外来食物植物作为有声望的礼物:以色列泰尔伯示麦阿玛纳时代宫殿的考古植物学

Ehud Weiss, Y. Mahler-Slasky, Y. Melamed, Zvi Lederman, Shlomo Bunimovitz, Shawn Bubel, D. Manor
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引用次数: 5

摘要

与el-Amarna档案中相对丰富的关于阿玛纳时代(青铜时代晚期ii;公元前14世纪),这些遗址的考古资料仍然缺乏。这种不幸的情况凸显了最近在Tel Beth-Shemesh的青铜时代晚期宫殿中收集的大约6万件植物的重要性。宫殿里的L1505房间——从里面的食物和准备和消费食物的容器来看,显然是一个食品储藏室——里面有8个碳化的农作物。发现了几乎纯谷物和极少量杂草种子的沉积物,表明这些储存的食用植物已准备好用于食品制备。特别有趣的是在黎凡特考古植物中发现了数量可观的两种稀有植物——胡芦巴(Trigonella foenum-graecum)和塞浦路斯野豌豆(Lathyrus ochrus)——这两种植物只在另外两个青铜时代的王室背景中被发现:埃及的图坦卡蒙陵墓和克诺索斯的米诺斯二世晚期未开发的豪宅。因此,除了证明了阿玛纳时代迦南统治宫廷的农业实践和烹饪偏好外,这些植物组合还暗示了著名的皇室礼物交换的外来食用植物。
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Foreign Food Plants as Prestigious Gifts: The Archaeobotany of the Amarna Age Palace at Tel Beth-Shemesh, Israel
In contrast with the relatively rich documentation from the el-Amarna archive related to the main city-states of the southern Levant in the Amarna Age (Late Bronze Age IIA; 14th century b.c.e.), archaeological data from these sites is still wanting. This unfortunate situation highlights the importance of the ca. 60,000-item plant collection from the recently exposed Late Bronze Age IIA palace at Tel Beth-Shemesh. Room L1505 in the palace—apparently a pantry due to its contents of foodstuffs and vessels for food preparation and consumption—contained eight deposits of carbonized crop plants. Deposits of almost pure grains and very low numbers of weed seeds were found, indicating that these stored food plants were ready to be used in food preparation. Of special interest is the presence of a sizeable amount of two rare pulses in Levantine archaeobotany—fenugreek (Trigonella foenum-graecum) and Cyprus vetch (Lathyrus ochrus)—only found in two other Bronze Age royal contexts: Tutankhamun’s tomb in Egypt and the Late Minoan II Unexplored Mansion in Knossos. Thus, in addition to attesting to the agricultural practices and culinary preferences of a Canaanite ruling court during the Amarna Age, this botanical assemblage also hints at prestigious royal gift exchanges of exotic food plants.
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From the Editors, Fall 2021 Back Matter Framing Archaeology in the Near East: The Application of Social Theory to Fieldwork, ed. by Ianir Milevski and Thomas E. Levy. New Directions in Anthropological Archaeology. Bristol, CT: Equinox Publishing, 2016. 156 pp., 13 figures. Hardcover $100. Front Cover Index
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