ABSTRACT

The year 2008 marks the 40th anniversary of Mabada Plains Project archaeological research in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The Madaba Plains Project is one of the longest-lived, continuously running archaeological excavation projects in the Middle East. Spanning four decades, the project, with its beginnings at Tall Hisban in the late sixties, has engaged 1,500 participants, produced scores of publications and spawned a dozen other projects. Its legacy includes being one of the first major Near Eastern archaeology projects to adopt a multi-millennial, regional approach; to incorporate ethnoarchaeology and environmental studies; to construct data around a food-systems' approach; and to computerize procedures for archaeological data acquisition and analysis, thus helping advance both the theoretical underpinnings and the field methods of archaeology in the southern Levant and beyond. Madaba Plains Project directors, wishing to celebrate this major scientific and historical milestone, have produced this anniversary volume which: highlights the value of ongoing collaborative research across the region of central Jordan, attempting to explain life and survival from the Bronze ages through the Islamic and early modern periods and features the latest results from ongoing research; enlivens the discussion by hearing from major scholars in the field who, in the process of assessing the contributions of the project to the archaeology of the southern Levant, broaden the discussion in the context of ancient Near Eastern archaeological research; and, expands the horizons of the project's research by presenting the ever enlarging number and extent of projects conducted by dig directors once on staff with the Madaba Plains Project, thereby taking readers all over Jordan and beyond.

part I|65 pages

Madaba Plains Project Research after 40 Yeears

chapter 1|6 pages

The Madaba Plains Project

A Personal 40-year Retrospective, 1967–2007

chapter 2|19 pages

Tall Hisban *

Palimpsest of Great and Little Traditions

chapter 5|8 pages

The Madaba Plains Project

Excavations at Tall Jalul

part II|30 pages

Assessment of the Contributions of the Madaba Plains Project to the Archaeology of the Southern Levant

part III|148 pages

Legacy of the Madaba Plains Project throughout Jordan

chapter 9|11 pages

From Tall Hisban to Tall al-‘Umayri

40 Years Researching the Late Bronze Age

chapter 10|17 pages

Where Are Those Guys?

Iron Age I Settlement in the Tall al-‘Umayri Hinterland

chapter 11|8 pages

The Artist's Role in Archaeology

Artists and Archaeologists: How They Work Together

chapter 13|8 pages

Beyond the Madaba Plains Project

A Regional Approach to the Archaeology of the Madaba Plains Region

chapter 14|19 pages

Discovering Iron Age Towns in Central Jordan

The Legacy of the Madaba Plains Project

chapter 16|20 pages

“Be of good cheer! No one on earth is immortal”

Religious Symbolism in Tomb Architecture and Epitaphs at the Umm el-Jimal and Tall Hisban Cemeteries

chapter 17|16 pages

Khirbat al-Mahatta Revisited

Surveys, Soundings, and the Tobiads