Alternative name | Dromolaxia-Vyzakia |
---|---|
Location | Larnaca, Cyprus |
Coordinates | 34°53′07″N33°36′36″E / 34.885277°N 33.610013°E |
Type | settlement |
History | |
Founded | 2nd millennium BC |
Periods | Late Bronze Age |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 1897-1898, 1948, 1971-2008, 2010-present |
Archaeologists | Henry Beauchamp Walters, John Winter Crowfoot, Arne Furumark, Vassos Karageorghis, Paul Åström, Peter Fischer |
Condition | Ruined |
Ownership | Public |
Public access | No |
Hala Sultan Tekke (occasionally referred to as Dromolaxia-Vyzakia) is an ancient archaeological site which lies close to the mosque of the same name and to the international airport of Larnaca on the south coast of Cyprus. The site lies on the western shore of the half square kilometer Larnaca Salt Lake. In the Late Bronze Age the lake was open to the Mediterranean, acting as a protected harbor for the settlement. Hala Sultan Tekke was occupied in the middle of the 2nd century BC, c. 1650 BC, and reached its peak in the 12th and 13th century BC before being destroyed and abandoned c. 1150 BC. Its ancient name is still unknown. The site has been subject to looting at various periods in the past and is endangered by modern deep agricultural plowing at the edges. Despite being only occupied for a few centuries this is a notable archaeological site with a long history of small scale modern excavation. [1]
John Myres examined the site briefly in 1894. The site was excavated for about a week in December 1897 by Henry Beauchamp Walters on behalf of the British Museum with "not more than 40 workers". The extent of his work is unclear but he recorded 10 tombs. In April 1898 John Winter Crowfoot worked at the site for 8 days, also for the British Museum. He emptied "fifty or sixty chamber tombs and several wells" and recorded 13 of the tombs which dated from the Middle Cypriot III and Late Cypriot IA-IIC periods (c. 1600-1080 BC). The tombs had already been partly looted. Finds included Mycenae, Minoan, and Canaanite pottery, objects of gold, silver, faience, glass, bronze, and ivory, a cylinder seal, and a Cypro-Minoan inscribed clay ball (4 in total have now been found). [2] The excavator indicated some objects were imported from Egypt. In neither of these early excavations were resulted published though a few excavator notes are available. [3] [4] In 1948 Arne Furumark discovered a large pithos at the site and did a short excavation of it. In 1968 Vassos Karageorghis excavated two circular chamber tombs with central roof openings in a location later excavators called "Area A, ‘The Cemetery’". All the burials showed signs of plagiocephaly, intentional cranial deformation. Finds included animal bones, ostrich eggs, objects of silver, gold, ivory, bronze, lead, and carnelian, and three cylinder seals. Mycenae pottery and Late Minoan IIIA-IIIB stirrup jars, kraters, and a bowl were also found. [5]
In 1971 a topographic survey was conducted in three trial trenches were dug by the Swedish Cyprus Expedition from the University of Gothenburg, led by Paul Åström. [6] The survey showed that the settlement covered about 600 meters east to west and about 450 meters north to south. In 1972, after a proton magnetometry survey was conducted, small scale excavations began, continuing until 2008, interrupted by war in 1974. Based on the survey areas were defined in the settlement. In Area 6, northwest, a 1.2 meter wall was found and 4th century BC sling bullets with signs in classical Cypriot syllabary. In Area 8, central, a large building dating to Late Cypriot III A2, with courtyard, was discovered. On room in that build had ashlar block floors and walls revetted with thin stone slabs with a well containing "drinking cups, grape pips, grains, and fishbones". A wide staircase in the front of the room led down to the courtyard. [7] Nearby finds included stone mould for casting copper arrowheads, a bronze shovel with twisted handle, a bronze needle, a bronze pin, a faience head, a carnelian bead, and two pithoi with short Cypro-Minoan syllabary inscriptions. [8] [9] [10] Other finds in this area included terracotta figurines, faience beads, crushed murex shells, red ochre, an ivory comb, a clay ball and stone weights with Cypriot syllabary inscriptions, and a faience scepter with a cartouche of pharaoh Horemheb. Two looted chamber tombs were cleared and produced a hematite cylinder seal. [11] An extensive industry in copper production and coppersmithing was discovered. [12] [13] Underwater exploration between Kiti and Cape Greco finding a number of anchors and other nautical items from various periods. [14] In 1979 a Very Low Frequency Discriminative Detector survey found a number of metal object including lead sling bullets. [15]
Excavation resumed (sometimes referred to as the "New Swedish Cyprus Expedition" or "The Söderberg Expedition") under Peter Fischer in 2010. [16] The excavators noted that some looting has occurred in various periods at the site over the last century between excavations resulting in objects appearing on the antiquities market without provenance. From 2010 until 2019 excavation focused on city center area CQ1, CQ2, CQ3, and CQ4 (which was near the harbor and buildings had sturdier construction. [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] There were five strata of occupation layers: [22]
Much of the effort as been on the cemetery area and a major focus has been "safeguarding and recording of tombs which are exposed to destruction by farming, erosion and potential looting". The cemetery lies in the east-south-east part of the site, has an area of several hectares, and is on a slightly raised platform. The tombs there have associated ritual pits and consists of chamber tombs, shaft tombs, and re-used wells. [23] [24] Sample for AMS radiocarbon dating (calibration with INTCAL13) were collected from the city area and from the cemetery. Calibrating C-14 dated from this time are difficult. [25]
The chronology of Cyprus during the later half of the 2nd millennium BC is defined as follows (different researchers use slightly different dates): [26]
Occupation at began c. 1650 BC in Middle Cypriot III–Late Cypriot I with most of the earlier material being found in cemeteries. Primary remains from the site are from the final occupation from the 13th century BC until the middle of the 12th century BC in Late Cypriot IIIA period when the settlement reached its greatest extent with an estimated population of about 11,000. Afterward it was permanently abandoned after being violently destroyed by conflagration c. 1150 BC, part of a regional wide phenomenon. [27] The town was laid out in a grid pattern with roads as wide as 4 meters. [28] Imports found at the site indicate it was part of a large trading network which extended to Egypt, Italy, the Aegean, Anatolia, and the Levant. The many Syria/Mesopotamia seals found show an administrative system was in function. [29] [30] [25] [31]