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   » » Wiki: Tel Erani
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Tel Erani () or Tell esh-Sheikh Ahmed el-ʿAreini () is a multi-period archaeological site on the outskirts of in the Southern District of . It is also known by the name ʻIrâq el-Menshiyeh ("vein-like sand ridges of Menshiyeh"), although thought to have borne the original Arabic name of Menshiyet es-Saḥalīn. The tell was first occupied in the period, but its most notable remains are from the and , when it was the site of a substantial city with links to , before becoming a Judahite town. It has been identified with the cities of , Gath, , Eglon and , but none of these identifications are certain. The city was destroyed by the Assyrians in the 8th century BCE, and again in the 6th century BCE, possibly by the Babylonians. In the Persian period, it was the site of a temple. There are also signs of settlement in the Hellenistic, , and periods. The village of Iraq al-Manshiyya was located at the foot of the tell until it was depopulated in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

(2025). 9780826485717, Continuum.


Discovery and history of investigations
Tel Erani was first documented by Claude Reignier Conder and Herbert Kitchener in their 1872–1877 survey for the Palestine Exploration Fund. They described the contemporary village of Iraq al-Manshiyya and remarked that the site was "evidently ancient and important, and seems possibly to represent the ancient Libnah." The identification of Tel Erani with the biblical city of was based on the in the hills nearby – the name of the city meaning 'the white' in . Remains from the 10th century BCE have been found at the site.
(2025). 9780884142188, SBL Press.
The town, then belonging to the kingdom of Judah, was destroyed in 701 BCE, with 15 discovered among the debris.

In 1921, William F. Albright argued that the site was a poor fit with Libnah, and instead proposed it was the major city of Gath. He placed Libnah at , which most scholars of the time identified with Gath. When the Palestinian population was forced out of the area in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, Albright's theory was the basis for naming the new Israeli settlements of and Kibbutz Gat.


New identification
Historical geographer, M.D. Press, concludes that Tel Erani, by way of a transformation of its name, may have been the 1st-century Idumean town of Sallis (= ) mentioned by ( The Jewish War 3.2.2. ). A citadel (acropolis) was once built at the site, Tel ʽErani, Hadashot Arkheologiyot, Excavations and Surveys in Israel (vol. 129: 2017), Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) making it a likely place of refuge for a retreating army en route from to .


Excavations
The site is very large, more than 24 hectares.


Yeivin dig (1950s)
In the late 1950s, opened excavations at the site (then known as Tel Gat) to confirm Albright's identification. Although he did find material, the pottery was not consistent with a Philistine city. Albright's theory was therefore rejected.
(2025). 9788393421886, Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University of Kraków.
Instead, Yeivin discovered that the main phase of occupation of the site was earlier, in the Early Bronze Age. He also found what was then the earliest evidence of contact between and : a potsherd bearing the of the pharaoh .


Jagiellonian University excavations
Polish archaeologists from Jagiellonian University in Krakow have been excavating here since 2013. They found that the oldest artefacts on the site may date to the (Naqada I) ca 4,000 BC. So the ancient Egyptian trading post at Tel Erani may be much older that previously thought. Egyptian trading post at Tel Erani in Israel older than previously thought. archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com 9/09/2019

"Last year’s 2018 research by the Kraków archaeologists proved that the inhabitants of Lower Egypt maintained relations with the southern Levant where Tel Erani lies. “We proved that the were very lively,” said Professor Ciałowicz, adding that both regions were cooperating with one another closely in 4,000 BC. Copper and olive oil flowed into Egypt and animal and fish meat was transported in the opposite direction."

An Early Bronze Age I fortification wall was also discovered in 2018, which may date to over 5,300 years old. This may be the oldest such defense wall in Israel.


See also

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