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Robert R. Stieglitz
Rutgers University, Newark
Tel Tanninim 'Crocodiles
Mound’, (Tell al-Milāt 'Mortar Mound')
is situated on the Mediterranean coast of
Israel, some 5 km. north of Caesarea Maritima,
at the outflow of Nahal Tanninim 'Crocodiles
River'. Indeed, there were Nilotic crocodiles
in the river, as well as the adjacent Kabbara
marsh, now drained. The last of the reptiles
was killed shortly after 1905. The tel has
been identified with Hellenistic Krokodeilon
polis 'Crocodiles City, (Strabo 16.2.27
and Pliny NH 5.17.75 ). In Byzantine times,
the settlement marked the northern municipal
border of Caesarea and can be identified with
the place named Migdal Malhā in the
Jerusalem Talmud (Demai 2:1,22c). The Latin
name Turris Salinarum, a translation of
the Aramaic name, was still in use during the
Crusader period. Both names mean 'Saltworks
Tower', referring to the production of sea
salt, from coastal pans, or to a salted-fish
industry at the site.
Surface surveys had indicated the site was
occupied from the Persian to the Crusader
period. A brief salvage excavation in 1979
unearthed substantial Byzantine remains along
the eroded western edge of the tel. Systematic
excavations directed by the present writer
took place from 1996-99. The earliest pottery,
excavated at the lowest stratum of the tel,
indicates that the settlement was a Phoenician
foundation in the fifth century BCE, no doubt
after this stretch of Palestinian coast was
ceded by the Persian emperor to his vassal the
king of Sidon. The Phoenician name of the site
remains unknown. The latest finds were
Ottoman, presumably connected with the
construction of the now-ruined Kaiserbruecke
across the Crocodiles River at the foot of the
tel.
The finds in Area A
include remains of several structures from the
Crusader, Islamic and Late Byzantine periods,
which were built atop the foundation walls of
a large Early Byzantine church, whose floors
were covered with multi-colored mosaics,
poorly preserved. Below the Early Byzantine
level was a gap, marked by a thick layer of
sterile sand, and below that a thick layer
with structural and ceramic and other remains
of the Persian-Hellenistic settlement.
In Areas B and B2 were
found fishponds (Latin: piscina) for
breeding of freshwater fish and in Area D and
the western coastline were several ponds for
saltwater fish. The freshwater ponds were
supplied with running water by the Tel
Tanninim Aqueduct, which tapped into the
high-level aqueduct of Caesarea, had thick
plastered walls and utilized a system of
embedded ceramic jars either within the walls
or along the floor to create a series of cells
(Latin: speci) for the freshwater fish,
such as the tilapia (St. Peter’s
fish) bred and grown in the ponds. Each
breeding pond had a small tank with a mosaic
floor built nearby, presumably for holding and
sorting fish. The aqueduct and breeding ponds
were evidently built in the fourth century CE
and continued to operate through the end of
the Seventh century.
Sometimes in the Sixth
century CE, the water flow in the aqueduct of
Tel Tanninim was disrupted, but the freshwater
fishing industry at the site continued to
operate with well water. The water was drawn
from a round well-built stone well, three
meters in diameter, dug into the aquifer
adjacent to the breeding pond in Area B2.
Across the well's center a wooden wheel had
been installed, around whose perimeter were
attached a series of ceramic jars, fragments
of which were found. In Talmudic sources, this
type of pump is called an ‘antelayyā-wheel.
The stratigraphic table
below summarizes the occupation history of Tel
Tanninim:
|
Stratum |
Dates |
Finds |
|
I Crusader |
1099-1265 |
structures; ceramics |
|
II Late Islamic |
750-1099 |
intermittent settlement |
|
III Umayyad |
640-750 |
Stratum IV continues |
|
IV Late Byzantine |
450-640 |
edifices; piscinae |
|
V Early Byzantine |
324-450 |
church; aqueduct & reservoir;
baths |
|
GAP |
--------------- |
|
|
VI Hellenistic |
332-100 BC |
building; ceramics |
|
VII Persian |
475-332 BC |
building; ceramics |
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