Itamar Taxel is the head of the Pottery Specializations Branch at the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) Archaeological Research Department. He is involved with various fieldwork and research projects on behalf of the IAA, Tel Aviv University, and the Israel Nature and Parks Authority, and he has authored and coauthored seven monographs and numerous articles and book chapters on the archaeology of Hellenistic to Late Islamic historical Palestine.
Meẓad Yeroḥam: A Caravanserai Site of the Roman and Byzantine Periods in the Negev Highlands studies the area situated to the southwest of the modern town of Yeroḥam, in the heartland of other Negebite towns of the classical periods (Mampsis to its northeast, Elusa and Reḥovot-in-the-Negev to its northwest, Nessana and Sobota to its southwest and Oboda to its south). The site of Meẓad Yeroḥam has received little attention in modern research due to lack of publications. Surveyed by Palmer (1870) and Glueck (1954) and excavated by Cohen (1966–1967, 1993) and Baumgarten (2000), the site’s four areas of excavations (A–D) revealed three layers of occupation dated from the Early Roman (1st/2nd century CE) through the Late Byzantine (6th and possibly early 7th century CE) period, based on the unearthed pottery and coins. While the early occupation at the site is restricted to Areas B and C, the site’s current architectural landscape dates to the Byzantine period and illustrates a relatively dense settlement whose character – apparently a caravanserai with a few buildings of military and domestic (familial) nature – differs from contemporaneous Negebite large villages and townlets. This function and use may also hint at its character during earlier periods of occupation. One of the Greek ostraca found at the site mentions a toponym, Μαραμαθως, perhaps the site’s ancient name which sadly is unrecorded in contemporaneous epigraphic material or known from historical sources. This study constitutes a full report of the site’s excavations, dealing with its history of research, environs, architecture and stratigraphy, architectural sculpture, pottery, glass, stone (and other artifacts) and coins, as well as ostraca, dipinti and shells. The site’s necropoleis and hinterland are also discussed in detail. The analysis of Meẓad Yeroḥam is holistic in nature, based upon the finds recovered and the Zeitgeist of the current research of the classical periods in the Negev.