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When Sarah Stroup began excavating at Tel Dor, an archaeological
site in Israel, she was hardly the first to dig there. Tel Dor has
been a source of interest for nearly a century, with excavations
beginning in earnest more than 20 years ago. But the site is so
large and promising, new discoveries continue to be unearthed.
Stroup, assistant professor
in the UW Department
of Classics, began making research trips to Tel Dor as a graduate
student at the University of California, Berkeley. Last summer she
became co-investigator on a $236,000 grant from the Getty Foundation—with
colleagues at Berkeley and Hebrew University—to learn more
about the beginnings of the Hellenistic period at Tel Dor.
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“We
won’t run out of things to find there,” says
Sarah Stroup of Tel Dor, above. “Over the past 20
years, only about five percent of the site has been uncovered.”
Photo by Sarah Stroup. |
The birth of the Hellenistic
period, when Greek culture began to spread far beyond its native
territory, has long been set around 334 B.C. to 323 B.C., when Alexander
and his troops traveled south through what is now Syria, Lebanon,
Israel, and Egypt. But the excavation suggests that the region may
have been Hellenized much earlier.
“Alexander’s
influence was so great in the Mediterranean and beyond that he is
seen as the one who brought Greek influences to native populations,”
says Stoup, “but we’re finding that there was a substantial
interaction with Greek culture at Tel Dor long before Alexander—starting
in the fifth century B.C.E. In fact we see a long, ongoing process
in which the choice and predilections of the native populations
play a much stronger role than anyone had predicted.”
Stroup describes Tel
Dor during that period as “an amazingly flexible, cosmopolitan
town” located at the crossroads of several trade routes. “During
most of its existence, this area has been colorful and multicultural
without the tension we see now,” she says.
Findings from the excavation
site support this view. Western-style temples have been discovered
next to buildings from the same period that are very eastern in
form. Many Greek works of art found there date back to pre-Hellenistic
times.
The impact of such discoveries may have broader significance. “If
we can reasonably conclude that the start of the Hellenistic period
can be moved back a bit, it will affect the way we look at the literature
of the fourth century and what’s going on in Athens during
that period,” says Stroup. “So now we are looking very
carefully at stratigraphic clues to date things as firmly as possible.”
Thanks to the Getty
Foundation grant, Stroup was able to fund two UW students—graduate
student Benjamin Crotty and undergraduate Allyssa
Lamb —as research assistants at Tel Dor last summer. This
summer she plans to do the same. “We won’t run out of
things to find there,” says Stroup. “Over the past 20
years, only about five percent of the site has been uncovered.”
A memorable recent find was a mosaic in Western style dating back
to the late Hellenistic period, which Stroup describes as “the
highest quality mosaic that could be produced in this period.”
Stroup was at Tel Dor when the discovery was made.
“It was astounding,”
she recalls. “We had no idea that any structure in Tel Dor
could possess a mosaic of this caliber. It must have been part of
a villa, probably a very rich merchant’s dining room. So someone
was choosing to decorate in a very showy, Western way.”
As for what she expects
to find during the next excavation season, Stroup makes no predictions.
“We don’t really ever know what we’re going to
find,” she says. “That’s what makes it so interesting.
We are, in the end, playing in the dirt with other kids who like
playing in the dirt. And trying to solve mysteries.”
[Winter/Spring 2004 - Table of Contents]
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