Tell Abraq

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Tell Abraq
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Shown within United Arab Emirates
Coordinates 25°29′00″N55°33′00″E / 25.48333°N 55.55000°E / 25.48333; 55.55000
Typesettlement
History
Founded2nd millennium BC
Periods Bronze Age, Iron Age
Cultures Umm Al Nar culture
Site notes
Excavation dates1989 - 1998
ArchaeologistsDaniel Potts
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
Public accessYes

Tell Abraq (Til Abrook) was an ancient Near Eastern city. Located on the border between Sharjah and Umm Al Quwain in the United Arab Emirates about 50 kilometers north-east of Dubai, the city was originally on the coastline of the Persian Gulf but changing sea levels have placed the remains of the city inland. It is located on the main road from Umm Al Quwain to Falaj Al Mualla.

Contents

The mound containing the ruins of Tell Abraq was originally excavated by a team from the University of Copenhagen working on the extensive remains of the city of Ed-Dur, a few kilometres to the north. Their original intention was to confirm the time sequence prior to Ed-Dur's primacy, around 1,000 BC. However, they were surprised to find extensive indications of much earlier settlement, dating back to the Umm Al Nar period, including a 3rd millennium monumental fortification.

Tell Abraq has been cited as being the "best preserved and largest prehistoric settlement in the Lower Gulf" [1] and is thought to be one of the key locations of the area the Sumerians knew as 'Magan'. [2]

History

Finds at Tell Abraq show human occupation through the Umm Al Nar, Wadi Suq and Iron Age periods, from approximately 2,200 BC to 200 AD. At the core of the settlement lies a large circular fortification built out of mud brick and faced with stone, some 40 meters in diameter and eight metres high. This has been preserved by an Iron Age mud platform, built over the fortification. [3] It is the largest of the distinctive Umm Al Nar fortress towers to be excavated in the UAE. [4] As well as a collection of Umm Al Nar buildings and fireplaces, mud brick buildings dating from the second and early first millennium were found. [3]

The 6 meter diameter Umm Al Nar tomb, located 10 meters west of the tower and made of limestone ashlar blocks and beach stone, contained the mostly dis-articulated remains of some 410 individuals (276 adult). [5] [6] Analysis of the human remains have shown evidence that individuals suffering illness and limited mobility were cared for, pointing to a developed society which was sufficiently secure and prosperous to be able to afford compassion. [6] One of the individuals, a woman in her twenties, was found to be suffering from polio, thought to be the earliest dated instance of the disease in human history. [7]

As with Ed-Dur, there is evidence of extensive trade links between the people of Tell Abraq and Mesopotamia, Iran and the Indus Valley. Finds include two Harappan cubical weights, distinctive Harappan carnelian and agate jewellery and an ivory duck figurine, and tin and ivory from Afghanistan. An ivory comb and pottery found at the site has been linked through its decorative form to Bactria. [8] There is evidence that bronze was both refined and cast at the site. [1]

Some 600 sherds of red-ridged Barbar pottery at Tel Abraq show distinct links to Umm Al Nar island and also ancient 'Tilmun', or Bahrain. [9]

Tell Abraq boasts the largest collection of faunal remains uncovered on any archaeological site within the Arabian Peninsula. Domesticated animals such as sheep, goats and cattle were reared, while locally available wild animals such as gazelle and oryx were hunted. Fish and shellfish as well as turtles and dugongs from the Persian Gulf were eaten extensively. Digs have uncovered over 100,000 animal bone remains. [10]

Both Tell Abraq and Shimal and Seih Al Harf in Ras Al Khaimah show a continuation from the Umm Al Nar to Wadi Suq periods, although Shimal has yielded a preponderance of the distinctive Wadi Suq burials. [11] The tower at Tell Abraq continued to be occupied throughout this period, with evidence of a changing lifestyle among its occupants and more dependence on seafood. Further possible links between these two communities (through Ed-Dur) is provided by Iron Age pottery finds at Tell Abraq, which include similar artefacts to those found at Shimal. [4]

Archaeology

The mound comprises an area of some four hectares and rises to a height of some ten metres above the surrounding sabkha, or salt flats.it is a well known site in the UAE

The site was excavated in 5 seasons between 1989 and 1998 by a team from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark led by Daniel Potts. [3] [12] [13] [1] [14] [15] Work was resumed in 2007 by a joint team from the Bryn Mawr College and the University of Tübingen led by Peter Magee. [16] Initially principally involved in cataloging the existing site, in 2010 large scale excavations were undertaken. A charcoal sample from the base area of the Umm Al Nar fortress tower provided a radiocarbon date of 2461–2199 BC (C14 date 3840±40 BP). It was calibrated with IntCal13. [16] [17]

Finds from Tell Abraq have been crucial in the division of the Iron Age I (1200-1000 BC), II (1000-500 BC) and III (500-300 BC) periods in the UAE. [15]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 D.T. Potts, Four Seasons of Excavation at Tell Abraq (1989-1993), Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies Vol. 23, Proceedings of the Twenty Sixth SEMINAR FOR ARABIAN STUDIES held at Manchester on 21st - 23rd July 1992, pp. 117-126, 1993
  2. Barker, Diane. "Bronze Age Pottery from Tell Abraq, United Arab Emirates" (PDF). NEAF Grant in Aid Report via Near Eastern Archaeology Department, Sydney University Australia.
  3. 1 2 3 D. T. Potts, Excavations at Tell Abraq, 1989, Paléorient, vol. 15, iss. 15-1, pp. 269-271, 1989
  4. 1 2 United Arab Emirates : a new perspective . Abed, Ibrahim., Hellyer, Peter. London: Trident Press. 2001. pp.  30. ISBN   978-1900724470. OCLC   47140175.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. Taylor, Katie Marie, "Assessing Population Variation Using Heritable Nonmetric Traits: A Bronze Age Assemblage from Tell Abraq, United Arab Emirates", Masters Thesis, Boise State University, 2021
  6. 1 2 D., Vilos, Jamie (2011). Bioarchaeology of compassion: Exploring extreme cases of pathology in a Bronze Age skeletal population from Tell Abraq, U.A.E. (Thesis). University of Nevada, Las Vegas.{{cite thesis}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. Gregoricka, Lesley A., Jaime Ullinger, and Alecia Schrenk, "Set apart from within: Articulated women in commingled tombs from Early Bronze Age Arabia", Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 32, pp. 243-255, 2021
  8. Potts, Daniel T., "Arabian Time Capsule", Archaeology, vol. 53, no. 5, pp. 44–48, 2000
  9. P. Grave, et al., Elemental characterisation of Barbar ceramics from Tell Abraq, Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy, vol. 7, iss. 2, pp. 177–187, 1996
  10. Uerpmann, Margarethe (2001). "Remarks on the animal economy of Tell Abraq (Emirates of Sharjah and Umm al-Qaywayn, UAE)". Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. 31: 227–233. JSTOR   41223685.
  11. Vreeze, M. de, B. S. Düring, and Eric Olijdam, "New light on the late Wadi Suq period from the Ṣuhār hinterlands", Proceedings of the seminar for Arabian Studies. Vol. 50. Archaeopress, 2020 ISBN   978-1-78969-653-0
  12. Daniel T. Potts, Further Excavations at Tell Abraq: The 1990 Season, Munksgaard, 1991, ISBN   87-16-14903-3
  13. Daniel T. Potts et al., A Prehistoric Mound in the Emirate of Umm al-Qaiwain, U.A.E.: Excavations at Tell Abraq in 1989, Munksgaard, 1990, ISBN   87-16-14873-8
  14. D. T. Potts, Ancient Magan: The Secrets of Tell Abraq, Trident Press Ltd., 2000, ISBN   1-900724-40-5
  15. 1 2 P. Hellyer, New finds at Tell Abraq. Tribulus (Journal of the Emirates Natural History Group), vol. 2, no.1, pp.15-17, 1992
  16. 1 2 Peter Magee, Tell Abraq during the second and first millennia BC: site layout, spatial organisation, and economy,  Arabian archaeology and epigraphy, vol. 28(2), pp. 209-237, November 2017
  17. Degli Esposti, Michel, et al. "Renewed excavations at Tell Abraq, Umm al-Quwain, 2019–2020—insights into the site's occupation from the mid-second millennium BC to the late pre-Islamic period." Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies. Vol. 51. 2022.

Further reading