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Shivta

Coordinates: 30°53′N 34°38′E / 30.88°N 34.63°E / 30.88; 34.63
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jacek555 (talk | contribs) at 18:40, 5 October 2023 (the source "Shivta National Park" claims that it is "son of the famous American gun manufacturer". Impossible, because Samuel Colt died in 1862, and the explorer Shivta was born in 1901, the son of Harris Dunscombe Colt Sr.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Shivta
שבטה
شبطا
Shivta's southern church
Shivta is located in Israel
Shivta
Shown within Israel
Alternative namepossibly Shubitu (Nabataean), Sobota (ancient Greek), Subeita[1] and Isbeita[2] (Arabic).
LocationSouthern District, Israel
RegionNegev
Coordinates30°53′N 34°38′E / 30.88°N 34.63°E / 30.88; 34.63
TypeSettlement
History
Abandoned8th/9th century
CulturesNabataean, Byzantine
Site notes
Excavation dates1933-1934
ConditionIn ruins
Official nameIncense Route - Desert Cities in the Negev (Haluza, Mamshit, Avdat and Shivta)
TypeCultural
Criteriaiii, v
Designated2005 (29th session)
Reference no.1107
RegionEurope and North America

Shivta (Template:Lang-he), originally Sobata (Template:Lang-gr) or Subeita (Template:Lang-ar), is an ancient city in the Negev Desert of Israel located 43 kilometers southwest of Beersheba.[3] Shivta was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in June 2005, as part of the Incense Route and the Desert Cities of the Negev, together with Haluza/Elusa, Avdat and Mamshit/Mampsis.[4][5]

The name Shivta is a modern Hebraization, given by the Negev Naming Committee in the early 1950s.[6][1] The Greek name Sobata was mentioned in the Nessana papyri.

History

Subeita shown in the 1944 Survey of Palestine map
Shivta ruins

Long considered a classical Nabataean town on the ancient spice route, archaeologists are now considering the possibility that Shivta was a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Saint Catherine's Monastery in the Sinai Peninsula.[citation needed]

A few Roman-period ruins have been discovered, but most of the archaeological findings date to the Byzantine period.[citation needed] Shivta's water supply was based on surface runoff collected in large reservoirs.[7][8]

Roman period

Roman ruins from the first century BCE have been unearthed in the southern part of the town.[7]

Byzantine period

Three Byzantine churches (a main church and two smaller ones), two wine-presses, residential areas and administrative buildings have been excavated.[citation needed]

Churches

Traces of a mural of Christ's transfiguration were discovered in the apse of the southern church, as well as remains of a colourful 6th-century mosaic and a beardless depiction of Jesus in the northern church.[9][10]

Agriculture (wine)

The wine presses at Shivta give an insight into the scale of wine production at the time.[11] According to the calculations of archaeologists, the Nabatean/Byzantine village of Shivta produced about two million liters of wine.[12]

Adjacent to the site is a large farm that uses Nabatean agricultural techniques[dubiousdiscuss] of irrigation, sowing and reaping.[13]

In the early 6th century, grape production in the Negev for the so-called vinum Gazentum ('Gaza wine' in Latin) experiences a major boom, due to the high demand for this product throughout Europe and the Middle East.[14] This has been documented by studying ancient trash mounds at Shivta, Elusa and Nessana, which showed a sharp peak in the presence of grape pips and broken "Gaza jars" (a type of amphorae used in this period to export Levantine goods from the port of Gaza), following a slower rise during the fourth and fifth centuries.[14] However, mid-century two major calamities strike the Byzantine Empire and large parts of the world: a short period of climate change known as the Late Antique Little Ice Age (536-545), caused by huge volcanic eruptions in faraway places, which lead to extreme weather events; and in the 540s the first outbreak of bubonic plague in the Old World, known as the Justinianic Plague.[14] Probably as a result of these two events, international trade with luxury goods such as Gaza wine almost grounded to a halt, and in Shivta and other Negev settlements grape production again gave way to subsistence farming, focused on barley and wheat.[14] The previously widely accepted theory that the Muslim conquest, which came a century later, and the Muslim ban on alcoholic beverages were the cause for the decline of the wine industry in the Negev has been now proven wrong.[14] In nearby Nessana, the number of grape pips is even on the rise again during the Early Islamic period, probably due to the needs of a local Christian monastery.[14] This seems to indicate that the wine industry of the Negev could well be sustained over centuries through appropriate agricultural techniques and in spite of the arid climate, but that the grape monoculture was economically unsustainable in the long run.[14]

Early Muslim period

After the Arab conquest in the 7th century CE, the population dwindled.[why?] Shivta was finally abandoned in the 8th or 9th century CE.[citation needed]

Excavation history

Ulrich Jasper Seetzen was the first Westerner to visit the site when he arrived in 1805, but he misidentified it as Abde (Avdat).[15] Edward Henry Palmer came in 1870 and the following year he published the first official description,[16] while Alois Musil's 1901 visit resulted in the publication of the first photos of the ruins.[17] A team from the École Biblique in Jerusalem including famed researchers Antonin Jaussen, Raphaël Savignac and Louis-Hugues Vincent studied a few aspects of the site in 1904, Theodor Kühtreiber added a few observations in 1912.[18] The first scientific study covering agricultural and social aspects came as a result of a survey by C. L. Woolley and T. E. Lawrence (the future "Lawrence of Arabia"), taken on behalf of the Palestine Exploration Fund (PEF) in 1914.[19] During the Great War, a German team of researchers (Theodor Wiegand, Carl Watzinger and Walter Bachmann), part of the Deutsch-Türkisches Denkmalschutzkommando [de] ("German-Turkish Command for Cultural Heritage Protection"), studied the site in 1916.[20] The École Biblique returned in 1926 with a team under Raphaël Tonneau, and in 1929 with Alexis Mallon.[21]

In 1933–38, American archaeologist Harris Dunscombe Colt conducted a dig at Shivta. The house he lived in bears an inscription in ancient Greek that reads: “With good luck. Colt built (this house) with his own money."[7][22] Colt never published the result of his excavations, altogether undertaken in a scientifically less than laudable manner, which also represent the only large-scale archaeological campaigns executed at the site.[23] Much of the archaeological information is lost for good, not least due to a dubious fire at the expedition house that consumed all the collected architectural decoration and dig notes.[24]

Updates from 2018:

In January 1938, a suitcase, which contained artifacts, documents, and photographs from the archaeological excavations at Shivta, was forgotten at the Haifa port. The suitcase belonged to Harris Dunscombe Colt (1901—1973), the excavator of Shivta. Colt never came to claim the forgotten suitcase, nor was it ever sent to him. The suitcase was eventually shipped to Jerusalem and its contents were never studied or published. [25]
The artifacts, which consist of small items like jewelry, door hinges, nails, pieces of glass, objects made from bone, ivory and wood, and shards of pottery inscribed with Arabic and Greek writing, are now on display at the Hecht Museum at the University of Haifa.[26]

In the late 1940s, Bellarmino Bagatti continued work at the northern church,[27] and in the 1950s Nelson Glueck researched Shivta's ecology.[28] Between 1958-1960, Michael Avi-Yonah and made the site accessible, in the process also clearing the central church of debris.[29]

In the 1960s, botanist Michael Evenari studied the economy of Shivta and water collection in its arid environment, his methods of experimental archaeology offering important insights into subsistence farming in the Negev desert.[30]

Between 1970-1976, Avraham Negev led various surveys,[31] others following with a number of small digs, theoretical studies and mapping efforts.[32] A 2000-2001 in-depth study of Shivta's water systems, based on surveys and analysis, was the work of Tsvika Tsuk.[33]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Negev, Avraham; Gibson, Shimon (2001). Sobota; Shivta. New York and London: Continuum. p. 474. ISBN 0-8264-1316-1. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Shivta (Subeita, Isbeita), Carta Digital Ltd, accessed 5 August 2020
  3. ^ Segal, Arthur (1985-01-01). "Shivta-A Byzantine Town in the Negev Desert". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 44 (4): 317–328. doi:10.2307/990111. JSTOR 990111.
  4. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 18
  5. ^ Israel National Commission for UNESCO: Report on Activities 2004-2005, p. 30, accessed 6 August 2020
  6. ^ Beʼer-Shevaʻ. Ḳiryat-sefer. 1992. p. 61. The Arabic name of the site is A-Sbaita and is associated with the Sobata mentioned in the Nessana papyri. A. Negev assumes that the name originated from the Nabatean name Shubitu . The Hebrew name, Shivta, was awarded by the Governmental Commission of Names.
  7. ^ a b c "Shivta National Park". Archived from the original on 2013-03-04. Retrieved 2012-12-30.
  8. ^ Meet Shivta National Park, at the new homepage of the Nature and Parks Authority, accessed 5 August 2020
  9. '^ Suddenly I Saw Eyes': Jesus’ Face Discovered in Ancient Israeli Desert Church. Ruth Schuster for Haaretz, 14 November 2018. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  10. ^ Tepper, Yotam and Bar-Oz, Guy. Shivta: Preliminary Report. Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel (HA-ESI) Volume 132 Year 2020, Israel Antiquities Authority. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  11. ^ "Deep in the desert". Adam Montefiore for The Jerusalem Post. 2012-08-16. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  12. ^ "No sour grapes", Deborah Rubin Fields for The Jerusalem Post, 17 February 2011, partially accessed 5 August 2020 (subscription required)
  13. ^ "A hop, skip and a jump into the past". John Benzaquen for The Jerusalem Post, 26 August 2012. Retrieved 2020-08-05.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g "How Volcanoes and Plague Killed the Byzantine Wine Industry in Israel". Ariel David for Haaretz, 29 July 2020. Retrieved 2020-08-04.
  15. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 1
  16. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 2
  17. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 4
  18. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 5
  19. ^ Röhl (2010), pp. 6ff.
  20. ^ Röhl (2010), pp. 11ff.
  21. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 14
  22. ^ Röhl (2010), pp. 14-15
  23. ^ Röhl (2010), pp. 14-15
  24. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 15
  25. ^ "The Forgotten Suitcase".
  26. ^ "Customs Letter About a Long-Lost Suitcase Leads to Artifacts from Desert with Early 'Jesus' Painting". Live Science. 19 February 2019.
  27. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 15
  28. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 16
  29. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 16
  30. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 16
  31. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 16
  32. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 17
  33. ^ Röhl (2010), p. 18

Bibliography