A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan

In October and November of 2014 an archaeological team lead by Lucas Petit of the University of Leiden and Zeidan Kafafi of Yarmouk University uncovered a 2,700-year-old shrine at Tell Damiyah in Jordan. This had been in the center of a small village that had been closely allied with the Neo-Assyria...

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Main Author: Jaimee Uhlenbrock
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ACoSt - Association for Coroplastic Studies 2015-08-01
Series:Les Carnets de l’ACoSt
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/acost/635
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author Jaimee Uhlenbrock
author_facet Jaimee Uhlenbrock
author_sort Jaimee Uhlenbrock
collection DOAJ
description In October and November of 2014 an archaeological team lead by Lucas Petit of the University of Leiden and Zeidan Kafafi of Yarmouk University uncovered a 2,700-year-old shrine at Tell Damiyah in Jordan. This had been in the center of a small village that had been closely allied with the Neo-Assyrian capital, as is attested by written sources and ceramics. The shrine was in the form of a rectangular building with a platform measuring eight by six metres. The discovery of this shrine is of considerable importance since this is the first late Iron Age shrine to have been brought to light in the region.
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institution Kabale University
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publisher ACoSt - Association for Coroplastic Studies
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spelling doaj-art-714fcd0f1d5a40cab75cce71227090432025-01-09T12:59:38ZengACoSt - Association for Coroplastic StudiesLes Carnets de l’ACoSt2431-85742015-08-011310.4000/acost.635A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in JordanJaimee UhlenbrockIn October and November of 2014 an archaeological team lead by Lucas Petit of the University of Leiden and Zeidan Kafafi of Yarmouk University uncovered a 2,700-year-old shrine at Tell Damiyah in Jordan. This had been in the center of a small village that had been closely allied with the Neo-Assyrian capital, as is attested by written sources and ceramics. The shrine was in the form of a rectangular building with a platform measuring eight by six metres. The discovery of this shrine is of considerable importance since this is the first late Iron Age shrine to have been brought to light in the region.https://journals.openedition.org/acost/635
spellingShingle Jaimee Uhlenbrock
A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan
Les Carnets de l’ACoSt
title A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan
title_full A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan
title_fullStr A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan
title_full_unstemmed A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan
title_short A Unique Shrine From the Late Iron Age in Jordan
title_sort unique shrine from the late iron age in jordan
url https://journals.openedition.org/acost/635
work_keys_str_mv AT jaimeeuhlenbrock auniqueshrinefromthelateironageinjordan
AT jaimeeuhlenbrock uniqueshrinefromthelateironageinjordan