Figurines and Their Makers: A View from a Canaanite Cultic Enclosure at Tel Burna

Jon Ross, Itzhaq Shai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Plaque figurines are a well-established Canaanite tradition of the Late Bronze Age Southern Levant. In this paper, we go beyond typology to consider who made these ritual objects at Tel Burna, based on impressions of fingerprints from shaping these figurines using an open mold. The lack of care exhibited on the backs and sides of the plaques has enabled a fingerprint analysis using proven biometric methods to clarify the demographics of their producers and the division of labor. Such analyses, when possible, potentially add another dimension to existing debates over how these cultic objects functioned in society, who made them and what they may or may not represent.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)43-76
Number of pages34
JournalAtiqot
Volume116
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Keywords

  • age and sex determination
  • fingerprints
  • Late Bronze Age
  • Levant
  • plaque figurines
  • Tel Burna

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