An Intrasite Analysis of Agricultural Economy at Early Islamic Caesarea Maritima, Israel

  • Kathleen M. Forste Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston, USA.
Keywords: Archaeobotany, Israel, Early Islamic period, Agricultural economy, Intrasite analysis

Abstract

The archaeological site of Caesarea Maritima in modern-day Israel was an important coastal town in the Early Islamic period (c. 636–1100 CE). In this article, I analyze 15 samples of carbonized wood and non-wood macrobotanical remains recovered from two residential neighborhoods to investigate the production and consumption of agricultural plant products. The identified crop and wood taxa are typical for the Mediterranean coast. Wild seeds point to crop cultivation in the vicinity of the site. Plant remains were collected from discrete contexts and are interpreted with associated features and artifacts, revealing cereal processing debris across a series of rooms in a former warehouse. Such a socioeconomic shift in this building, from a storage area to a crop processing space, is detectable by combining this intrasite analysis with the diachronic research previously conducted at the site.

Author Biography

Kathleen M. Forste, Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston, USA.

Kathleen M. Forste is an anthropological archaeologist with interests in paleoethnobotany/archaeobotany, agricultural economy, and her research currently focuses on the Early Islamic period in ancient Palestine.

References

’Ad, U., Y. Arbel, and P. Gendelman. 2018. Caesarea, Area LL: Preliminary Report. Hadashot Arkheologiyot 130:1–13.

al-Muqaddasī. 1886. Description of Syria, Including Palestine. Translated by Guy LeStrange. Palestine Pilgrims’ Text Society, London.

Avni, G. 2014. The Byzantine-Islamic Transition in Palestine: An Archaeological Approach. Oxford University Press, New York.

Bouchaud, C., C. Newton, M. Van der Veen, and C. Vermeeren. 2018. Fuelwood and Wood Supplies in the Eastern Desert of Egypt during Roman Times. In The Eastern Desert of Egypt during the Greco-Roman Period: Archaeological Reports, edited by J. Brun, T. Faucher, B. Redon, and S. Sidebotham. Collège de France, Paris. DOI:10.4000/books.cdf.5237.

d’Alpoim Guedes, J., and R. Spengler. 2014. Sampling Strategies in Paleoethnobotanical Analysis. In Method and Theory in Paleoethnobotany, edited by J. M. Marston, J. d’Alpoim Guedes, and C. Warinner, pp. 77–94. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, CO.

Danin, A., and G. Orshan. 1999. Vegetation of Israel. Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, Netherlands.

Decker, M. J. 2009. Tilling the Hateful Earth: Agricultural Production and Trade in the Late Antique East. Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York.

Feinbrun-Dothan, N. 1978. Flora Palaestina. Part Three, Text. Ericaceae to Compositaceae. Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Jerusalem.

Feinbrun-Dothan, N. 1986. Flora Palaestina: Part Four. Text. Alismataceae to Orchidaceae. The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Jerusalem.

Gil, M. 1992. A History of Palestine, 634-1099. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Hillman, G. C. 1984. Interpretation of Archaeological Plant Remains: The Application of Ethnographic Models from Turkey. In Plants and Ancient Man: Studies in Paleoethnobotany, edited by W. van Zeist and W. A. Casparie, pp. 1–41. A. A. Balkema, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

Holum, K. 2014. The Archaeology of Caesarea Maritima. In Archaeology in the Land of “Tells and Ruins”: A History of Excavations in the Holy Land Inspired by the Photographs and Accounts of Leo Boer, edited by B. Wagemakers, pp. 183–199. Oxford books, Oxford.

Holum, K. G. 2011. Caesarea in Palestine: Shaping the Early Islamic Town. In Le Proche-Orient de Justinien Aux Abbassides: Peuplement et Dynamiques Spatiales, edited by M. D. Borrut, A. Papaconstantinou, D. Pieri, and J.-P. Sodini, pp. 169–186. Brepols Publishers, Turnhout, Belgium.

Jones, I. W. N., E. Ben-Yosef, B. Lorentzen, M. Najjar, and T. E. Levy. 2017. Khirbat Al-Mana‘iyya: An Early Islamic-Period Copper-Smelting Site in South-Eastern Wadi ‘Araba, Jordan. Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 28:297–314. DOI:10.1111/aae.12096.

Kraemer, C. J. 1958. Excavations at Nessana, Volume 3: Non-Literary Papyri. Princeton University Press, Princeton.

Liphschitz, N. 2007. Timber in Ancient Israel. Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv.

Patrich, J. 2011 Studies in the Archaeology and History of Caesarea Maritima: Caput Judaeae, Metropolis Palestinae. Brill, Leiden, Boston.

Ramsay, J., and K. Holum. 2015. An Archaeobotanical Analysis of the Islamic Period Occupation at Caesarea Maritima, Israel. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 24:655–671. DOI:10.1007/s00334-015-0519-x.

Ramsay, J., Y. Tepper, M. Weinstein-Evron, S. Aharonovich, N. Liphschitz, N. Marom, and G. Bar-Oz. 2016. For the Birds—An Environmental Archaeological Analysis of Byzantine Pigeon Towers at Shivta (Negev Desert, Israel). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 9:718–727. DOI:10.1016/j.jasrep.2016.08.009.

Rowan, E. 2015. Olive Oil Pressing Waste as a Fuel Source in Antiquity. American Journal of Archaeology 119:465–482. DOI: 10.3764/aja.119.4.0465.

Stevens, C. J. 2003. An Investigation of Agricultural Consumption and Production Models for Prehistoric and Roman Britain. Environmental Archaeology 8:61–76.

Taxel, I., D. Sivan, R. Bookman, and J. Roskin. 2018. An Early Islamic Inter-Settlement Agroecosystem in the Coastal Sand of the Yavneh Dunefield, Israel. Journal of Field Archaeology 43:7, 551–569. DOI:10.1080/00934690.2018.1522189.

VanDerwarker, A. M., J. V. Alvarado, and P. Webb. 2014. Analysis and Interpretation of Intrasite Variability in Paleoethnobotanical Remains: A Consideration and Application of Methods at the Ravensford Site, North Carolina. In Method and Theory in Paleoethnobotany, edited by J. M. Marston, J. d’Alpoim Guedes, and C. Warinner, pp. 205–234. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, CO.

van der Veen, M. 2007. Formation Processes of Desiccated and Carbonized Plant Remains—The Identification of Routine Practice. Journal of Archaeological Science 34:968–990. DOI:10.1016/j.jas.2006.09.007.

van der Veen, M. 2011. Consumption, Trade and Innovation: Exploring the Botanical Remains from the Roman and Islamic Ports at Quseir Al-Qadim, Egypt. Africa Magna Verlag, Frankfurt.

White, C. E., and C. P. Shelton. 2014. Recovering Macrobotanical Remains: Current Methods and Techniques. In Method and Theory in Paleoethnobotany, edited by J. M. Marston, J. D’Alpoim Guedes, and C. Warinner, pp. 95–114. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, CO.

Zohary, M. 1966. Flora Palaestina: Part One, Text. Equisetaceae to Moringaceae. The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Jerusalem.

Zohary, M. 1987. Flora Palaestina: Part Two, Text. Plantaceae to Umbelliferae. Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Jerusalem.

Figure 2 Area LL with sample locations. Pie charts show percentage of economic seeds by weight in each sample (Sample 20656 is not displayed because it contained no economic seeds). Plan courtesy of Yoav Arbel and the IAA.
Published
2021-03-19
How to Cite
Forste, K. M. (2021). An Intrasite Analysis of Agricultural Economy at Early Islamic Caesarea Maritima, Israel. Ethnobiology Letters, 12(1), 58-69. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.12.1.2021.1718
Section
Research Communications