Location | Palestine |
---|---|
Region | Gaza Strip |
Coordinates | 31°28′33″N 34°24′17″E / 31.47583°N 34.40472°E |
Type | Settlement |
Area | 8–9 ha (20–22 acres) |
History | |
Material | Mud brick |
Founded | c. 3300 BCE |
Abandoned | c. 2400–2350 BCE |
Periods | Bronze Age |
Associated with | Egyptians, Canaanites |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 1999–2000[1] |
Archaeologists | |
Condition | Damaged |
Tell es-Sakan (Arabic: تل السكن, lit. 'Hill of Ash') is a tell (archaeological mound) about 5 km south of Gaza City in what is today the Gaza Strip, on the northern bank of Wadi Ghazzeh.[1] It was the site of two separate Early Bronze Age urban settlements: an earlier one representing the fortified administrative center of the Egyptian colonies in southwestern Palestine from the end of the 4th millennium, and a later, local Canaanite fortified city of the third millennium.[2] The location at the mouth of what was probably a palaeochannel of the river, allowed it to develop as an important maritime settlement with a natural harbour.[3] Its geographical location endowed it with a position of importance at the crossroads of land-based trade routes between the Canaan region, the Old Kingdom of Egypt,[4] and Arabia. As of 2000, the early Egyptian settlement was the oldest fortified site known to researchers in both Egypt and Palestine.[2]
The tell covered an estimated area of 8–9 hectares (20–22 acres), of which 1,400 square metres (15,000 sq ft) has undergone archaeological excavation.