Projekte
Profil Lebenslauf Publikationen Projekte
- PD Dr. Berit Hildebrandt, Seminar for Prehistory and Early History, University of Göttingen
- Prof. Dr. Guy Bar-Oz, Department of Archaeology, University of Haifa
- Dr. Orit Shamir, National Treasures, Israel Antiquities Authority
Project:
The trade
and exchange of goods, people, and technologies in Antiquity along the
so-called Silk Roads have been the subject of numerous studies in recent
decades. Our project’s goal is to contribute to this global world history by
examining the textile finds from a small village and way station along an
ancient trade route in the Negev Desert in what is today Israel. The village,
Nahal Omer, can be dated to the Late Byzantine (6th century CE) and Early
Islamic periods (7-8th centuries CE). Nahal Omer’s prominence derives from its
excellently preserved organic materials. Through a case study of archaeological
silk and cotton textiles, and applying cutting-edge bioarchaeological methods,
we will for the first time determine these textiles’ origins and places of
production and highlight the longue durée as well as the breaks and
changes in textile trade and production along this part of the Silk Roads. Our
research methodologies combine datasets from the Eastern and Western
Mediterranean, together with evaluation of textual and iconographic sources, in
order to better understand the movements of textile goods, traders, and
consumers. Taking a bottom-up approach, we will look at one of the
often-neglected smaller settlements and silk roads, focusing on the impact of
long-distance trade on the communities scattered along the peripheral trade
routes; and add this hitherto little known artery of the “Israeli Silk Road” to
the larger systems of connectivity.