Abattoir Hill
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Abattoir Hill, pronounced in Hebrew as Giv'at Bet Hamitbahayim (Hebrew: גבעת בית המטבחיים), is an archaeological site in Tel Aviv, Israel, located near the southern bank of the Yarkon River. The site is a natural hill made of Kurkar, a local type of sandstone. In 1930 ancient burials and tools were discovered upon the construction of an abattoir on top of the hill, hence its name. Between 1950 and 1953, Israeli archaeologist Jacob Kaplan studied the site, ahead of the construction of new residential units and streets on it. He discovered the remains of burials and small settlements spanning from the Chalcolithic period to the Persian period (4500 – 332 BCE).[1][2] In 1965 and 1970 Kaplan conducted two more excavations next to the slaughterhouse and discovered settlement remains from the Bronze Age and the Persian period.[3][4] In February 1992 a salvage excavation was conducted by Yossi Levy after antiquities were damaged by development works. Two burial tombs dated between the Persian period and the Early Arab period (538 BCE – 1099 CE) were discovered.[5] In June 1998 another salvage excavation was conducted by Kamil Sari after ancient remains were damaged by work of the Electric Corporation. Two kilns were unearthed, similar to two found by Kaplan.[6]
The kurkar hill has a length of approximately 400 meters and a height of 15 meters above its surroundings. The boundaries of the site were determined by Jacob Kaplan who first studied the site in the 1950s like so: west: Agripas, Hurkanos, and Yehoshua Bin-Nun streets; south: Nordau Boulevard; east Alexander Yanai street; north: Shimon HaTarsi street.[7] The archaeological discoveries were found in these sites (from north to south):
- Shimon HaTarsi 31 Street - The northernmost part of the hill, overlooking the Yarkon River. Contains remains of a settlement from the Byzantine period and burial caves used between the Persian and Early Arab period.[5]
- Hill Square - An area on top of the hill which was left as a garden. Remains of a Middle Bronze Age settlement linked to the Hyksos was found
- Yanai Street - On the eastern slope of the hill, east of the abattoir building, between two buildings in the street. Two hewn caves indicating the presence of a settlement were discovered. They were dug in the Chalcolithic period and were used in later periods.[1]
- Nordau Boulevard 93 - The southernmost site, featuring an Early Bronze Age burial. On top of the cave was a settlement from the Persian period.[1]