תל קירי (Hebrew) | |
Location | HaZore'a, Israel |
---|---|
Region | Border between the Menashe Heights and Jezreel Valley |
Coordinates | 32°38′38″N 35°06′53″E / 32.64389°N 35.11472°E |
Type | Ancient village, cemetery |
Area | 10 dunams (1 hectare; 2.5 acres) |
History | |
Periods | Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, Early Arab, Ottoman |
Satellite of | Tel Yokneam |
Site notes | |
Archaeologists | Amnon Ben-Tor, Miriam Avissar |
Completely covered by HaZore'a's houses today. |
Tel Qiri (Hebrew: תל קירי) is a tel and an ancient village site located inside the modern kibbutz of HaZore'a in northern Israel. It lies on the eastern slopes of the Menashe Heights and the western edge of the Jezreel Valley. As of the beginning of the excavations in 1975, almost half of the site was still visible, but today the entire site is covered by the houses of HaZore'a. The site spans an area of one hectare and is believed to have been a dependency of the nearby Tel Yokneam. The site hosted some human activity during the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods, as well as parts of the Bronze Age. An uninterrupted sequence of settlement lasted from the Iron Age to the Roman-Byzantine period. Unlike all urban centers in northern Israel, the village in Tel Qiri, which flourished during the Iron Age, escaped all military events and no traces of destruction can be found there. This minor, damaged and seemingly insignificant site yielded an amazingly rich and diverse quantity of remains of different periods.[1][2][3]
The excavation of Tel Qiri is part of the Yoqneam Regional Project, which conducted excavations at nearby Tel Yokneam and Tel Qashish.[3]