• Published 00:00 27.12.04
  • Latest update 03:50 27.12.04

Ancient village located near coast

By The Associated Press

Archeologists have discovered a village on the coast near Tel Aviv dating from the fourth century B.C.E, the Israel Antiquities Authority announced yesterday.

The discovery - a rare find - provides an unusual insight into a turbulent period when there were intense struggles for control over the area, said Uzi Ad, who led the dig.

During this period the region was under the rule of the Egyptian Ptolemy empire and then the Selucid Greeks from Syria before it was conquered by the Jewish Hasmonean dynasty in the second century B.C.E.

"The village was abandoned after the area was conquered by the Hasmoneans," Ad said. It was found just south of Tel Aviv, about 4 kilometers inland from the Mediterranean Sea.

While there are a number of towns from this period, there have been very few villages from this period found, said archaeologist Shimon Gibson, who was not involved in the excavations.

"When it comes to villages, we really don't have a lot of information," Gibson said. "This will shed light on how villages at that time functioned, so that's an important insight," he said.

At the site, which spans five acres, the archeologists have uncovered an industrial area for producing clay pots, a large mausoleum, a cemetery and several buildings built out of mud bricks, Ad said.

Archeologists also found 11 pits, apparently dug to hold garbage, placed downwind to the east of the village so that the smell wouldn't bother the residents, Ad said.

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