, such as found in Tel Be'er Sheva, for example, as opposed to two.[23]
The 2010 reports mention evidence of destruction by King Hazael of Aram-Damascus around 830 BCE.[22]
During the Crusades, the site was called Blanchegarde ("White guard"), likely referring to the white rock outcrop next to the site.[24] In 1142, a fort was built on the site by King Fulk. After the Siege of Ascalon in 1153, the castle was expanded and strengthened.[25] It became a lordship in 1166, when it was given to Walter III Brisebarre, lord of Beirut.
It was dismantled after being taken by Saladin in 1191,[24][26] but reconstructed by Richard the Lionheart in 1192. Richard was nearly captured while inspecting his troops next to the site.[24]
In 1253, Gilles' son Raoul (died after 1265) was documented as lord of Blanchegard. In 1265, the Baron Amalric Barlais, who was loyal to the Hohenstaufen, took over the rule of Blanchegard.[27] Shortly thereafter Blanchegard was retaken by Muslim forces. The remnants of the square castle and its four towers served as a place of some importance in the village well into the 19th century.[8][28][29]
The Arab geographer Mujir al-Din al-Hanbali noted around 1495 that a village by this name was within the administrative jurisdiction of Gaza.[24][31]
Ottoman period
The village was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517 with all of Palestine, and in 1596 it appeared in the tax registers being in the nahiya (subdistrict) of Gaza under Gaza Sanjak, with a population of 88 Muslim households; an estimated 484 persons. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of 25% on a number of crops, including wheat, barley and sesame, and fruits, as well as goats and beehives; a total of 13,300 akçe.[32]
In 1838 Edward Robinson described Tell es-Safieh as a Muslim village in the Gaza district.[33] It was "an isolated oblong hill or ridge, lying from N.to S. in the plain, the highest part being towards the South. The village lies near the middle; lower down."
The Sheikh, Muhammed Sellim, belonged to the 'Azzeh family of Bayt Jibrin. After his family took part in the Peasants' Revolt of 1834, his father and uncle were beheaded and the remaining family was ordered to take up residence at Tell es-Safi.[34]
When Victor Guérin visited in 1863, he saw two small Muslimwalīs.[35] An Ottoman village list drawn up around 1870 counted 34 houses and a population of 165 men.[36][37]
In 1883, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine described Tell al-Safi as a village built of adobe brick with a well in the valley to the north.[38] James Hastings notes that the village contained a sacred wely.[8]
In 1896, the population was around 495 persons.[39]
The villagers of Tall al-Safi had a mosque, a marketplace, and a shrine for a local sage called Shaykh Mohammad. In the 1945 statistics, the total population was 1,290, all Muslims,[2] and the land area was 27,794 dunams of land.[1] Of this, a total of 19,716 dunums of land were used for cereals, 696 dunums were irrigated or used for orchards,[42] while 68 dunams were classified as built-up (urban) areas.[43]
Israel
1948 war
In 1948, Tell es-Safi was the destination for the women and children of Qastina, sent away by the menfolk of Qastina at this time, but they returned after discovering there was insufficient water in the host village to meet the newcomers' needs.[44]
On 7 July Givati commander Shimon Avidan issued orders to the 51st Battalion to take the Tall al-Safi area and "to destroy, to kill and to expel [lehashmid, leharog, u´legaresh] refugees encamped in the area, in order to prevent enemy infiltration from the east to this important position."[45] According to Benny Morris, the nature of the written order and, presumably, accompanying oral explanations, probably left little doubt in the battalion OC's minds that Avidan wanted the area cleared of inhabitants.[46][47]
Arab village remains
In 1992, Walid Khalidi wrote that the site was overgrown with wild vegetation, mainly foxtail and thorny plants, interspersed with cactuses, date-palm and olive trees. He noted the remains of a well and the crumbling stone walls of a pool. The surrounding land was planted by Israeli farmers with citrus trees, sunflowers, and grain. A few tents belonging to Bedouin were occasionally pitched nearby.[24]
National park
The site is now an Israeli national park and the site of ongoing archaeological excavations.[48]
Archaeological exploration
The site was visited in 1875 by Claude Reignier Conder who was impressed with its height and position in the landscape but not impressed by the "insolent peasants". The only visible remains were those of the Crusader era fortress.[49]
The first excavations at the site began in 1899 when Frederick J. Bliss and R. A. Stewart Macalister worked for three seasons on behalf of the Palestine Exploration Fund. While in the early days of archaeology the methods of Bliss were reasonably advanced for those days. The excavation failed in its primary goal of firmly identifying the site as Gath but did properly work out the stratigraphy.[50][51][52][53][54][55]
In the 1950 and 1960s Moshe Dayan conducted illegal digs at Tell es-Safi and other sites. Some of the robber holes can still be seen at the site today. Many of the objects from these digs ended up at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.[56]
Since 1996 the site has been excavated by the Tell es-Safi/Gath Archaeological Project led by Aren Maeir.[57][58]
^Harris, Horton (2011). "The location of Ziklag: a review of the candidate sites, based on Biblical, topographical and archaeological evidence". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 143 (2): 119–133. doi:10.1179/003103211x12971861556954. S2CID162186999.
^Maeir, Aren M., et al. "'Like a Lion in Cover': A Cylinder Seal from Early Bronze Age III Tell Eṣ-Ṣafi/Gath, Israel." Israel Exploration Journal, vol. 61, no. 1, 2011, pp. 12–31.
^[1]Ross, J., et al. "In search of Early Bronze Age potters at Tell es-Safi/Gath: A new perspective on vessel manufacture for discriminating chaines operatoires". Archaeological Review from Cambridge, vol. 35, 2020, pp. 74-89.
^Wimmer, Stefan J., and Aren M. Maeir. "'The Prince of Safit?': A Late Bronze Age Hieratic Inscription from Tell Eṣ-Ṣāfi/Gath." Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins, vol. 123, no. 1, 2007, pp. 37–48.
^Givati, Operation An-Far, 7 July 1948, IDFA 7011\49\\1. Cited in Morris, 2004, p. 436. Also see note#127, p. 456 According to Morris, Avraham Ayalon (1963): The Givati Brigade Opposite the Egyptian Invader. pp. 227-28 "gives a laundered version of the order, – which I (unfortunately) used in the original edition of The Birth." The "laundered" version does not contain the words: "to destroy, to kill".
^Bliss, Frederick J. "Fourth Report on the Excavations at Tell Zakarîya; Third Report on the Excavations at Tell es-Sâfi; List of Casts and Moulds." Palestine Exploration Quarterly 32.1 (1900): 7-29
^Rona S. Avissar Lewis, and Aren M. Maeir. “New Insights into Bliss and Macalister’s Excavations at Tell Eṣ-Ṣâfi/Gath.” Near Eastern Archaeology, vol. 80, no. 4, 2017, pp. 241–43, https://doi.org/10.5615/neareastarch.80.4.0241
^Aren M. Maeir and Joe Uziel, "Tell es-Safi / Gath II: Excavations and Studies", Ägypten und Altes Testament, vol. 105, Zaphon, 2020 ISBN978-3-96327-128-1