Israeli Archaeologists
on Wednesday unveiled a fortified structure from the time of the King David on
the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights that sheds light on the borders of a
Biblical Israeli ally.
The 3,000-year-old fort, found near the Jewish settlement of Hispin ahead of
works to build a new neighbourhood, is believed to have belonged to the
Geshurites, King David’s allies.
Locally quarried basalt boulders form the
metre-and-a-half (five-foot) thick walls of the hilltop complex. Barak Tzin,
who directed its excavation for the Israel Antiquities Authority, estimated
that it covered more than 1,000 square metres (a quarter of an acre).
Diggers
found a large stone with an engraving of two horned figures stretching out
their arms and a statuette of a woman holding a musical instrument, possibly a
drum.
“That also links us to finds from the Iron
Age,” Tzin said, noting similar artefacts uncovered in Bethsaida, “a site
linked to the capital of the Geshur kingdom” that lies west of Hispin on the
northern shore of the Sea of Galilee.
Tzin said there is source material indicating “family ties” between the Geshur
kingdom and the kingdom of David.
The Hispin
fortress, the first of its kind to be excavated, adds a rare “piece to the
puzzle” of Golan archaeology, Tzin said.
“This phenomenon might be more widespread that
we know. Golan research is not yet at a high level… We’re only beginning to
rediscover the Golan now.” Future finds might help define clearer boundaries
for the Geshurite kingdom, while the Hispin fortress “fills out its middle,” he
said.
“We believe (the kingdom) spread to Syria — it
fills in the space between,” he said of the Hispin site.
“The picture is beginning to get a bit more clear.
[AFP]
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