Tell Hisban a ‘time machine for exploring humanity’s global past’ — US scholar
Over the years, the objectives of archaeological excavations at Tell Hisban, located in the Madaba Plain, have changed dramatically, according to a US scholar.
“The banner under which the first phase of excavations at Tell Hisban (1968-1976) was carried out was the ‘Heshbon Expedition’,” said OysteinLaBianca of Andrews University in Michigan.
“The project’s name clearly signalled the excavation’s objective: To determine if Tall Hisban was biblical Heshbon, one of the most frequently mentioned places in the Old Testament,” he said.
After a two-decade-long hiatus, excavations were renewed at the site in 1996, again by a team from Andrews Universtiy.The second phase is titled the Hisban Cultural Heritage Project, LaBianca noted.
“An immediate first objective of the renewed excavations is to give agency to host community members as empowered partners in protecting, preserving and presenting the archaeological site,” according to LaBianca.
The second objective is to “crystallise”a more inclusive approach in narrating the site’s history,LaBianca said.
The quest began with a focus on the deep-time history of the Hisban food system, he said.
“The site is a kind-of time machine for exploring humanity’s global past as it has unfolded in a very particular location, namely at Tell Hisban. No longer are we in pursuit of one particular desired past — a biblical or classical or Islamic past,” the professor emphasised.
The third objective is to “excavate less and learn more from what we excavate through deployment of the latest techniques for extracting knowledge about the way of life of occupants of the site during particular historical periods”, said LaBianca.
*jordantimes
Over the years, the objectives of archaeological excavations at Tell Hisban, located in the Madaba Plain, have changed dramatically, according to a US scholar.
“The banner under which the first phase of excavations at Tell Hisban (1968-1976) was carried out was the ‘Heshbon Expedition’,” said OysteinLaBianca of Andrews University in Michigan.
“The project’s name clearly signalled the excavation’s objective: To determine if Tall Hisban was biblical Heshbon, one of the most frequently mentioned places in the Old Testament,” he said.
After a two-decade-long hiatus, excavations were renewed at the site in 1996, again by a team from Andrews Universtiy.The second phase is titled the Hisban Cultural Heritage Project, LaBianca noted.
“An immediate first objective of the renewed excavations is to give agency to host community members as empowered partners in protecting, preserving and presenting the archaeological site,” according to LaBianca.
The second objective is to “crystallise”a more inclusive approach in narrating the site’s history,LaBianca said.
The quest began with a focus on the deep-time history of the Hisban food system, he said.
“The site is a kind-of time machine for exploring humanity’s global past as it has unfolded in a very particular location, namely at Tell Hisban. No longer are we in pursuit of one particular desired past — a biblical or classical or Islamic past,” the professor emphasised.
The third objective is to “excavate less and learn more from what we excavate through deployment of the latest techniques for extracting knowledge about the way of life of occupants of the site during particular historical periods”, said LaBianca.
*jordantimes
Over the years, the objectives of archaeological excavations at Tell Hisban, located in the Madaba Plain, have changed dramatically, according to a US scholar.
“The banner under which the first phase of excavations at Tell Hisban (1968-1976) was carried out was the ‘Heshbon Expedition’,” said OysteinLaBianca of Andrews University in Michigan.
“The project’s name clearly signalled the excavation’s objective: To determine if Tall Hisban was biblical Heshbon, one of the most frequently mentioned places in the Old Testament,” he said.
After a two-decade-long hiatus, excavations were renewed at the site in 1996, again by a team from Andrews Universtiy.The second phase is titled the Hisban Cultural Heritage Project, LaBianca noted.
“An immediate first objective of the renewed excavations is to give agency to host community members as empowered partners in protecting, preserving and presenting the archaeological site,” according to LaBianca.
The second objective is to “crystallise”a more inclusive approach in narrating the site’s history,LaBianca said.
The quest began with a focus on the deep-time history of the Hisban food system, he said.
“The site is a kind-of time machine for exploring humanity’s global past as it has unfolded in a very particular location, namely at Tell Hisban. No longer are we in pursuit of one particular desired past — a biblical or classical or Islamic past,” the professor emphasised.
The third objective is to “excavate less and learn more from what we excavate through deployment of the latest techniques for extracting knowledge about the way of life of occupants of the site during particular historical periods”, said LaBianca.
*jordantimes
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Tell Hisban a ‘time machine for exploring humanity’s global past’ — US scholar
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