TY - JOUR
T1 - The birth, life and death of an Iron Age house at Tel ‘Eton, Israel
AU - Faust, Avraham
AU - Katz, Hayah
AU - Sapir, Yair
AU - Avraham, Assaf
AU - Marder, Ofer
AU - Bar-Oz, Guy
AU - Weiss, Ehud
AU - Auman-Chazan, Chen
AU - Hartmann-Shenkman, Anat
AU - Sadiel, Tehila
AU - Vilnay, Oren
AU - Tsesarsky, Michael
AU - Sarah, Pariente
AU - Ackermann, Oren
AU - Timmer, Natasha
AU - Katz, Ofir
AU - Langgut, Dafna
AU - Benzaquen, Mordechay
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, © Council for British Research in the Levant 2017.
PY - 2017/5/4
Y1 - 2017/5/4
N2 - Using a biographic-like approach, this article presents the initial results of the study of an elite Iron Age house at Tel ‘Eton, from its conception, through its birth and life, to its death and decomposition. Massive preparations preceded the construction of the house, and the latter incorporated continuous foundations, and quality building materials, including ashlar stones. The building was pre-planned, and some of the original rooms had two doorways leading to them, in order to enable easy future sub-division, without endangering the structure's physical integrity. The house evolved over the years, and its inner division changed overtime, reflecting the changes in the life-cycle of the extended family that lived in it. The house was destroyed in heavy conflagration in the late 8th century BC; hundreds of artifacts and complete vessels were unearthed below and within the debris, allowing for a detailed reconstruction of the use of space within the building on the eve of its destruction and the processes that accompanied its destruction (perhaps even ‘execution’), and subsequent collapse.
AB - Using a biographic-like approach, this article presents the initial results of the study of an elite Iron Age house at Tel ‘Eton, from its conception, through its birth and life, to its death and decomposition. Massive preparations preceded the construction of the house, and the latter incorporated continuous foundations, and quality building materials, including ashlar stones. The building was pre-planned, and some of the original rooms had two doorways leading to them, in order to enable easy future sub-division, without endangering the structure's physical integrity. The house evolved over the years, and its inner division changed overtime, reflecting the changes in the life-cycle of the extended family that lived in it. The house was destroyed in heavy conflagration in the late 8th century BC; hundreds of artifacts and complete vessels were unearthed below and within the debris, allowing for a detailed reconstruction of the use of space within the building on the eve of its destruction and the processes that accompanied its destruction (perhaps even ‘execution’), and subsequent collapse.
KW - construction
KW - destruction
KW - four-room houses
KW - household archaeology
KW - use of Space
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85033715014&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00758914.2017.1388027
DO - 10.1080/00758914.2017.1388027
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AN - SCOPUS:85033715014
SN - 0075-8914
VL - 49
SP - 136
EP - 173
JO - Levant
JF - Levant
IS - 2
ER -