Emmanuel Anati IS HAR KARKOM THE BIBLICAL MOUNT SINAI?
Transcription
Emmanuel Anati IS HAR KARKOM THE BIBLICAL MOUNT SINAI?
Emmanuel Anati IS HAR KARKOM THE BIBLICAL MOUNT SINAI? ATELIER Monographs The past is in the present, the present is in the future, the future is in the past ATELIER Atelier is a workshop for inventing, creating, playing, and experiment and research IS HAR KARKOM THE BIBLICAL MOUNT SINAI? By Emmanuel Anati First English edition, 2013 ISBN 978-88-98284-02-3 Copyright@2013, by Emmanuel Anati All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without permission in writing from the author, except for reviewers who may quote brief passages. Editorial project: Atelier editing Editorial team: Ariela Fradkin, Federico Mailland, Giulia Scotti Layout: Silvia Stefani Copy-editor: Penny Butler Keywords: Biblical Archeology, Cult of stones, Exodus, Har Karkom, Megaliths, Mount Sinai Printed in Italy, February 2013 Emmanuel Anati IS HAR KARKOM THE BIBLICAL MOUNT SINAI? ATELIER Città della Cultura Via Guglielmo Marconi, 7 25044 Capo di Ponte, Brescia For orders or informations: [email protected] CONTENTS 1 - The mountain and the findings ............................................. 9 2 - The testimony of archeology .................................................. 27 3 - The biblical geography ........................................................... 47 4 -The chronological problems .................................................... 65 5 -Conclusions ............................................................................... 83 Bibliography .................................................................................. 85 Italian Archaeological Expedition to Har Karkom Bibliography 86 7 1 - THE MOUNTAIN AND THE FINDINGS 33 years of archeological survey have allowed us to reconstruct the history of a mountain and its surrounding valleys, where 1,300 archeological sites illustrate over a million years of human presence. The discoveries in the area reveal its particular character and function. Har Karkom in the Negev desert (Israel) is a mesa-like plateau of about 4x2 km, surrounded by precipices. The presence of archeological sites and rock art was first recorded by this writer in 1954 (Anati, 1956). Since 1980 he has directed a systematic archeological survey and excavations carried out by the Italian Archeological Expedition in a concession area of 200 km2. The surveyed area included the mountain and the surrounding valleys (corresponding to maps 229 (Har Karkom) and 226 (Beer Karkom) of the Israeli grid) (Anati & Mailland, 2009; 2010). More than 1,300 archeological sites were recorded in an area where not a single site had been known before. Forty thousand rock engravings make of this area the major concentration recorded so far of pre-Roman rock art in the Near East. Over 120 cult sites, small temples, open-air altars, various types of shrines some of them related to rock art, stone circles and other megalithic monuments illustrate the religious role of this mountain since the Upper Paleolithic period. Most of the cult sites belong to the Bronze Age. 9 In geomorphological terms the mountain and its surroundings, at altitudes of 600–850 m above sea level, are crossed by an 8 km long valley (Wadi Karkom) flanked by an ancient trail leading south–north from Har Karkom to Beer Karkom, a waterhole. From Beer Karkom, the ancient Maale Sagi trail leads northwest to the highlands of the Central Negev. The mountain and its surroundings were intensely occupied from remote times during certain periods and abandoned in other periods. The human presence is believed to have been strongly influenced by climatic fluctuations. The Lower Paleolithic is represented by areas having major concentrations of bifacial hand-axes and other flint implements. The conspicuous findings of Middle Paleolithic Mousterian sites and of early Upper Paleolithic sites on the mountain plateau indicates a long period with abundant hunting resources probably due to a humid climate in the Negev and other Near Eastern areas, from c. 80,000 BP to 28,000 BP (Mailland, 2013). Fig. 1 - Aerial view of the Paran desert with the high plateau of Har Karkom in the background. This large mesa is a reference point in the landscape (ISR85:CI-6). 10 The volume of Paleolithic sites at Har Karkom is much higher than in any other area of the Negev and of the entire Sinai Peninsula. One possible reason is that Har Karkom was a source of flint of excellent quality, a fundamental raw material for prehistoric man which was being worked on the mountain, as documented by numerous flint workshops. It may have been a strategic place for gatherings and seasonal campsites, while the vegetation in the surrounding valleys during humid climates supported the lives of large Pleistocene mammals and consequently provided profitable hunting for Paleolithic people. The presence of large mammals in ancient times is recorded on the Har Karkom plateau by the geoglyphs representing animal species, such as the elephant and the rhinoceros, which became extinct in the area in the Late Pleistocene, presumably around 28,000 BP. As the fauna represented disappeared from the area at that time, these may well be the world’s oldest geoglyphs so far documented. Site HK/86b is a peculiar ceremonial structure characterized by a group of standing pillars of natural flint nodules up to 120 cm high, selected and collected by early man because of their natural anthropomorphic or zoomorphic shapes, having only secondary human-made retouches such as the eyes or thin incisions of patterns that may represent body decoration. On the fossil floor, there are pebble alignments, non-figurative geoglyphs, associated with an early Upper Paleolithic flint industry named Karkomian. Collections of ‘figurines’, small flint stones (about 10–20 cm length) with anthropo-zoomorphic shapes, in part roughly retouched to emphasize some anatomical parts such as eyes, were found on the fossil ground. As is suggested by this sanctuary (HK/86b), there was a place of worship on the mountain since the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic. In the concession area, 170 Early Upper Paleolithic sites were recorded (Karkomian, Proto-Aurignacian and Aurignacian), and only seven of Late Upper Paleolithic (Gravettian group). An arid phase followed the alluvial period of the early Upper Paleolithic and 11 Fig. 2a - Geoglyphs likely to represent a rhinoceros and elephant Tracings by F. Mailland (2012). Fig. 2b - Har Karkom, site HK 24/b. Aerial view of two geoglyphs of quadrupeds, each over 30 m long (EA94: ISR.II-27). 12 may account for the substantial lack of findings related to late Upper Paleolithic in the Har Karkom area. Colder and more humid conditions recurred in the Neolithic period, a phenomenon which invested the Sinai Peninsula and extended to the Arabian Peninsula and to the northern African Sahara as well. To this period are assigned some of the rock art representations at Har Karkom and 15 campsites from the PPNB (pre-pottery Neolithic B) and the pottery Neolithic. In the Bronze Age Assemblage (BAC) period (including Chalcolithic, Early Bronze Age and the beginning of the Middle Bronze age) the mountain became a paramount ceremonial high place. Numerous rock engravings detailing worship, cult and mythological themes were carved and numerous standing pillars, stone circles, altars and shrines were erected. Over 100 sites of this period were defined as ceremonial, evidencing the paramount role of the Holy Mountain, Har Karkom, in the Bronze Age. In the concession area of 200 km2, 272 BAC sites were recorded, mainly near the mountain, although the density of sites of this period sharply decreases in the surrounding areas. It is the only known mountain in the entire Sinai Peninsula, so far, which displays archeological evidence of such a central ceremonial role. Many findings of this period lead to the hypothesis that this mountain can be identified with the biblical Mount Sinai. This proposal opened up a wide debate which is still in progress. Its various aspects are elaborated in the following pages. On the western and northern sides of the mountain there are major valleys with numerous remains of settlements belonging to the BAC period. The material culture of this period consists of abundant flint tools and scanty pottery shards. On the plateau there are many Paleolithic habitation sites. But there are none from the BAC period, just plenty of cult sites of that period. Though the anthropological study of these sites is not yet complete, it has been preliminarily calculated that several thousand human beings would have lived in the area during BAC times in seasonal or semipermanent settings. 13 Fig. 3a - The Upper Paleolithic site, HK/86b (EA96: VII-20). Fig. 3b - The Paleolithic site HK86 with hut floors and flint workshops. The sanctuary, HK86/b, is located in a small valley in a light colour to the left. The black spots are bushes, which indicate the presence of water. Over 200 Paleolithic sites are known on the plateau of Har Karkom and most of them are in an excellent state of preservation. On the hill between the bushes and the Paleolithic site there are traces of geoglyphs (EA95: CVII-27). 14 Archeological evidence seems to indicate that this rather large population had no access to the mountain. Many surface Paleolithic sites are so well preserved that plans of huts and other structures can be defined from the surface and from air photographs. The numerous Paleolithic hut floors in an excellent state of preservation, remains of flint workshops and fireplaces, the concentrations of flint industry, the presence of fossil soil with traces of flint work, and distribution of cores and flakes in coherent relative positions appear to have remained untouched in situ for millennia. Remains of flint workshops and of fireplaces are sometimes so neatly in situ as if they had been abandoned yesterday. It is doubtful whether the Paleolithic sites would have been so finely preserved if the multitudes of the BAC period had access to the mountain plateau: the Paleolithic sites would not have been preserved in such an excellent condition. The mountain appears to have been a paramount ceremonial site, reserved for worship and religious ceremonies, and the access to the plateau may have been restricted to a few selected persons. The many people who lived in the sites in the surrounding valleys most likely never reached the plateau. They may have expressed their devotion in the numerous shrines found near the habitation sites at the foot of the mountain. Descriptions and plans of various shrines may be found in previous publications (Anati, 1986; 2001; 2010; Anati & Mailland, 2009; 2010). A water source was excavated and built in the Bronze Age in the Beer Karkom area (map 226), which has remained in use ever since. It may have been in use even earlier. Another unusual site is BK/407a, an Early Bronze Age fortress located on top of the hill which overlooks the waterhole, Beer Karkom. It is defended by a surrounding wall reaching a thickness of 1.7 m in the form of a semi-circle with five circular turrets (Figures 10a.b), which ends at the edge of the precipice at both ends. It has two entrances, both protected by turrets. Material culture in the fortress included BAC flint implements, a few pottery pieces and a fragment of a small alabaster vase from the Egyptian VIth dynasty. 15 Fig. 4 - Har Karkom, site HK 23/b. A circle of orthostats in the place where the main path reaches the high plateau of Har Karkom (EA HK93: XVII-36). Fig. 6 - Har Karkom, site HK212d. An orthostat and a large cupstone just below one of the peaks of Har Karkom (EA98: LVI-35) Fig. 5 - Altar stone with burn marks on the upper surface and small stones inserted in a fissure of the rock. Two small stones alignments are on the sides of the altar stone. Around it stones with rock engravings were placed (Site HK 32; photo ISR82-EA 11). Fig. 7 - Beer Karkom, site BK 552. A series of orthostats, some of which are still standing; others have fallen but their alignments can be recognized. In the foreground, there are the remains of a circular structure (EA96: X-26). 16 17 Fig. 8 - Three hut floors from the Middle Paleolithic in site HK105 are well preserved at the surface. In this site, which is over 50,000 years old, there are flint workshops and remains of a Paleolithic fireplace (ISR83:XXXII-22). 18 This is the only building in the entire explored area of Har Karkom and Beer Karkom that can be defined as having a strategic and defensive purpose and it is the only massive Early Bronze Age fortress known in the Negev desert. Beer Karkom may have been a vital strategic site. Both it and Har Karkom, the mountain of shrines, are unique of their kind in the entire Sinai Peninsula. They are of such prominence in the Bronze Age that it is unlikely that they should not be mentioned in the Pentateuch. It has been proposed that Beer Karkom is the biblical site of Refidim and Har Karkom is Mount Sinai. For those rejecting this proposal, what would their biblical names be? The sites that are peculiar to the BAC period are the so-called plaza sites (Figure 11). They are stone-built structures organized in large circles round a vast central plaza. No pottery was ever found in plaza sites, only abundant early BAC flints attributed to the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age I. They are usually located 2–3 km from the foot of Har Karkom and form a ring around the mountain. Several hypotheses have been formed about the function of the plaza sites: guard points, boundaries round the mountain, living quarters, workshops or commercial places? A volume was dedicated to this query, and no final solution was found (Anati, 1987). In the entire area of concession, no evidence was found of human activity from the beginning of Middle Bronze Age II to Iron Age I. Such a hiatus may raise a double query: either no connection is possible between Har Karkom and the biblical story of Exodus, or the conventionally attributed dates for Exodus must be reconsidered. After the period of intense occupation in BAC times, the plateau and the valleys around it were abandoned from c. 1950 B.C. to 1050 B.C. Again, this gap can be explained by a drought episode. The entire Sinai Peninsula in fact lacks traces of living sites during this period. Local evidence of this period of drought, which is also recorded in Arabia and the Sahara, has been confirmed by geological studies on the fluctuations of the Dead Sea shores and 19 Fig. 9 - Stone implements from the BAC period and the alabaster vase of site BK 407. Figg. 10a.b - Aerial photograph and plan of site BK 407. This fortification overlooks and defends the well at Beer Karkom (hidden by vegetation at the foot of the hills). On the right, along the trail that reaches the water source, are the remains of a tower which once controlled the access to the well. On the site of the fortification, flints of the BAC period were found, as well as an Egyptian alabaster vase from the Sixth Dynasty or the First Intermediate Period (Site BK 407; photo EA98: III-8; drawing: HK Archive; WARA W05901, W05902). 20 21 the variations in stalagmite formation in the Sorek Cave. (Horowitz & Weinstein-Evron, 1986). Both the archeological findings and paleoclimatic evidence indicate that tribal life was impossible in most of the Negev and Sinai for about one millennium. The only traces of human presence were sites like mines or caravan stations along routes (Anati, 2001). Archeological traces reappear in Iron Age II, around 1000 B.C., including remains of a hamlet of eight hut floors and a shrine. The largest living site of the entire area belongs to the fourth or third century B.C. It is well planned and had over 100 huts. It may represent a planned military adventure of short duration. The human presence consistently increased in Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine times, with large villages and terraced agricultural fields (Anati, 1986). The Nabataean caravan trade and pastoral activities contributed to this phenomenon. Har Karkom is on the way from Petra, the capital of the Nabataean kingdom, to Gaza, the Nabataeans’ main port on the Mediterranean Sea. Wares for the Mediterranean coasts may have passed through the Har Karkom area; in fact, the presence of camel caravans is documented in the rock art of this period, often associated with Nabataean inscriptions. In the Byzantine period, at the beginning of Christianization, there is conspicuous evidence of monastic settlements in the valleys around Har Karkom. The human presence sharply decreased in early Islamic times and during the Islamic period the area was occupied by desert nomads, who did not settle permanently, but left behind traces of encampments. The archeological sequence of the concession area is illustrated in Chart 1. The findings are subdivided by period and into four geographical areas. The chart gives the evidence for the major sites in the central area around Har Karkom. The difference in the density of sites from period to period is likely to have been influenced by the changing climatic conditions and the changing function of the site. In all the surveyed areas around, the density of pre-Roman archeological sites is less than half that recorded in our concession area of Har Karkom and Beer Karkom, while that of later periods it is quite similar. This may be 22 Har Karkom Map 229 Beer Karkom Map 226 Total Map 229 + Map 226 Period South HK North HK South BK North BK HK + BK Lower Paleolithic (to 200,000 B.C.) 6 39 11 0 56 Middle Paleolithic (to 40,000 B.C.) 12 125 37 6 180 Early Upper Paleolithic (to 26,000 B.C.) 11 128 31 6 176 Late Upper Paleolithic 0 1 6 0 7 Epipaleolithic 0 2 0 1 3 Pre-pottery Neolithic 0 2 3 3 8 Pottery Neolithic 0 9 0 0 9 BAC (4300 to 2000 B.C.) 40 172 131 19 362 Middle Bronze age II 0 0 0 0 0 Late Bronze Age 0 0 0 0 0 Iron Age I 0 0 0 0 0 Iron Age II 1 0 9 2 12 Persian 0 1 3 0 4 Hellenistic 0 1 9 1 11 Nabataean 0 3 7 2 12 Roman-Byzantine 15 50 137 66 268 Islamic 18 65 79 45 207 Total sites 103 598 463 151 1315 Chart 1: Frequency of sites by period at north and south Har Karkom and Beer Karkom: comparative table of frequency. an indication of the special role played by the mountain in early times. The Har Karkom discoveries provide a section of human life of over a million years in a crucial place that marked the destiny of mankind, the land bridge that links Africa to Asia, where hominids and then humans crossed from their African ‘Garden of Eden’ to settle the planet Earth. They illustrate the lifestyles, resources and beliefs of different ages in an area that is now deep desert. The human presence in any geographical area is usually one of four sorts according to lifestyle: nomadic, semi-nomadic, semi-sedentary and sedentary. All four types were present at Har Karkom, a result 23 not only of the environment and climate fluctuations, but also of the diverse traditions of people living there in different periods or even in the same periods. The survey allowed us to obtain a section of over a million years of human activity from a single area (Anati & Mailland 2009; 2010). The particular geomorphology and its present desert character render the area ideal for archeological survey and gave easy access to masses of data, which now require deep analysis to make them generally available and to produce culture-history out of the research base. The riddle of Mount Sinai is certainly a major issue here, but the record of over a million years of human presence, from the evidence of over 1,300 archeological sites from one single area, is of no minor relevance for the history of the region. Many issues are being studied and published. The Paleolithic campsites and their planimetry provide information on the demography and social structure of early man. The study of the rock art reveals the beliefs and myths of desert people during long periods of time. The geoglyphs give rise to the major problem of their conceptual function. The study of the Bronze Age shrines and other cult structures open up a new vista on rituals, ceremonies and beliefs of different human groups living in the area at the time. The following pages concern the documentation, the findings, of just one aspect, the reasons and the considerations that led to the identification of Har Karkom with the biblical Mount Sinai. Fig. 11a - Profile of a platform of site HK 301/a (ISR86.EA: XXXIV-14). Fig. 11b - Aerial view of site HK 301/a with four burnt platforms (EA98:IV-4). 24 25 2 - THE TESTIMONY OF ARCHEOLOGY The archeological discoveries illustrate the ceremonial and religious role of the mountain, which became a prime cult centre in the Bronze age. Temples, shrines, altars and megalithic monuments illustrate the beliefs and cult practices of the desert people. Some discoveries display parallels with details of the biblical account of Exodus. Fig. 12 - Beer Karkom, site BK478. A “plaza” site: huts form a large circle. This is a pattern of settlement that was common in the Early Bronze Age (HK Archives). 26 The area is the north of the Sinai peninsula, between Eilat and Gaza, inside the state of Israel, in the area which still preserves the biblical name of Negev. We first visited Har Karkom in 1954. The name of the mountain was then Jebel Ideid, which according to Tarabin Bedouin means the ‘mountain of celebrations’ and according to a Bedouin from the Azazme tribe, the ‘mountain of multitudes’. In both cases they are strange names for a stony mountain in the middle of the desert. This mesa-like mountain, surrounded by precipices, has two prominent hills at the centre, some natural waterholes where water is available today for about five months every year, and a few ancient trails which remained in use for ages. In 1980, we came back to this mountain, and started the archeological survey which is still in progress. Meanwhile, the mountain had acquired the Israeli name of Har Karkom, which means the Mount of Saffron. In December 1983, after four years of fieldwork, the data collected suggested the identification of Har Karkom with the biblical Mount Sinai. 27 Fig. 13a - An aerial view of the Har Karkom plateau with the precipices bordering the east side (ISR: XVIII-33). Fig. 13b - Aerial view of the two summits of Har Karkom (Site HK42). The elongated summit is called the ‘masculine summit’ and the other, with three mounds, is called the ‘feminine summit’. The cleft is located on the central rise of the ‘feminine summit’. There is a visible trail which leads to it (EA95: CVI-21). 28 This proposal awakened polemics and debates. In 1986 several editions of The Mountain of God were published in Italian, French and English, and the controversy expanded. Since then new evidence has come to light. In 2001 a new book was published, The Riddle of Mount Sinai, which updated the discoveries. In 2010 La riscoperta del Monte Sinai (The rediscovery of Mount Sinai) came out in Italian, published by the Catholic Church (Anati, 1986; 2001; 2010). Over 100 articles have appeared in international scientific journals and many more in the popular press. In the present text we are trying to summarize the two books and other texts concerning the evidence that led us to consider Har Karkom to be the biblical Mount Sinai (See enclosure: ”Bibliography of Har Karkom Research”). Year after year, new discoveries are made. In 1992, the socalled Paleolithic ‘sanctuary’ (HK82b), likely to be the oldest sanctuary known, stimulated new considerations of the history and meaning of this mountain. It became clear that it had been a place of cult for millennia (Anati, 2012; Mailland, 2012). In 1993, geoglyphs were discovered on the mountain. They are drawings made of alignments of stones on the ground, some of them having large dimensions. Some are geometric shapes, others represent anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figures. A few animal figures are over 30 m long. They are best seen from the air and they have been considered to be human offerings to an invisible celestial entity. The dates of these geoglyphs are a source of debate. According to F. Mailland, the representation of extinct animals, like the rhinoceros and the elephant, suggest a date in the Pleistocene (Mailland, 2012). Other geoglyphs may be later. In 1994, a peculiar discovery concerned a cave, which was inhabited by a solitary human being in the Bronze Age. It was excavated by a team coordinated by Giorgio Fornoni. “Hermit Cave”, as it was called, had the remains of a fireplace, an area used as a bed-like platform of c. 1.80x60 cm. with the rock on one side and a row of stones on the other, fragments of a large water jar, two flint blades and a bone spatula. In addition, remains of cooking 29 Fig. 14a - The high plateau of site HK 221/b, with the group of orthostats in front. In the far background a small heap on the surface indicates the location of the Hellenistic sanctuary (DA90: XXIII-15). Fig. 14b - Har Karkom. Aerial view of site HK 221/b. In the foreground the rectangular shape is the Hellenistic sanctuary. At the back of the summit plateau there is a defensive wall that protects the way in. Nearby are the orthostats. The cistern is located near the right end of the wall, where one can see a clear white spot (EA95: CX-17). Fig. 14c - The entrance to the Early Bronze Age cistern of HK 221/b (EA98: LXI-05). 30 were found, among which were bones of birds, small animals and ostrich eggshells (dated by C14 to 4130 +/- 50 BP = 2136 B.C.). Probably we will never know the name of this ‘hermit’, but now we have archeological testimony of an episode which is similar to that described in the Bible, where Moses ‘went to the mountain and remained there by himself for 40 days’ (Exodus 24: 18). The numerous standing stones, stone circles, paved platforms, small shrines, built altars some of them with cupmarks, several deliberately shaped anthropomorphic pillars and a variety of other non-functional structures offer us the image of an immense openair natural museum built up in the course of millennia. After over 30 years of survey, the area of investigation of 200 2 km counts today over 1,300 archeological sites. In 1980, nothing was known of the archeology of this area, except for the ten rock art sites that we discovered in 1954. The synthesis of the entire survey has now been published (Anati & Mailland 2009; 2010). But no survey is ever truly complete and additional details and even new sites are continuing to be recorded. Several excavations have been carried out, including living sites, shrines and tumuli. The fieldwork in the area of Har Karkom has involved scholars and experts from five continents and from various disciplines: anthropologists, archeologists, architects, art historians, biblical scholars, geologists, epigraphists, historians, historians of religions, paleo-botanists, paleo-climatologists, prehistorians and theologians. The international and multidisciplinary cooperation favoured a broad debate and a broadminded view of the meaning of the discoveries. One of the excavations, coordinated by Flavio Barbiero, has uncovered a cistern for the collection of water, with Early Bronze Age pottery, on an isolated peak about 5 km northwest of the Har Karkom plateau. The presence of this cistern on the peak of a stone mountain adds another to the many mysteries which still concern the mountain. Nearby there are some standing menhirs (orthostats), so that one can suppose that the cistern served the cult 31 Fig. 15a - The black stone tumulus from site HK 203/b before the excavation (EA98:LVII-38). Fig. 15b - Har Karkom, site HK 203/b. The moment of the discovery of the white stone that had been cut in the shape of a semicircle. Fig. 15c - Har Karkom, site HK 203/b. The large fan scraper found near the white stone in the tumulus (Archive HK. Drawing by Ida Mailland). 32 site. Another excavation, coordinated by Valerio Manfredi, was undertaken on a mountain which is approximately 5 km south of the Har Karkom peaks. It is the most prominent peak dominating the surrounding Paran desert. On the peak there are four rounded platforms, 8–10 m in diameter, over 1 m high, with circular walls built with large overlapping stones. It is a monumental complex. The surface finds of this area are all of the Early Bronze Age. The excavation was conducted in one of the platforms down to the bedrock. The structure did not contain a grave, or anything else: just a totally sterile filling of stones. Two hypotheses challenge each other. One is that the platforms were used to light large fires, which could be seen from the surrounding desert for many miles around, the other that these platforms are imposing altars for burning sacrifices. In any case fire must have been shining from the top of this mountain which dominates the entire Paran desert. The Paran Mountain is mentioned as one of three sacred mountains in the same area: ‘God came from Sinai, and rose up from Seir unto them: he shined forth from Mount Paran (Deut. 33: 2). The proposed identification of this mountain with the biblical Mount Paran is so far a working hypothesis (cf. figg. 12a.b). Another excavation, also coordinated by Valerio Manfredi, concerned a tumulus located on the eastern edge of Har Karkom in a prominent place. It was thought at first that it would contain a burial of an important person. But nothing came out during the removal of several cubic meters of stones. The team of excavators wanted to stop the excavation when something strange was noticed. At the centre of the structure, lying on a large rectangular boulder which was lying on the bedrock, early people had laid down a calcareous white stone, intentionally shaped. The stone is 60 cm long and about 10 cm thick and weighs around 44 kg. Early Bronze Age flint tools, including a fan scraper, were found near the stone. The tumulus is visible from far away. It is considered to be a testimonial tumulus, the kind of monument that is mentioned in the Pentateuch as gal-ed. According to biblical narrations these monuments are built to commemorate an event, or as a testimony of an agreement, or to dedicate a site (Gen. 31: 43–5; Joshua 7: 25-6, 8,28–9). 33 The tumulus of black stones was constructed to host a white stone, intentionally shaped by man as a crescent, lying on a boulder. Traces of burning on the boulder and in the nearby layer indicate that a fire was lit in front of it. A tentative reconstruction suggests that the boulder was first located in the most exposed and visible point of the mountain. The crescentstone was cut and shaped and deposed on it. A fire was lit in front of the boulder and then the whole structure was covered by a heap of stones. A debate concluded that this was a dedicatory monument, a gal-ed, with which the desert people of the Early Bronze Age dedicated the mountain to the moon or rather to the moon god, Sin. The possible relation between Har Karkom and the moon god Sin had already been hypothesized by the team studying rock art, on the grounds of the numerous figures of ibex with crescent-shaped horns seen in cult scenes. The ibex, with its horns symbolizing the moon, is related to the god Sin. These representations indicate the relevance that the cult of the god Sin had on this mountain in the Bronze Age. The figure of the ibex is often accompanied by a pair of footprints, which appear to indicate worship and adoration. It is also sometimes depicted on altar-stones, upon which there are cupmarks (man-made cupules on flat surfaces). The depiction of the ibex is likely to indicate the connection between the sacrifices and this animal. A study by Rosetta Bastoni (1997), suggests the possibility that the name Sinai derives from the name Sin, thus Mount Sinai being the mountain of the god Sin (Sinai = of Sin). Despite the fact that the top of Har Karkom is only 847 m above sea level, and 1,246 m above the present level of the Dead Sea, whose depression is a landmark on the horizon, it dominates the surrounding desert. The mountain is visible from the mountains of Edom and Moab in Jordan, more than 70 km away. Likewise, it can be seen from Jebel Arif el-Naqe, likely to be the biblical Mount Seir, located about 20 km northwest over the present border with Egypt. 34 The Paleolithic ‘sanctuary’ (HK/86b) has yielded a flint industry found in 24 other sites of the area (Karkomian) which displays blades, points of the type of the “Chatelperron point” along with a Middle Paleolithic tradition of “Levallois flaking”, and is considered to be initial Upper Paleolithic, likely earlier than the local Aurignacian. Having no radiocarbon dating so far, it is tentatively dated to c. 40,000 BP, but it may be earlier. The sanctuary consists of about 40 anthropomorphic orthostats made from flint, some of them over 1 m high. It is located in a small valley on the edge of the eastern precipice of the mountain. Smaller figurines of flint have also been found, as well as remains of geoglyphs. From this sanctuary we may presume that Har Karkom is likely to have been a sacred mountain from an early phase of the presence of Homo sapiens. The Paleolithic sanctuary has always remained exposed and visible during the course of millennia. Though some of its orthostats have fallen down near their original location and some have been manipulated by recent visitors, the site still retains its original effect. The cult sites on the mesa are mainly of the BAC period, c. 4,300– 2,000 B.C. The material culture, in particular the flint industry, maintains the same general character throughout the various phases of this period. Minor typological changes can be defined technically but do not reflect substantial changes. Society and the way of living seem to have kept similar trends based on a pastoral and hunting economy. Some of the hamlets and the flint implements may indicate the presence of wheat agriculture. At the foot of the mountain several shrines, alignments of menhirs and other cult structures of the same period, have been recorded near the living sites. There are also later cult sites, including a small temple from the Iron Age and a sanctuary from the Hellenistic period; both are near the mountain, but are not on it. The evolved phase of the BAC period (BAC IV, 3300-2000 B.C.) was the period of the most intense occupation, as is shown by numerous sites on the mountain and the campsites at its base. Out of 35 - The Figg. 16a.b - Har Karkom, site HK38. Rock engraving of an ibex accompanied by footprints. The ibex was the symbolic animal of the God Sin. The footprints indicate an act of devotion (ISR84: XX-37). Figg. 17a.b - Tracing and photograph of an anthropomorphic stone in which eyes and nostrils have been emphasised. On the “forehead” of the figure an image of an antelope has been engraved (Site HK 64b; drawing: HK Archive, photo EA93: XIXX-9; WARA W01836, W05895). 36 187 sites which are located in the valleys at the foot of the mountain, 128 are habitation structures, villages with basements of stone wall huts. Large human groups came to its foot and the mountain was the theatre of numerous cult activities. Archeological discoveries illustrate the gathering of large groups of people around the mountain; living sites are equipped with shrines, altars and standing stones, which offer the image of a paramount sacred mountain in the heart of the desert, practically in the middle of nowhere. In this respect it has no parallels in the Sinai Peninsula. Again, could it be that such an outstanding Bronze Age holy mountain would not be mentioned in the Pentateuch? And if so, what would the biblical name of the mountain be? The area of Har Karkom has provided an immense amount of documentation on the way of life, the social structure, the economy, the customs and the beliefs of the desert people. It was clear from the very beginning that Har Karkom had been a cult high place, a sort of prehistoric Mecca, where human groups arrived and built their campsites at its foot. But could it be the holy mountain of Exodus? As mentioned already, only a few people were allowed to go up to the plateau. The surface of the plateau is covered with important Paleolithic remains: over 239 sites with hut floors, 42 fireplaces and 55 flint workshops were found practically intact. On the hammada, the typical stony soil of the stony desert, some trails lead from one to another of the cult sites of the BAC period and cross the Paleolithic sites. It is unlikely that the large numbers of people at the BAC campsites came to walk en masse on this surface, because if so the Paleolithic sites would not have remained in this perfect state of preservation. It seems that the BAC population had no access to the plateau: it was probably restricted to the limited number of persons who practiced at the shrines. We may detect the sharp difference in the use of the mesa between the Paleolithic and the BAC. Entire surfaces are covered by Paleolithic flint implements, while the BAC material culture is concentrated at specific and well-defined sites. Probably the access to holy places was reserved to high priests 37 and was taboo for the majority of the population. An analogous prohibition of people climbing the mountain can be found in a passage in Exodus: ‘the people cannot go up Mount Sinai’ (Exodus: 19, 12-13). Similar rules are common in tribal societies. Just by themselves they do not make the kind of argument that would confirm the proposed identification of Mount Sinai, but the parallel with the biblical account is noteworthy. Pillars or menhirs, alignments of standing stones, circles of stones, tumuli, altars, small ‘private sanctuaries’ in which an orthostat is usually surrounded by smaller stones and unusual paved platforms likely to be what the Bible calls bamoth (stages) are all indications of cult activities. We can add to this the enormous production of rock art (153 sites with over 40,000 engravings), the geoglyphs, the remains of a small temple on the plateau and at least nine more at the foot of the mountain. Indeed, Har Karkom contains a unique aggregation of cult activities in the BAC period. Every scholar acquainted with the findings agrees that Har Karkom was a rather exceptional Bronze Age Holy Mountain, but this fact by itself would not be sufficient to identify it with the biblical Mount Sinai. And indeed, having been told “at school” that the mountain near St Catherine is being Mount Sinai, even for the present writer it demanded a certain effort to consider this possibility. The first archeological considerations which suggested a link between Har Karkom and Mount Sinai were based on the analogies between the field discoveries and biblical descriptions. Near one habitation site of the BAC period, at the foot of the mountain (site HK/52) a group of 12 pillars were standing in front of a stone platform. This recalls the Exodus passage (24, 4): ‘And Moses got up early in the morning and built at the foot of the mountain an altar and 12 pillars, for the 12 tribes of Israel’. Here we found an altar and 12 pillars at the foot of the mountain, near a campsite from the Bronze Age. Obviously, no one is in a position to prove that this monument was built by Moses, nor even that Moses ever existed, 38 Fig. 18a - A small “private sanctuary” on the plateau of Har Karkom (Site HK/13e). An orthostat is standing in front of a black rock and it is surrounded by other stones which were arranged by man. There are flint artefacts of the Early Bronze Age (EA96 VI-18). Figg. 18b.c - Two of the orthostats of site HK 23/b. These monuments include stones with natural shapes which have been chosen intentionally by man because of their vaguely anthropomorphic forms (ISR EA93: X-14, ISR EA93: XVI-6). 39 but the monument is there, and if nothing more, it was probably seen and interpreted by ancient visitors in biblical times. On the top of one of the two hilltops of Har Karkom there is a small rock cleft. A cleft on the summit of a mountain is not common in the Sinai Peninsula. In Exodus 33: 21-22 Mount Sinai is described as having this characteristic. It may well be a coincidence. On the plateau of Har Karkom there are the remains of a small temple from the BAC period built with non-worked stones, with a platform (altar?), oriented to the east. Around this sanctuary are tumuli, geoglyphs and rock engravings which include footprints, engraved as if towards the mountain top. The footprint has been a sign of veneration and cult in most parts of the Near East and elsewhere since Neolithic times. In the book of Exodus there are mentions of a temple that Moses was supposed to have seen on the top of the mountain (Exodus 25: 40; 26: 30; 27: 8). This means that in the idea of the writers there was a temple on the mountain. And here there is a temple. Again, it may be a pure coincidence. Similarities between biblical descriptions and archeological findings appear as simplistic and non-probative. How could archeology provide factual evidence on traditions that survived for millennia? How could mythical accounts find reliable confirmation from material evidence? Fig. 19a - Har Karkom, site HK1/b. A circle of large stones in the corner of a sanctuary of the Early Bronze Age at Har Karkom has inside a series of small stones (some of which are fallen). In front of them are traces of a fire. Both temples are likely to have been located in what may have been Midianite territory (ISR84: XIV-14). Fig. 19b - A group of small stones fitted in the corner of a sanctuary in the Uvda Valley. The area of the standing stones is surrounded by boulders which delimit its area. The small, standing stones are likely to have represented the cult of ancestors or ancestral spirits, and may coincide with the family idols mentioned in Genesis by the name of Terafim (ISR84: XXIII-39). Fig. 19c - Har Karkom, site HK 234. Altar-stone with a large cupmark on the top, and a protruding horn with traces of an engraved anthropomorphic face. On the side of the monument there is an engraving depicting an anthropomorphic masked figure and an ibex. It may commemorate the dedication of the altar-stone (ISR. 86: LI-17). 40 41 Fig. 20 - Site HK 52 at the foot of the mountain where an altar is located (the low, stone platform in the centre of the photo) and 12 pillars aligned in two rows of six (EA98: LVIII-28). Fig. 21 - Har Karkom, site HK42. The rock cleft situated on one of the two summits of the mountain (EA93: XX-24). 42 Other parallels between the biblical accounts and the archeological findings were looking at first sight like coincidences. But with the progress of research these coincidences became too many. In the first place, rock art provides a remarkable number of parallels with the biblical accounts. The rock engravings representing the table with ten partitions, which was defined as ‘The Ten Commandments’, or the figure of the ‘serpent and the staff’ or that of ‘the eye of God that looks from the rock’ are already well known. Nothing similar has been found in other mountains in the peninsula or in other rock art sites. This style of hermetic rock art from the BAC period is typical of Har Karkom. This wealth of biblical parallels is at least peculiar to those who wish to explain it as purely casual. But again, just by themselves they are not probative. Among the cult sites on and around this mountain there are also many sites which may have nothing to do with the biblical tradition. Stone circles and stone alignments were built around some of the boulders that had come down from the mountain, and around some of them there are traces of ceremonial trails, likely to have been routes for ceremonial performances. There are 25 sites of geoglyphs on the plateau and around it. There are standing pillars, orthostats or menhirs in 60 sites, some of them forming circles or alignments. Nothing of the sort is described in the Pentateuch. The cult of this mountain persisted for millennia, with a particular intensity in the Early Bronze Age and at the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age, involving different populations and in more than one instance, human groups camped at its foot. So far we cannot say if one of those groups was made of slaves who fled from Egypt but we can say that some of the archeological finds tell us stories similar to those described in the Bible. The spirit of several monuments and sites at Har Karkom is very similar to that of the biblical accounts. They appear as illustrations to the biblical text. But again all this could be a pure coincidence. In any case, year after year the general image becomes richer and more complex. 43 When the identification of Har Karkom with Mount Sinai was proposed in 1983, 200 sites were known within our archeological area of investigation. When the book The Mountain of God came out in 1986, 500 archeological sites had been recorded. Since then, the archeological expeditions conducted every year have brought the number to over 1,300. Years of field research have allowed us to acquire a concrete knowledge of the territory and to collect conspicuous documentation. The mountain, as far as we know, does not have parallels as a pertinent and paramount cult site in the BAC period in the course of almost 2,000 years. It is unlikely that such a site, in the area in which it is located, would not be mentioned in the Bible. Again and again the same question arises: if it is not Mount Sinai, what was its biblical name? Current archeology identifies the remains of structures of stones, floors of huts, fireplaces and other aspects of material culture. In this context, there are many additional elements. Traces of battered, compact paleo-soils, intentional traced trails leading to standing stones and stone alignments, reveal the action of the human hand on the entire territory. It seems that man manipulated the forms of nature, completing and complementing them with new elements such as rock art, geoglyphs, orthostats, stone circles, tumuli, platforms, non-functional structures and other ceremonial sites. The entire surface of many sites appears as an immense mosaic where ancient people left their messages. In 30 years of survey we were able to read some of these messages; others still remain to be deciphered. Today the majority of scholars agree that Har Karkom was a great cult high place, a ‘mountain of God’, but they are Fig. 22a - Har Karkom, site HK24. The “Midianite temple” in the centre of the plateau. The platform (altar?) is facing east. On the western side of the structure is a small room (HK Archives). Fig. 22b - Har Karkom, site HK 24. Aerial view of the central part of the plateau with the traces of trails. To the left are the remains of the Midianite temple. In the upper part of the photo remains of geoglyphs representing large quadrupeds are among hut basements (the white circular forms) from the Paleolithic period (EA95: CVI-4). 44 45 split on its possible identification with the biblical Mount Sinai. Our modest feeling is that those refusing to make this identification are not sufficiently acquainted with the discoveries. Much archeological documentation collected at Har Karkom corresponds to the biblical stories, but it does not demonstrate Keller’s theory that ‘the Bible was right’ (Keller, 1957) and it does not even demonstrate that there was a revelation on Mount Sinai or that Moses ever existed. The hypothesis that we then proposed is that the compilers of the narration, or the storytellers who came before and after them, had a visual idea of Mount Sinai and Har Karkom was the model that they had in front of their eyes (Anati, 2001). But new finds seem to project us towards a new interpretation, that is, primarily the dedicatory tumulus to the lunar god Sin. On the grounds of the finds discovered in the course of the excavation, this monument can be dated to an early phase of the Early Bronze Age, probably 3200–2600 B.C. The mountain was then dedicated to the lunar god Sin, a divinity of Mesopotamian origin having the main worship center in Haran, which is considered to be the land of origin of the Hebrew Patriarchs. The proposal of the possible origin of the name of Mount Sinai in the Mesopotamian god Sin seems to add a new riddle to the many existing already. If Mount Sinai is the mountain dedicated to the god Sin, what connection could it have with the story of Moses and the revelation of the Hebrew laws? Could there be any relation between the ancient gods Sin and Yah? This query will be dealt with elsewhere. However, the main arguments for the identification of Har Karkom with the biblical Mount Sinai are its location. What are the indications provided by the topography of Mount Sinai as described in the Bible? What concept did the compilers have about the shape and the geographical location of Mount Sinai? We shall talk about that in the following pages. 46 3 - THE BIBLICAL GEOGRAPHY The biblical narrative of Exodus and of Mount Sinai describes in detail the location of the Mountain of Moses. The archeological finds and the topography of the territory help us understand the biblical texts and reveal the core of the biblical narration. The march towards the Promised Land is not an exclusive feature of Hebrew mythology; it follows the trend of archetypal myths of origin of various populations in at least four continents. Indeed, reaching the Promised Land is an ambition of almost everybody; every human being on Earth is looking for a promised land. Exodus is a recurring theme even in the biblical narration. Narrations as those of the exodus of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, the exodus of the Patriarch Abraham from the Land of the Two Rivers to the Promised Land, the exodus of the Patriarch Jacob to Egypt, are antecedents of the exodus of the children of Israel from Egypt. The biblical story of the wanderings in the desert and Mount Sinai has a strong ethical message. The crossing of the desert and the revelation at the Mountain of God appear as a metaphor of a rite de passage of universal value, through which a people becomes adult, free and having a new identity. What of this story preserves historical memory and what reflects the elaborations of generations of story-tellers is a query open to a series of different answers, from 47 the believers of the absolute truth of the story to those considering the story the result of absolute invention. The truth is probably in the middle. No myth can survive for thousands of years if it does not have some roots in truth and no myth can remain purely an objective chronicle after being transmitted for generations. Whether or not based on historical events, a vast literature came into existence during the last 2,000 years on the story of Exodus. In our opinion, the vision of Mount Sinai near the monastery of St Catherine, in the south of the Sinai Peninsula, does not fit the topography of the biblical description of its location and is not supported by archeological evidence. Why the knowledge of the original location of the Mountain of God was lost by the collective memory is not clear, though various explanations are proposed by different authors. The attempts to localize the Mountain of God near St Catherine go back to the Byzantine period, more than one millennium after the prophet Eliya is said to have visited the mountain, and since then the doubts have stimulated research (Kings 19: 6–15). The search for the locality has engaged time and effort on the part of many explorers, archeologists, geographers and theologians and there are over 20 Candidate Mountains identified with the biblical Mount Sinai by various writers. Several scholars have gone so far as to conclude that the whole story of Exodus was a pure and simple myth and that Mount Sinai never existed. This hypothesis seems to us an easy and superficial solution. A sacred mountain is likely to have existed, though the miracles described may well have metaphorical meaning or may have been magnified by troubadours. Other scholars have seen the wanderings of the children of Israel as a casual movement from one well to another, with the lists of the stations of Exodus as a litany of magic words without meaning. In a previous publication (Anati, 1997) it was demonstrated that this hypothesis is simply wrong. Others saw this wandering as an itinerary from Egypt to the Byzantine Jebel Mousa ‘Mountain of 48 Fig. 23 - The main mountains proposed by the various authors for the identification of the biblical Mount Sinai (HK Archives). 49 Moses’, situated in the south of the peninsula near St Catherine, and from there to Ain Kuderat, believed to be the biblical Kadesh Barnea, in the north of the peninsula. Others again suggested the possibility that the itinerary of Exodus described sites along the Mediterranean coast, in the north of Sinai. On the basis of the topographical descriptions of the Pentateuch, in the last 50 years various scholars have advocated that Mount Sinai had to be located in the north of the peninsula and not in the south. There are several hypotheses of identification, but never before had the area of Har Karkom been proposed and never before had a mountain proposed for the identification been supported by archeology as being a sacred mountain in the Bronze Age, a place of worship and where multitudes gathered. Whoever thinks the story is a fairy tale has no need to look for the geography of Exodus. Whoever begins an analysis of the topography of the itinerary of Exodus with the preconceived idea that Mount Sinai should be in the region of St Catherine or in any other area in the south of the Sinai Peninsula will find it impossible to give a geographical sense to the sequence of the stations of Exodus. The whole biblical itinerary of Exodus, from Egypt to Mount Sinai and to Kadesh Barnea took place in the north of the peninsula. The south appears to have been totally ignored (Anati, 1997). It seems likely that the described itinerary was topographically acceptable to the people who knew the area and its topography when it was memorized, compiled, recited or declaimed in the first millennium B.C. In fact it is clear still today to whoever is familiar with the territory. Having myself explored the Negev and Sinai for 50 years, the biblical descriptions of several of the sites in the itinerary of Exodus appear as real, reliable, identifiable and precise. The present writer has carried on archeological excavations and explorations in the Negev and elsewhere in the Sinai Peninsula ever since 1952. In 1989 and again in 1992 departing from the ‘Land of Goshen’, in the Nile Delta, the writer followed the various 50 hypotheses of Exodus in the territory, in the Egyptian Sinai, in the Israeli Negev and in the Jordanian highlands, visiting wells and sites along ancient trails. After years of ‘wanderings in the desert’ in order to carry on archeological prospection of other kinds, mainly on prehistoric sites and rock art, it was surprising to realize that it was possible to produce a new decoding of the territory by examining data which had been examined before, but with the new perspective of looking for early routes and a geographical history of Exodus. We went back to areas where we had been before. Trails, mountains and valleys, wells and remains of nomadic campsites that had always been there suddenly acquired new dimensions. In our view the list of stations in the biblical narrative has a precise geographical sense, as we have shown in our book Esodo, tra mito e storia (1997). The idea that Har Karkom could be identified with the biblical Mount Sinai came after four years of fieldwork and exploration on the mountain and in the area, and 30 years after we first discovered rock art in that area. Our fieldwork was not oriented to biblical archeology and we did not look for Mount Sinai. It was not easy to conceive that the archeological discoveries could be connected to the biblical narrative and it was a difficult step to go into biblical exegesis. Ever since, in the last 30 years, both biblical exegesis and field exploration have made some progress. The numerous cult structures had demonstrated the role of the mountain as a paramount cult high place. On the basis of topographical and archeological evidence, in 1983 the idea that Har Karkom could be identified with the sacred mountain of the biblical narrative gradually was born. Since then, 30 years have elapsed and research, prospection and discoveries have given new dimensions to this hypothesis. Like other innovations in research, the idea has been received with skepticism by some scholars, but no serious debate has ever taken place on the basis of the evidence produced about Har Karkom. The evidence published so far is not complete but is sufficient for the necessary knowledge for a sound evaluation. 51 Fig. 24 - Tribal territories and the deserts in the narration of exodus are all located in the north of the peninsula. None of the names of the peoples and of the deserts mentioned in the narration of exodus are located in the south of the peninsula (From Anati, 1997, HK Archives). 52 Looking at the biblical accounts, C.S. Jarvis, B. Mazar and others had already established in the 1930s that Mount Sinai should be located in the north of the peninsula, but the identification of a specific site relying on archeological evidence was embarrassing and disturbing for those having different preconceived ideas (Jarvis, 1931; Mazar, 1977). It was a scandalizing new fact. All the other mountain candidates for Mount Sinai have no pertinent suitable archeological documentation. In the area of St Catherine the earliest traces of the cult of the mountain go back only to Byzantine times. As far as we know, besides the Greek Orthodox Church, which maintained until recently that Mount Sinai should be in the area of St Catherine, no other religious denomination has so far established a clear position concerning the geographical location of Mount Sinai. Since this mountain is the main point of reference and holy place of monotheism, the fact that most monotheistic religions have ignored its location is worth consideration. This may also explain why its discovery is disturbing and causing rejection. The main biblical texts which help identify the area where the mountain is located, according to the compilers, are the lists of the sites of Exodus and the description of the mountain and its topography in the books of Exodus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. Because of the present writer’s long history of work in the Negev and Sinai, he does not share the ideas of those who study the itinerary at their desks and consider that the biblical stations are not identifiable or that they are canonical litanies without geographical significance. On the contrary, we consider that the biblical itinerary of Exodus, from the land of Goshen to Mount Sinai, and from there to Kadesh Barnea, and from there to Jericho, has a geographic logic and can be traced. The text, when it was compiled, was aimed at a public who knew the territory and knew where Elim, Alush or Refidim, were located; they were obviously acquainted with the location of the Shur desert, the deserts of Sin, Zin and Paran, and the territory of the Edomites, Midianites, Amalekites, Horites and Amorites. Most tribal people have a total knowledge of their territory and its geographical names and it is unlikely that the biblical populations were less informed than others. 53 New elements have been added to the itinerary of Exodus proposed in my book The Mountain of God (Anati, 1986). The topography has been enriched by further geographical and archeological data. They concern, in particular, the two biblical stations of Mara and Elim, at sites responding to the biblical description, respectively at El Murra and in the vicinities of Abu Awgeila, and in the biblical site of Refidim at Beer Karkom (see Esodo tra mito e storia, Anati, 1997). If, as we trust, there are sufficient elements for identifying these sites, the biblical itinerary of Exodus and the area in which Mount Sinai can be located become clear. Beyond the new data, a fundamental query emerges. After the long stay at Mount Sinai did the biblical itinerary describe faraway sites or sites along the border of the Promised Land? One of the factors which at first excluded any relation between Har Karkom and Exodus was its position on the border of the Promised Land. The southern border of the land of Israel, according to the Book of Joshua (15: 1–4), went from the shores of the Dead Sea, through the south of Maale Haakrabim, to the south of Kadesh Barnea, to the River of Egypt (Wadi el-Arish), all the way to the Mediterranean coast. Mount Sinai is frequently seen in the literature as a faraway site. Har Karkom is far from any itinerary of Exodus previously proposed, it is outside the borders described in the Book of Joshua, but it is not far from them. It is located in what is defined by the general term of the Land of Edom, halfway between Ezion Gaber and Kadesh Barnea at the north of the area called the Paran desert. In the sea of alternative proposals on the itinerary of Exodus, there are some points which are more or less agreed by most scholars, such as the location of Kadesh Barnea in the area of the oasis of Ein Kudeirat and of Ezion-Gaber on the shores of the Gulf of Akaba, near the modern town of Eilat. Nevertheless, for over 1,500 years most interpreters of the Exodus since Byzantine times have considered the area of St Catherine to be the site of the Mountain of Moses and so they see the biblical itinerary after Mount Sinai as a random wandering in the south and centre of the peninsula, 54 Fig. 25 - “Eleven days from Horeb to Kadesh Barnea by the way of Seir” (Deut. 1, 2). The map shows two roads from Har Karkom to Kadesh Barnea. One, by the way of Jebel Arif el Naqe, which is identified with Mount Seir, crosses the foot of this mountain and has ten groups of wells along its way. For a group of people walking by foot, it is an eleven day journey, as remembered in the Bible. The other way, the way of Amalek, is shorter but more difficult, with two mountain passes (HK Archives). 55 in terra incognita. A detailed consideration of the names, the description and the sequence of the stations mentioned in Numbers 10–13 shows a very different reality (Anati, 1997). In Deut. 1: 19 is written: ‘And we departed from Horeb, we went through all the great and terrible wilderness, which ye saw by the way of the mountain of the Amorites…’ This Amorite route, from Mount Sinai after the Paran desert, should be in the Amorite territory. Various passages of the Pentateuch place the Amorites to the south of the Dead Sea, not far from the Arava Valley. This is not the south of the Sinai Peninsula. The Paran desert, near Hazerot, is described as the site of the departure of the ‘explorers’ who carried back a huge bunch of grapes. They reached Hebron departing from the desert of Zin (Numbers 13: 1). The Paran desert is the ‘great and terrible desert’ of the previous citation and, from the biblical narrative, it is located between Mount Sinai, the Arava Valley and the desert of Zin (which is different from the desert of Sin, which is further south). Nahal Zin, from the Arava Valley to today’s Sde Boker, north of Har Karkom, is identified with the biblical desert of Zin where an important caravan route still passes from the Arava to the Arad region and then to the Hebron mountains. Most of these names were commonly known places at the time of compilation; some of them are still in use and can be located on a map. The list of stations following Mount Sinai again shows the itinerary described in the books of Deuteronomy and Numbers. The site of Bene Yaakan has a Horite name (Numbers 33: 32; Deut. 10: 6), and the Horites (Genesis 14, 36; Deut. 2) lived near the Arava Valley. According to the biblical description, Yotvata and Avrona are localities in the Arava (Numbers 33: 34), and Ezion Gaber was at the end of the Arava, on the northern end of the Gulf of Akaba (Numbers 33: 36). Following these indications on a map, the biblical itinerary becomes clear. Departing from Mount Sinai and crossing the Paran desert, it reaches the Arava Valley near the desert of Zin, then, after the departure of the explorers, 56 Fig. 26 - Map showing the main landmarks visible from Har Karkom. Mountain peaks as far away as 80km can be seen (HK Archives). 57 Fig. 27 - Schematic topographical map of Har Karkom. Cult-sites are concentrated on the high plateau, and the living sites from the Bronze Age are located in the surrounding valleys (HK Archives). 58 turns south towards Yotvata, Avrona and Ezion Gaber, reaching eventually Kadesh Barnea avoiding the land of the Amalekites and other tribal areas. Such descriptions appear to reflect topographic references to names and localities, indicating that the compiler had a sound knowledge of the territory. The location of Mount Sinai can be defined in a restricted area in the southern Negev. In other contexts as well, the biblical chronicler knew how to locate Mount Sinai: ‘Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father-in-law, the priest of Midian, and he led the flock beyond the desert, and came to the Mountain of God, Horeb’ (Exodus 3: 1). In the story of Moses in Midian, Mount Sinai, which is also called Horeb, is described as a herding territory of the Midianites, beyond the (Paran) desert which separates it from the habitation site of Jethro, the Midianite, not far from the Arava Valley (Perhaps in the Uvda Valley?). On the way, between Jethro’s place of residence and Egypt, Aaron went to meet Moses who was coming from the land of Midian, going back to Egypt, and met him near the Mountain of God (Exodus 4: 26). That means that, according to the biblical view, the way from Midian to Egypt crosses by Mount Sinai. The land of Midian and the land of Egypt were clearly located by the compilers and Mount Sinai is on the way. These descriptions locate what the Bible calls Mount Sinai in the area of Har Karkom. Har Karkom is the only locality, among those proposed for Mount Sinai, which fits without any effort into all these co-ordinates. It is also the only mountain that has a recorded archeological evidence of the paramount cult role it had in the Bronze Age. A more detailed description of the topography of the itinerary and of the connected geographical inferences has been presented in previous publications (Anati, 1997; 2001; 2010). According to the biblical story, the Hebrews went to collect water at Mount Horeb while staying at Refidim. The Bible describes Refidim as being at short walking distance from Mount Sinai (Exodus 17: 15). It is also presented as the well that caused debate and dispute. The tribes of the Amalekites and the 59 Midianites disputed the ownership of the well. The narrative tells us that both these tribes were present at Refidim which, according to the topographical view of the biblical narrations, is on the border between their territories. The Midianites were on the side of the Arava Valley and the Amalekites on the Highlands of the Central Negev. This is also an additional hint of the location of Mount Sinai according to the biblical narrative. It locates it in the pastoral land of the midianites, not far from the border with the land of Amalek. The Amalekites came to Refidim to send away the children of Israel, while Jethro the Midianites came to welcome them. The well of Beer Karkom, 7 km north of Har Karkom, where there are remains of large campsites from the BAC period, reflects the same topography and seems to correspond to the biblical site of Refidim. Near the well there is a major track coming down from the mountains of the Central Negev; it may well be the same that the biblical chronicler mentions while describing the arrival of the Amalekites at Refidim. Har Karkom is therefore located in the pastoral land of the Midianites, near the border between Midian and Amalek. This is the biblical location of Mount Sinai. Other biblical descriptions provide useful topographical data on the territory. At the beginning of Deuteronomy it is written ‘there are eleven days’ journey from Horeb by the way of mount Seir unto Kadesh Barnea’ (Deut. 1: 2) Kadesh Barnea is currently identified with Ain Kudeirat or the nearby Ain Kadis. Mount Seir (Seir means hairy) is identified with Jebel Arif el-Naqe, which has a valley with water on the northern side, with grazing areas where the wells of Bir Main and Bir el Beidha are located. It really is a hairy mountain, in the sense that its foot-hills are still covered in bushes. There is a good trail between Har Karkom and Ain Kudeirat, via Jebel Arif el-Naqe. Along this route there are ten wells at a distance of between 7 km and 15 km from each other. The walking distance from one well to the other varies between four and eight hours which is the range of daily walking time avoiding the hottest hours. In 1987 the trail could be used by donkeys and camels and certain 60 sections were not suitable for jeeps. Part of this trail was recently replaced by an asphalt paved road for vehicles. The compilator knew the itinerary while mentioning 11 days. Along this trail one may stop every evening near a source of water. If Har Karkom is Mount Sinai, for a clan or other group that walks on foot, eleven days are indeed needed to get to Kadesh Barnea from Horeb by way of Mount Seir (Anati, 1997, fig. 75, p. 115). Who could want to say that such biblical passages are meaningless nursery rhymes? Figg. 28a.b - Har Karkom, site HK 37. Rock engravings on the plateau of Har Karkom are situated near a waterhole, which seem to relate to the Deuteronomy passage (Deut. 8: 14– 15): “Then thy heart be lifted up, and thou forget the Lord thy God, who brought thee out of the land of Mizrayim, from the house of bondage; who led thee through that great and terrible wilderness, in which there were venomous serpents, and scorpions, and “saraf” (poisonous lizard ?), where there was no water; who brought forth water for thee out of the rock of flint” (EA96:XXII-1). 61 Figg. 29a.b - Rock engraving of the staff and the serpent (Site HK 32). The staff has a pair of horns, which means ‘powerful’ or ‘full of energy’. The drawing, on a small standing stone, is likely to commemorate the story of a staff and a serpent (ISR-94:XLVII-27). Fig. 31 - Har Karkom, HK 2. Rock engraving representing a worshipper with an abstract sign next to it. This theme is repeated several times along the trail that leads from the western valley to the plateau of Har Karkom (ISR82:EA-1). Figg. 30a.b - Har Karkom, site HK 126/b. Rock engraving called ‘The Ten Commandments’ (HK Archives) (EA98: LVI-03). Fig. 32 - Rock engraving of ‘the eye that looks down from the rock’. There are seven lines up and seven lines down from the eye (EA98:LVIII-06). 62 63 It is worth emphasizing that the Bible describes deserts and tribal zones around Mount Sinai. One of the main pieces of data emerging is that according to the narrative Mount Sinai, must be situated in the Midianite territory near the borders between Midian and Amalek (Exodus 17: 9–20). The Bible also says that the Amalekites occupied the highlands of the Central Negev and the zone of Kadesh Barnea, while the Midianites were located on both sides of the Arava Valley (Anati, 1997). According to the biblical narrative Mount Sinai is located between these two regions. Following the biblical topographic indications, Mount Sinai is located in the area of Har Karkom. This could have been established even if nothing had been found at Har Karkom. The archeological remains seem to give new life to the biblical accounts. No other mountain, among all those proposed for identification with Mount Sinai, and also among all the mountains in the entire Negev and Sinai area, corresponds so precisely to all these characteristics. Thus, beyond the biblical narrative there is a high degree of reliability in the topographical descriptions. Archeological and anthropological investigation can attempt to understand how much of the story is real and how much the fruit of myths or fantasy. The monuments and the archeological sites that we find today are at the surface and they have been visible all the time in the course of the last millennia. Perhaps 3,000 years ago they were better preserved than today. It is likely that people travelling at that time saw them and attempted to interpret them, to relate them to some historical past, as is still done by the Bedouins of today. We have examined the discovery in its context, we have considered the archeological and topographic evidence, we have seen the identikit of the Mountain of God, according to the biblical text. An important query is still open, that of chronology. If there was an exodus, if there was a Moses and the presence of a Hebrew people at the foot of Mount Sinai, what is the date of this event? This will be the subject of the following pages. 64 4 - THE CHRONOLOGICAL PROBLEMS Ancient Egyptian texts, changing climates and archeological finds reveal a surprising consensus on chronology. For over a century, archeologists and biblical scholars have debated the question of the age during which the exodus of the Hebrews from Egypt towards the Promised Land took place. Some of them question the historical reliability of the biblical text. There were and there are those who consider that the story of Exodus is a historical document, others view it as a liturgical declamation, others claim that the event concerned a small group of slaves fleeing from Egypt, presumably only a small part of the Hebrew people; there are people who believe that there have been several exoduses; and there are those who value the narration as the fruit of a myth without any historical basis. The biblical account refers to one exodus which was shared by 12 tribes having Moses as charismatic leader. The problem of the chronology of Exodus exists only if one accepts that an exodus might indeed have taken place. The itinerary of the biblical narrative follows a geographical logic. Having ascertained this, in our view, it is possible to deduce that Exodus’s itinerary, as described in the Bible in the books of Exodus, Numbers and Deuteronomy was geographically intelligible at the time its compilation took place to whoever knew the territory. In theory the geographical coherence only indicates the topographical knowledge of the compilers. 65 It does not demonstrate that the narrated events really happened. In the last few generations exegesists have developed different ways of defining the possible background of the story of Exodus, the real events behind the narrative. Various theories locate the epoch of the conception of the story from the late third millennium to the beginning of the first millennium B.C. Several exegesists rely on the dating proposed by the Bible itself: ‘And it came to pass in the 480th year after the children of Israel were come out of the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon’s reign over Israel… that he began to build the house of the Lord’ (I Kings 6: 1). Although under fire in recent criticism, Solomon is a historical figure believed to have started his long reign around 970 B.C. Accordingly, the departure from Egypt is hypothesized at around 1450 B.C. Another calculation is that which relies on the succession of Judges, according to the Book of Judges, which goes back at least 100 years earlier, therefore around 1550 B.C. However, the most diffuse theory in recent years has proposed that the exodus took place in the 13th century B.C. (Cazelles, 1954; 1955; Kallai, 1983; Mazar, 1986). The first indication that we have so far of the presence of Israel as a political entity in Canaan to the west of the Jordan is found on a stele erected at Thebes in Egypt by the Pharaoh Mer-ne-Ptah, around 1220 B.C. Israel appears there as one of the people who had surrendered or been destroyed by an Egyptian military campaign. Israel appears as a political entity which occupies only part of the land of Canaan. According to the archeological evidence and the biblical narrative, we are then at the dawn of the period of Judges. If there was an exodus from Egypt, this should have taken place before the erection of the stele. There is not, however, a unanimous opinion on the length of time from the departure from Egypt to the settling of Israel west of the Jordan River. At the beginning of the book of Exodus the advent of a pharaoh who did not recognize the rights of the Hebrews is indicated: ‘there arose up a new king over Egypt, which knew not Joseph’ (Exodus 1: 8). ‘Therefore, they did set over them taskmasters to afflict them with their burdens. And they built for Pharaoh protected cities, Pithom and Raamses’ (Exodus 1: 11–12). The reference to the change 66 of policy towards immigrants may be a relevant chronological indication, as discussed already (Anati, 2010). According to the narrative, the towns of Raamses and Pithom appear to have been built in the period in which the children of Israel were in Egypt. Raamses, the capital of Egypt in the north of the Delta from the time of the Pharaoh Raamses II (c. 1292–1237 B.C.) to the 22nd dynasty (935–730 B.C.), acquired this name under Raamses II. The exegetical conventional dating assumes that if the city of Raamses was constructed after 1300 B.C. and if the Hebrews built it, the exodus must have taken place after that date. This has been retained as the main fixed point of the conventional chronology of a leading exegetical school and one might say that it has the function of a trap. Raamses is mentioned as a geographical area in the Book of Genesis also, referring to a period that all exegesists would agree must have been well before the 13th century B.C. “…and Joseph settled his father and his brothers in the land of Raamses…” (Genesis 47:11). The name emerges as a geographical indicator in the Books of Exodus and Genesis for the site where, according to tradition, the Hebrews settled, developed and then were obliged to do hard labour in Egypt. It was not the name it had in the period of the Patriarchs and is not necessarily the same name that the site had at the time of Moses. This is true also for other names that the Bible uses in an anachronistic way. For example, the story of Abimelech at Gerar, defined to be in the land of the Philistines (Gen. 26:1). The area could hardly have had that name at the time of Isaac the Patriarch, before the Philistines arrived, while at the period the text was compiled it undoubtedly did have that name. It is a normal narrative process, as when we might say: ‘… the Neolithic people settled in the area of Tel Aviv…’. This does not signify that the site was called Tel Aviv in the Neolithic period. As a consequence of such preconceived assumptions, this exegetical chronology had fixed the limits between which the exodus should have taken place at between 1292 and 1220 B.C., thus in any event in the 13th century B.C. The ancient tells in the Delta area have archeological layers of the New Kingdom which overlap older levels. 67 Har Beer Har Maktesh Karkom Karkom Saggi Ramon Har MR Ramon SW Har Har Hamran Hamran Sw SE Sde Har Shivta Sde Nafha Boqer Boqer E W Palaeolithic 324 98 3 21 25 5 3 7 3 5 1 12 Neolithic 11 6 1 3 3 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 212 BAC (Chalcolithic to MB age I) 150 76 61 43 78 45 80 59 21 40 36 MB age II & Iron age I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Iron age II & Persian 1 14 2 16 13 27 83 80 93 6 22 20 Hellenistic & Nabataean 4 19 10 2 3 35 26 11 42 45 0 1 Roman Byzantine 65 203 110 122 34 129 121 123 274 271 59 54 Islamic 83 124 3 21 41 0 4 0 12 8 6 8 Fig. 33 - Quantative, chronological table of the archaeological sites of the Negev. Data collected from 8 zones of 100km² each, explored and studied by different archaeologists. What emerges is the important density of finds from the BAC period between 6000 and 4000 B.P. (that is between 4000 and 2000 B.C.), and the total absence of finds from the Middle to the Late Bronze Age between 4000 and 3200 B.P. (that is 2000 and 1200 B.C.) The Iron Age is well-represented primarily on the mountains of the Central Negev while it is limited in the area of Har Karkom. The Roman Byzantine period shows an intense repopulation in the whole Negev area (data available in December, 1992, cf. E. Anati, 1993). Fig. 34 - General table of the archaeological findings in the Negev and the Sinai. Between 2000 and 1000 B.C. there is an almost complete hiatus of human presence throughout the peninsula. The only remains of structures are mining areas and military stations planned by regime. There is no evidence of tribal life (HK Archives). 68 69 This is also the case for the towns of Raamses and Pitom, which may be identified with the archeological sites of Kantir and of Tell el-Maskhuta, where there are archeological levels going back to the Early Bronze Age. Pitom and Raamses existed well before the names given them in the biblical narrative. The names identify their location for the geographical record, they cannot be used as a chronological definition of the events. The archeological finds of recent years, together with the comparative literature of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, contribute to the solution of the chronological problem. Table (fig. 33) provides a summary of archeological finds in the Sinai and Negev area and shows that the entire territory of the peninsula reveals no archeological documentation of living sites for most of the second millennium B.C. The few archeological sites were non tribal, but rather governmental structures like mines, checkpoints or military installations. If the populations mentioned in the biblical narrative, such as Midianites and Amalekites, Amorites, Horites and Edomites, really existed in a tribal context in this territory before the 13th century B.C., before the stele of Mer-ne-Ptah, it probably was before the period of drought: it is unlikely that this could have taken place after the 20th century B.C. The story of Exodus starts with the departure from Egypt of a group of “Asiatics” who were kept as slaves and acquired freedom by running away in the territory of sand. Then it describes a period of nomadism in the desert, during which there were long-lasting stops at the foot of Mount Sinai and at Kadesh Barnea (‘forty years in the desert’). From nomads they became semi-nomads or oasis dwellers in the oasis of Kadesh Barnea. There are the first attempts at entering the Promised Land, making wars against the Amalekites and the king of Arad. It illustrates a subsequent period of adventures, wars and conquests in Transjordan, against the people of Edom, Moab and Ammon, in the course of which a part of the Hebrew confederation passed from a state of nomadism to that of semi-sedentary, agricultural and pastoral communities. This is followed by the narration of the raids of Joshua in the land of Canaan. Finally in the Book of Judges there is the description of the gradual settlement of the tribes and their final sedentarization. 70 The story tells of different epochs in the course of which there are several phases of formation and transformation of a people; the confederation grows socially and politically, demographically and technologically. The biblical text describes indirectly but clearly the economic changes, the development of social structure and the changes in the way of life, the passage from the tent to the hut and from the hut to the house (Anati, 1997). The evolution which is described follows a logic which reflects what has been acquired as a succession of cultural processes by modern archeology and anthropology. From nomadism to an increasingly sedentary life and agricultural colonization, to the formation of a semi-urban society, is not necessarily a universal trend, but it fits the geographical area in question. The biblical narrative provides a coherent succession which may be synchronized with archeological documentation and climatic changes. No doubt it will be clear, at least to anthropologists and archeologists, what interest there is in a synchronic concordance between the various phases of the biblical narrative, climatic changes and the archeological periods to which they can be attributed. Figure 34 is not proposing a solution to the query but is providing the frame for a structural analysis. One of the recurring themes in the studies of Exodus is the embarrassment caused by the lack of other literary sources for events that appear to be so important in the Bible. Could it be that nothing is recorded by Egyptian and Mesopotamian texts on the epoch of Exodus? In the Egyptian period of the New Kingdom (1550-1200 B.C.), during the XVIIIth and XIXth dynasties, the court of the pharaoh was full of bureaucrats and intellectuals, and the state archives were worthy of every respect. If the episode of the flight from Egypt and the passage of the ‘Red Sea’ referred to the New Kingdom, some traces should have been found in the Egyptian text, perhaps proposing a more brilliant version for the Egyptians. The lack of any reference has convinced some scholars that the biblical narrative is pure mythology without any historical base. 71 Fig. 35 - A schematic table of the periods of biblical narrations and socio-economic contexts corresponding to the annotations on the climatic changes (HK Archives). 72 The biblical episodes describing the permanence of the Hebrews in Egypt refer to the presence of notable ethnic groups of Asiatics in the Delta zone, and the political changes that modified their social position. In our view similar events are indeed described by the Egyptian written documents; however, the pertinent texts do not belong to the New Kingdom but to the Old Kingdom. In other words they do not go back to the 13th century, but to the late third millennium B.C., one millennium before the contexts on which biblical scholars have focused their research. The story of Exodus has nothing to do with the Raamseside period. If the children of Israel built the town of Raamses, that town did not have that name at that time. The natural reply is: impossible! Obviously such a bold unconventional proposal that upsets the traditional chronology, challenging authoritative historical and theological literature and adding one millennium to the story of the Hebrews might upset academics. Let us try to think again. In previous publications we have gone into detail on the possible references of the Egyptian texts to the biblical story of Exodus (Anati, 1997; 2010). Reliable translations of most of these texts are found in Pritchard (1969) which we use here as reference. Let us briefly summarize some of these texts. During the VIth dynasty, especially under the reign of Pepi I (2375– 2350 B.C.), the Egyptians conducted several punitive military campaigns. A commander by the name of Uni immortalized the actions against the Asiatics ‘that live in the territory of sand’ and describes situations comparable with those in the Book of Exodus. From the accounts we get a picture of a world conceptually and contextually very near that described in the biblical narrative. The army of Uni devastated the animal enclosures, destroyed the huts, chopped down the fig and grape trees and safely came back to Egypt. The description could refer to one of the tribes of the pastoralists and incipient cultivators in the semi-desert zone, like the Midianites or the Amelekites. It could also be a war report of an event in which, as usual, each one of the sides claimed success. The story 73 of Uni has other relevant details treated in a previous publication (Anati, 2010). The biblical narration of the ten plagues finds a series of analogies in the Ipuwer Ammonitions, an Egyptian text going back to the VIth dynasty (2345–2181 B.C.). There are also similarities in the system of allegories and the way of evaluating natural phenomena and giving them specific significance. This text has numerous other hints which we should consider. ‘The delta marshes carry shields (are in turmoil)… foreigners have become landlords’, just like the biblical story of the clan of Jacob in the land of Goshen. ‘We do not know what may happen throughout the land… poor men have become possessors of treasures. He who could not make a pair of sandals is the possessor of riches’. This is a clear reference to foreigners who settled down in the Delta region, ‘in the best of the land’ (Genesis 7: 11). ‘Barbarians from outside have come into Egypt… foreigners are skilled in the work of the Delta’. The land was kept by foreigners: ‘the Asiatic have become landlords’ seems to reflect a version of the biblical story; ‘the storehouse is stripped bare’. The royal stores are mentioned also in Genesis in the story of Joseph. The text, which is very long for its period, seems to describe an era of wealth for the Asiatic tribes who arrived in the Delta zone, and a deep sense of bitterness on the part of the Egyptians who were put aside by the adventurous strangers. It almost seems to be the other side of a story. Analogies with the narration of the plagues in Exodus include among other things: ‘Women are dried up, and none can conceive… many dead are buried in the river… the river is blood’ (Pritchard, 1969, pp. 441-444). The concept of the divinity as time finds its highest expression in the narration of the revelation of Mount Sinai, where Yahweh revealed himself to Moses, saying: ‘I will be what I am’ (Exodus 3: 14). The god who comes down to the mountain has in his name the three tenses, present, past and future. There is a conceptual analogy with the myth of origin of the god Atum, or Atom, which is set upon the primordial mountain (or hill), and who reveals himself saying: ‘I am the great God that created himself… who created his own names. I am yesterday but I know tomorrow’. The dedicatory text is found in 74 the pyramid of Pharaoh Pepi II, of the VIth dynasty, who reigned in the 23rd century B.C., between about 2278 and 2184 B.C. (Pritchard, 1969, p. 3). The Instructions of Merikare is an Egyptian text from the 22nd century B.C. compiled for the education of a prince, and in it some commandments are proposed. Among those are: ‘Respect thy father and thy ancestors… Do not distinguish the son of a (rich) man from a poor man… Revere the God’. There are similar precepts that according to the biblical texts were given with the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai. Another Egyptian document, known as the Neferrohu Prophecies, may be of some interest. It goes back to the 20 century B.C. (XIIth dynasty) and among other things it says: ‘the Asiatic will not be permitted to come back into Egypt that they might beg for water in the customary manner, in order to let their beasts drink’ (Pritchard, 1969, pp.444-446). Some Asiatics had fled away into the desert and the resentful Egyptians expected that they would not be able to survive and would come back begging for water. The biblical accounts, according to which Moses lived in Midian for many years and there formed a family, are an exceptional ethnological document for the amount of its cultural information and for what it tells us about the habits of the desert population. The remains of the villages at the foot of Har Karkom and in the Uvda Valley constitute an impressive archeological testimony of this way of life that the Bible describes. Such a way of life may have lasted for long periods in the desert, until it ended because of climatic deterioration. The description refers to the BAC period; it cannot fit the period of drought. The Midianite episode of Moses shows numerous analogies with an Egyptian account, which, in the form in which it reached us, refers to the 20th century B.C. (c. 1960 B.C.). Sinuhe, an official of the Pharaoh Amen-em-het I, lived in the royal harem and served the hereditary princess. He committed some crime and when the Pharaoh died, he feared the successor. He fled to Asia ‘in the land of Yaa where figs and grapes are grown and wine is more abundant than water’, where he is 75 Fig. 36 - Beer Karkom, site BK 426. Detail of one of the platforms of the bamoth type. The platform has an altar facing HarKarkom. It is presumed that stone basements were covered with a layer of compacted earth (EA90:VIII-9). Fig. 37 - Beer Karkom, site BK 463. A platform with a stone altar facing Har Karkom (ISR84: IL-19). 76 welcomed in by a local chief. He gets the elder daughter as wife, and creates a family. From his father-in-law he receives animals and pastoral land and finally he is called back to Egypt to deal with an important task. The narration of Sinuhe has so many elements in common with the biblical story of Moses who flees to Midian and of his father-in-law Jethro, that we may hypothesize a common matrix of the two accounts. Obviously this matrix can only be older than or of the same period as the earliest of the two versions and therefore, it cannot be later than the 20th century B.C. The term ‘Land of Yaa’ would be worth a dissertation but it would lead us away from the main point of this work. There are also comparative points with Mesopotamian literature, and in this context it will be enough to mention one. Sargon of Akkad, charismatic leader of the Semites, led his people from the arid periphery to the conquest of the green, fertile land of Mesopotamia, around 2300 B.C. The myth of the origin of Sargon is almost identical to that of Moses: ‘My mother, the high priestess, conceived me, in secret she bore me. She set me in a basket of rushes, with bitumen she sealed my lid. She cast me into the river which rose not (over) me’ (Pritchard, 1969, p.119). Both conducted their respective people towards the conquest of their Promised Land. The myth of origin of the two characters at the roots of the Semitic world, Moses and Sargon, appears to have been inspired by a common narrative matrix, which necessarily is prior or contemporary to the first of the two narratives that have reached us, that is, earlier than the 23rd century B.C. The Egyptian and Mesopotamian texts appear to have many conceptual and factual connections with the biblical accounts hinting at the age in which such accounts were conceived. Descriptions of the construction of megalithic monuments are repeated on various occasions in the course of the biblical narrative: an altar and 12 pillars at the foot of Mount Sinai, a circle of 12 stones at Gilgal, the construction of funerary tumuli in several instances, testimonial tumuli (in Hebrew gal-ed) and other sacred 77 stones. Pillars or menhirs and other megalithic structures are part of the biblical landscape at the time of Exodus and Joshua. For the archeologists these elements have a chronological value. They can be attributed to the third millennium B.C. They are types of monuments found in the territory in the Early Bronze Age and at the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age and their use sharply decreased or ended shortly after 2000 B.C. The archeological excavations and survey have established the dating for Kadesh Barnea, Arad, Jericho, Ai and other sites mentioned in the biblical accounts of Exodus and in the Book of Joshua. According to the archeological findings, several of these localities developed in the third millennium B.C. and suffered devastation and destruction in the last third of this millennium. Several scholars have gone out of their way to make their archeological discoveries coincide with the conventional date attributed to the exodus by the traditional schools, but in fact none of these sites existed in the 13th century B.C. When no substantial traces of the Late Bronze Age were found at Jericho, some biblical scholars asserted that biblical Jericho was not there. When the archeological excavations failed to find traces of the Late Bronze Age at Ai, Arad and Kadesh Barnea, the same thing was said. Could all these identifications be wrong? This is hardly possible. The general picture provided by the archeological sites illustrates a period of turmoil, attacks and devastation of the fortified cities coming from the periphery. But if the archeological levels of these sites indicate earlier periods, how can they match the traditional chronology of the biblical narrations? Either the dates attributed to the archeological levels are wrong or the proposed dates of Exodus are wrong. Archeological discoveries indicate that there were invasions of people from the periphery to the fortified cities of the fertile land in the late third millennium B.C. Today, we know that the process of desertification rendered life in the desert ever more difficult. The peripheral tribes were compelled towards aggression by 78 Fig. 38 - Uvda Valley near the Arava. Remains of an agricultural settlement with a threshing floor and a canal for the collection of water, belonging to the Early Bronze Age and the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age. These villages may be attributed to the Midianite tribe (ISR84: XXIV-10). Fig. 39 - General view of Arad Tell. The fortified city of the Early Bronze age was abandoned in the course of the third millennium B.C. and never reconstructed again. On a hill overlooking it is an Israelite fortress of the Iron Age. In the Late Bronze Age, according to the archeological data at our disposal, the city of Arad did not exist (EAHK IL93: IX-8). 79 hunger and thirst. Moving from the Negev and Sinai towards the highlands of Transjordan may relate to the need of the nomadic tribes for pastoral land in the early phases of desertification. The narrative of the Book of Joshua, with the attacks on the cities of Canaan, in our view, may illustrate events caused by the worsening climatic circumstances when the drought further expanded. On the basis of the archeological finds in Moab and Edom in Jordan, the Bible could hardly have referred to an epoch after the 20th century B.C. for the populations mentioned; the war fought and the cities conquered in the biblical narrative concern traditions that imply the presence of a population. The territory which is said in the Bible to have been occupied and colonized by the Israelites was, according to the archeological documentation, intensely populated in the third millennium B.C. and desert in the second millennium B.C. In the second millennium B.C. they could not possibly have been conquered, colonized or cultivated. If there is a historical memory behind the biblical texts, the chronology of the Exodus narration has to fit the archeological evidence. ‘And Israel sent messengers unto Sihon king of the Amorites, saying: Let me pass through thy land: we will not turn into the fields, or into the vineyards’ (Numbers 21: 21–22). Fields and vineyards were possible in the zone before the 20th century B.C. Then the villages were abandoned and in the second millennium B.C. there was neither a sedentary population in this area nor a climate that would allow fields and vineyards. Considering all these factors, it seems likely that the biblical accounts reflect what the archeological investigations have revealed at Har Karkom, Beer Karkom and Kadesh Barnea, as at Jericho, Ai, Arad, Edom, Moab and elsewhere. Recent paleo-climatological studies have confirmed that the areas concerned, like other areas of Arabia and the Sahara, were not habitable during the period of intense aridity which covered almost all of the second millennium B.C. (Issar, 1995; Issar et al., 1992) 80 The concordance with the climatic fluctuations, the comparison with the Egyptian literature, the archeological documentation at Jericho and at Ai and the finds at Har Karkom and Ein Kudeirat seem to confirm a historical basis for Exodus and indicate that the events in the biblical accounts may well refer to the period of the VIth Egyptian dynasty (2345–2181 B.C.). According to this view, the mythical history that includes the wanderings in the desert, the presence at the foot of Mount Sinai and at Kadesh Barnea, the conquest of Transjordan, the period of incursions of Joshua and the subsequent ‘missing period’, until the beginning of the time of the Book of Judges, would cover around 1,000 years, from 2300 to 1200 B.C. The years mentioned in the Bible, like ‘40 years in the desert’ may have to be read as ‘many years in the desert’ (Anati, 2010). The ethical and moral messages, the universal values do not change. What is changing is the historical value of the biblical account. The synchronization with the historical documents of ancient Egyptian texts, with climatic and environmental changes and with the testimony of archeology may help us consider the possibility of a historical background for the biblical story of Exodus. 81 5- CONCLUSIONS Fig. 40 - Crevices and large breaks at the edges of Har Karkom seem to explain the biblical name Har Horeb which means ‘Mountain in the process of collapsing’ (ISR84: LVI-13). 82 The present text is a short summary of a volume published in Italian in 2010 (Anati, 2010). It describes the main discoveries and the reasoning that led to the identification of Har Karkom as the biblical Mount Sinai. Archeological evidence, the recorded climatic changes, Egyptian and Mesopotamian literary documents, provide synchronization and a testimony for the Exodus narration of the Bible. The newly proposed chronology offers a historical background for the setting of the Exodus story. The biblical account about Mount Sinai refers to a mountain which is identified with Har Karkom, according to its geographical position, topography and archeological finds. Moses’s visiting card was not found and the present documentation does not provide direct testimony of the presence of the children of Israel. It illustrates a paramount cult site which corresponds to the biblical description of Mount Sinai and is located in the precise location that can be assumed by the biblical description. Mount Sinai, the mount of the god Sin, had a long history as a holy mountain starting in Paleolithic times. In the BAC period it had a remarkable development, becoming a sort of Mecca in the middle of the desert, a place of gathering and of religious and social performances used by different populations. Its role decreased and ultimately came to an end when climatic changes made the human gatherings more difficult and then impossible. 83 If the children of Israel were among the tribal groups that shared this holy site, they are likely to have been the last population that used the mountain for cult purposes before the period of drought which brought these traditions to an end. In the same cultural context, other populations were present in the area and, as specified elsewhere (in Anati, 2010), some hints may help us to identify camping stations and living sites of different groups which may have a connection with the peoples mentioned in the biblical accounts called Midianites, Amalekites or Edomites. Can we identify the campsites of groups that may have belonged to the biblical children of Israel? It does not seem impossible and research is in progress. The identification, location and chronological framework of the Mountain of God are providing a new base for the historical reconstruction of the biblical narration. For some theologians it may be disturbing to realize that Mount Sinai was a holy mountain for many people, and not an exclusive cult site of Moses. For some contemporary scholars it may be disturbing even to have to accept that a biblical Mount Sinai indeed existed and could be located. What is the historical core of the biblical text? The mythical narratives are a result of an elaboration of the core and the archeological evidence may help define the core and contribute new chapters to the early history of Israel. Some of the previous convictions and beliefs have to be revised. We apologize for creating these disturbances. The story of desert peoples acquires a new dimension and new vistas. New perspectives are open for research. Among the many open questions one is particularly tantalizing: among the numerous Bronze Age camping sites are there any hints to identify the presence of the children of Israel? Gratitude is expressed to all those who contribute knowledgeable and serious criticism of our books and papers and help us verify again and again the various aspects of the many queries. The last words go to thank all those who participated in this cultural and scientific endeavour over the last 33 years, and those who support the continuation of research to decode the traces of man and to clarify the riddle of Mount Sinai. Note: Readers who wish to put questions to Professor Emmanuel Anati are invited to write by email to <[email protected]>. The most significant letters will be published in an appropriate mail box. 84 BIBLIOGRAPHY Anati, E. 1956 Rock engravings from the Jebel Ideid (Southern Negev), Palestine Exploration Quarterly, vol. 83/1-2, pp. 5-13. 1986 The Mountain of God, New York (Rizzoli). 1987 I Siti a Plaza di Har Karkom, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro). 1993 Har Karkom: Découvertes archéologiques sur la route de l’Exode, International Newsletter on Rock Art, n. 5, pp. 1-3. 1997 Esodo tra mito e storia, Archeologia, esegesi e geografia storica, SC, vol. 18, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro). 2001 The Riddle of mount Sinai. Archaeological discoveries at Har Karkom, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro). 2010 La riscoperta del Monte Sinai, Ritrovamenti archeologici alla luce del racconto dell’Esodo, Padova (Editrice Messaggero di Sant’Antonio). 2012 The Paleolithic sanctuary at Har Karkom, Negev Desert, The Intellectual and Spiritual Expression of NonLiterate Societies, Proceedings of UISPP XVI Congress, vo. 1, session 17 (CISENP), pp. 13-20. Anati, E., Mailland, F. 2009 Map of Har Karkom (229), Archaeological survey of Israel, Ginevra (Esprit de l’Homme-CISPE). 2010 Map of Beer Karkom (226), Archaeological survey of Israel, Ginevra (Esprit de l’Homme-CISPE). Bastoni Brioschi, R. 1997 Arte rupestre: Har Karkom e il dio Sin, B.C. Notizie, pp. 22-25. Cazelles, H. 1954 La date de l’Exode, La Bible et l’Orient, pp. 36-49. 1955 Les localisations de l’Exode et la critique littéraire. Revue Biblique, vol. LXII, pp. 321-364. Horowitz, A., Weinstein-Evron, M. 1986 The late Pleistocene climate of Israel, Bulletin de l’Association Française pour l’Étude du Quaternaire, vol. 23, pp. 84-90. Kallai, Z. 1983 Conquest and Settlement of Trans-Jordan. A Historiographical study, ZDPV 99, pp. 110-118. Keller, W. 1957 The Bible as History, London (Hodder & Stoughton). Issar, A.S. 1995 Climatic Change and the History of the Middle East, American Scientist, vol. 83, pp. 350-355. Issar, A.S., Govrin, Y., Geyh, M.A., Wakshal, E., Wolff, M. 1992 Climate Changes during the Upper Holocene in Israel. Israel Journal of Earth Sciences, 40, pp. 219-223. Jarvis, C.S. 1931 Yesterday and today in Sinai, London (Blackwood). Mailland, F. 2012 Geoglyphs: Origins and meaning, The Intellectual and Spiritual Expressions of Non-Literate Peoples, Colloquio UISPP-CISNEP Capo di Ponte 22-24 June 2012, pp. 149-154. 2012 Geoglyphs on Har Karkom plateau: witness to the early start of the expression of conceptual ideas during the early Upper Paleolithic, in E. Anati, L. Oosterbeck, F. Mailland (eds.), The Intellectual and Spiritual Expression of Non-Literate Societies, Proceedings of the XVI World Congress UISPP, Florianopolis, 4-10 September 2011. BAR International Series 2360, pp. 29-36. 2013 Har Karkom nel Paleolitico, B.C.SP, vol. 37, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), (in print). Mazar, B. 1977 Yahweh Came Out of Sinai, in Biran A. (ed.), Temples and High Places in Biblical Times, Jerusalem, (IES) pp. 5-9. 1986 The Historical Background of the Book of Genesis (1969), The Early Biblical Period. Historical Studies, Jerusalem, pp. 49-62. Pritchard, J. 1969 ANET: Ancient Near Eastern Text Relating to the Old Testament, Princeton (Princeton University Press). 85 ITALIAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXPEDITION TO HAR KARKOM BIBLIOGRAPHY ARCHAEOLOGY ANATI Emmanuel - Rock engravings from the Jebel Ideid (Southern Negev), Palestine Exploration Quarterly, vol. 83/1-2, 1956, pp. 5-13. - Har Karkom, Hadashot Archeologiot, vol. 82, 1983, pp. 74-76 (in Hebrew) - Har Karkom: Quattro anni di esplorazione archeologica. Resoconto preliminare, Bibbia e Oriente, vol. 26/1, n. 139, 1984, pp. 3-29. - Ulteriore spedizione archeologica ad Har Karkom, montagna sacra nel deserto dell’Esodo, B.C.N, vol. 1/3, 1984, pp. 25-26. - Har Karkom, dans le désert de Paran: un site sacré, Le Monde de la Bible, n. 35, 1984, pp. 53-55. - I nomi del Monte Sinai e il problema dell’Horev alla luce dell’archeologia, Bibbia e Oriente, vol. 26/3, n. 141, 1984, pp. 151-158. - Har Karkom. Montagna sacra nel deserto dell’Esodo. 1. Le scoperte archeologiche; 2. Il monte Sinai nel contesto dell’Esodo, Milan (Jaca Book), 1984, 227 pp. - Missione Archeologica nel Vicino Oriente, Har Karkom-1984, B.C.N, vol. 2/2, 1985, pp. 20-28. - Har Karkom: a Holy Mountain in the Paran Desert (Israel), B.C.SP, vol. 22, 1985, pp. 129-131. - Has Mt. Sinai Been Found? Biblical Archaeology Review, vol. 11/4, 1985, pp. 42-57. - Nuove scoperte ad Har Karkom. Ulteriore spedizione archeologica nel deserto del Negev, B.C.N, vol. 2/3, 1985, pp. 11-17. - Sur la route de l’Exode: La Montagne aux Ecritures, L’Univers du Vivant, n. 6, 1985, pp. 24-35. - Elementi per una analisi paleodemografica di Har Karkom, B.C.N, vol. 2/4, 1985, pp. 28-31. - Har Karkom: problemi cronologici ed esegetici, in AA.VV., Estudios en Homenaje al Dr. Antonio Beltran Martinez, Zaragoza (Facultad de Filosofia y Letras, Univ. de Zaragoza), 1986, pp. 439-451. - La Montagna di Dio. Har Karkom, Milan (Jaca Book); Eng. ed.: The Mountain of God, New York (Rizzoli); Fr. ed.: La Montagne de Dieu. Har Karkom, Paris/Milan (Payot Weber/Jaca Book), 1986, 358 pp. - Har Karkom - 1985, Hadashot Archeologiot, vol. 87, 1986, pp. 46-47 (in Hebrew). - La Montagne de Dieu. Har Karkom, Recherches archéologiques sur la route de l’Exode, Paris (Payot), 1986, 311 pp. - Har Karkom Montagna di Dio, L’Umana Avventura, vol. autumn`86, 1986, pp. 57-67. - Nuove scoperte sulla montagna di Mosé, Atlante, december 1986, pp. 86- 95. - Israël: Nouvelles decouvertes a Har Karkom, Archeologia, n. 219, 1986, pp. 30-43. - La Spedizione Archeologica Italiana ad Har Karkom, Israele, B.C.N, vol. 4/1, 1987, pp. 27-38. - I Siti a Plaza di Har Karkom, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 1987, 240 pp. - Arte rupestre nel deserto del Negev. Ipotesi di revisione della cronologia, B.C.N, vol. 4/3, 1987, pp. 19-27. - New discoveries at Har Karkom, the Negev Desert, Israel, 1986, B.C.SP, vol. 24, 1988, pp. 113-117. - Har Karkom: The Importance of the Site, Valcamonica Symposium’92, 1992, 14 pp. - Har Karkom In the Light of New Discoveries, Studi Camuni, vol. 11, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 1993, 96 pp.; It. Ed.: Spedizione Sinai. Nuove scoperte ad Har Karkom, Studi Camuni, vol. 11, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 1994, 112 pp. - Har Karkom - 1990, Hadashot Archeologiot, vol. 99, 1993, p. 103 (in Hebrew) - Har Karkom: Découvertes archéologiques sur la route de l’Exode, International Newsletter on Rock Art, n. 5, 1993, pp. 1-3. - Har Karkom Expedition 1992: A Preliminary Report, The Explorers Journal, vol. 71/2, 1993, pp.76-78. - Har Karkom, in Appendice dell’Enciclopedia Italiana, vol. 2, 1994, pp. 555-558. 86 - Il santuario paleolitico di Har Karkom: Arte o protoarte? XII° Valcamonica Symposium, 1994. - Har Karkom. La montagna di Dio, Archeologia Viva, vol. 14/50, 1995, pp. 60-73. - Har Karkom - 1993-1994, Hadashot Archeologiot, vol. 103, 1995, pp. 102-104 (in Hebrew). - Spedizione Sinai: Har Karkom 1994, B.C.N, vol. Marzo 1995, pp. 8-16. - Har Karkom. La montagna di Dio, Musa, vol. 2, 1995, pp. 28-30. - I geoglifi di Har Karkom, Valcamonica Symposium’96, 1996, 6 pp. - With L. Cottinelli & F. Mailland, Il santuario più antico del mondo, Archeologia Viva, vol. 15/56, 1996, pp. 26-38. - The Rock Art of Har Karkom, B.C.SP, vol. 29, 1996, pp. 13-48. - Il linguaggio delle pietre, Geoglifi nel deserto israeliano del Negev, Archeo, vol. 13/2-144, 1997, pp. 46-50. - Har Karkom, Survey - 1993/1994, Excavations and Surveys in Israel, vol. 15, 1996, pp. 116-119. - Har Karkom – 1995, Hadashot Archeologiot, vol. 106, 1997, p. 165 (in Hebrew). - Har Karkom 1996, B.C.N, 1997, pp.19-21. - Esodo tra mito e storia, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 1997, 300 pp. - Har Karkom – 1996, Hadashot Archeologiot, vol. 107, 1997, pp. 136-137 (in Hebrew). - Har Karkom, in AA.VV., Missioni Archeologiche Italiane, Roma (L’Erma di Bretschneider), 1997, pp. 149154, ill. - Har Karkom 1997, B.C.N, vol. March 1998, pp. 13-14. - Monte Sinai: mito-storia biblica, arte rupestre e testimonianze archeologiche, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Sciamanismo e mito, XVI Valcamonica Symposium, 1998, 20 pp. - Insediamenti di età del Bronzo, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 15-24, 117-118. - Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Testimonianze per una identificazione, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 59-67, 121-123. - La montagna del Dio della Luna, Archeo, vol. 15/1(167), Gennaio 1999, pp. 46-52. - Le mont Sinaï retrouvé, Sciences et Avenir, vol. n. 625, Mars 1999, pp. 78-89. - Har Karkom 1998, B.C.N, March 1999, pp. 13-16. - Har Karkom. 20 Anni di ricerche archeologiche, SC vol. 20, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 1999, 193 pp., 200 ill. - The Rock Art of The Negev Desert, Near Eastern Archaeology, vol. 62/1, 1999, pp. 22-34, ill. - 20 anni di ricerche archeologiche ad Har Karkom, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Decifrare le immagini, XVII Valcamonica Symposium, 1999, 3 pp. - Les mystères du mont Sinaï, Paris (Bayard Éditions), 2000, 225 pp., ill. - Har Karkom 1999, B.C.N, vol. Marzo 2000, pp.14-17. - Har Karkom – 1996, Excavations and Surveys in Israel, vol. 19, 1999, pp. 94-95. - L’art rupestre du mont Karkom, in Rina Viers, ed., Des signes pictographiques à l’alphabet, Paris (Karthala), 2000, pp. 43-72, 21 ill. - Messaggi del mito e contesto archeologico “Undici giorni da Horeb, per la via del monte Seir, a Kadesh Barnea” (Deuteronomio 1,2), in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 6 pp. - The Riddle of Mount Sinai, Archaeological Discoveries at Har Karkom, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 2001, 189 pp., 205 ill. - Har Karkom leor hatagliot hahadashot (Har Karkom in light of new discoveries), Jerusalem (Ariel), 2001, 97 pp., ill. (in Hebrew). - Har Karkom 1999-2001, Hadashon Arkheologiyot, vol. 119, 2001, pp. 117-119 (Hebrew section, pp. 169-170). - Har Karkom 2000. Rapporto preliminare, B.C.N, vol. Marzo 2001, pp. 18-22. - Locating Mount Sinai, The Canadian Jewish News, 05.06.2003, p. 9; 12.06.2003, p. 9. - Rock Art of the Sinai Peninsula, in U. Bertilsson & L. McDermott, The Future of Rock Art – a World Review, Stockholm (Riksantivarieämbetet -National Heritage Board of Sweden), 2004, pp. 23-39. - Har Karkom. A Guide to Major Sites, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 2006, 117 pp., ill. 87 - L’epoca dei sogni. Realtà esistenziale e realtà del sogno nella società aborigena dell’Australia, L’altro, vol. VIII/3, Settembre-Dicembre 2005, 2006, pp. 40-43. - Il Monte Sinai e la Luna del dio Sin, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di.), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 5-9, ill. - Har Karkom: Esegesi e Topografia, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 10-13, ill. - L’epoca dell’Esodo, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 14-19, ill. - Una scena di danza nel Negev Centrale*,in Lacaze Ginnette & Luc Camino Mémoires de Suez, Pasu (Société d’Égyptologie de Pau), 2008, pp. 171-175, ill. (* “Una scena di danza nel Negev Centrale”, Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche, Vol. X, faxc. 1-4, 1955, p. 70-75; nous présentons cet article avec l’aimable autorisation du Prof. E. Anati”). - With/con Federico Mailland HK/86b, Palaeolithic ceremonial site at Har Karkom, holy mountain in the desert of Exodus, XXIII Valcamonica Symposium 2009, Making history of prehistory. The role of rock art, Papers, Capo di Ponte, BS (Edizioni del Centro), 2009, pp. 41-45, ill. - With Federico Mailland, Archaeological Survey of Israel, Map of Har Karkom (229), Geneva (Esprit de l’Homme & Capo di Ponte, BS (CISPE), 2009, 256+L pp, ills. - Comme un grand corps de femme, in Pascal Pique & Michel Serres (eds.), 10.000 ans de Beaute, Paris (Gallimard), 2010, pp. 83-85, 1 ill. - With/con Federico Mailland, Har Karkom Preliminary Report, JournL 122, http://www.hadashot-esi. org.il/report_detail_eng.asp?id=1385&mag_id=117, 06.05.2010. - Har Karkom. Guida ai siti principali del riscoperto Monte sinai, Padova (Messaggero di Sant’Antonio Editrice), 2010, 143 pp., ills. - La riscoperta del Monte Sinai. Ritrovamenti archeologici alla luce del racconto dell’Esodo), Padova (Messaggero di Sant’Antonio - Editrice), 2010, 247 pp., 205 figs.. - Considerazioni e aggiornamenti su l’arte rupestre di Har Karkom Desserto del Negev, Israele, B.C.SP, vol. 36, 2010, pp. 115-133, figg. 75-86, tabs. - With I. Mailland, M.E. Peroschi, S. Amicone, F. Mailland, A Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Site (PPNB) at Har Karkom (Negev, Israel), Report on the hk/361 site, B.C.SP, vol. 35, 2009, pp. 51-72, figs. 22-38. - Har Karkom. Guida ai siti principali del riscoperto Monte sinai, Padova (Messaggero di Sant’Antonio Editrice), 2010, 143 pp., ill. - La riscoperta del Monte Sinai. Ritrovamenti archeologici alla luce del racconto dell’Esodo), Padova (Messaggero di Sant’Antonio - Editrice), 2010, 247 pp., 205 figs. - Considerazioni e aggiornamenti sy l’arte rupestre di Har Karkom Desserto del Negev, Israele, B.C.SP, vol. 36, 2010, pp. 115-133, figs. 75-86, tabs. - With/con Federico Mailland, Archaeological Survey of Israel, Map of Beer Karkom (226), Geneva (Esprit de l’Homme & Capo di Ponte, BS (CISPE), 2010, 208 pp, ills. - The Paleolithic sanctuary at Har Karkom, Negev Desert, The Intellectual and Spiritual Expression of Non-Literate Societies, Proceedings of UISPP XVI Congress, vo. 1, session 17 (CISENP), Oxford (BAR), 2012, pp. 13-20, 10 ill. BASTONI Rosetta - Arte rupestre di Har Karkom e il suo contesto ambientale, Valcamonica Symposium’94, 1994, 3 pp. - Arte rupestre: Har Karkom e il dio Sin, B.C.N, 1997, pp. 22-25. - Lo stambecco nell’arte rupestre di Har Karkom e nell’iconografia dei più antichi manufatti del Vicino Oriente, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 1 p. - Il Dio Lunare Sin, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 53-56, ill. - Mitologia mesopotamica e relazione con Har Karkom il Sinai ritrovao, Making history of prehistory. The role of rock art, XXIII Valcamonica Symposium Papers, 2009, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 2009, p. 62. CASTELLETTI Sergio - Har Karkom – Monte Sinai: La ricerca dei Nascondigli, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Sciamanismo e mito, XVI Valcamonica Symposium, 1998, 3 pp. - Har Karkom 1998 – Gruppo Grotte, B.C.N, 1999, pp. 17-19. - Har Karkom; le vie della montagna, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 2 pp. 88 COTTINELLI Luigi - Santuario Paleolitico in Har Karkom, Valcamonica Symposium’92, 1992, 16 pp. - Tipologia strutturale dei siti BAC di Har Karkom, Valcamonica Symposium‘93, 1993, 8 pp. - Har Karkom. I siti Ellenistico-Bizantini, Valcamonica Symposium’94, 1994, 3 pp. - With E. Anati & F. Mailand, Il santuario più antico del mondo, Archeologia Viva, vol. 15/56, 1996, pp. 26-38. - I siti di epoca ellenistica, romana, bizantina. Aspetti sociali, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 39-55. - Le due vette di Har Karkom, B.C.N, vol. Marzo 2001, pp. 23-24. - Presenze cristiane ad Har Karkom, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 50-52, ill. FORNONI Giorgio - La Grotta HK/244, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 35-38. - La Grotta dell’eremita, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 25-27, ill. FREEMAN Paul - The 1994 Expedition to Har Karkom, Bay Area Rock Art News, May 1994, pp. 3-4. GIROLOMONI Gino - Har Karkom.: La montagna di Dio, Mediterraneo, vol. 1/2, 1998, pp. 49-57. - Spedizione archeologica Har Karkom 2006, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 37-42, ill. GIROLOMONI Gino (a cura di) - Mediterraneo Dossier, Isola del Piano, PU (Fondazione Alce Nero), 2006 MAILLAND Federico - Har Karkom nel paleolitico: l’importanza del luogo, Valcamonica Symposium’92, 1992, 13 pp. - Har Karkom: le origini del mito, Valcamonica Symposium’95, 1995, 17 pp. - With E. Anati & L. Cottinelli, Il santuario più antico del mondo, Archeologia Viva, vol. 15/56, 1996, pp. 26-38. - Har Karkom nel Paleolitico: il passaggio, la presenza e i fenomeni di culto, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 9-14, 113-116. - Topografia e datazione nell’esodo secondo le testimonianze archeologiche, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 2 pp. - Witness of Palaeolithic conceptual expressions at Har Karkom, Israel, in E. Anati & J.-P. Mohen (eds.), Les expressions intellectuelles et spirituelles des peuples sans ecriture, 2007, Capo di Ponte (CISPE & Edizioni del Centro), pp. 76-82, 9 figs. - Har Karkom: Studio dei geoglifi mediante fotografia zenitale, B.C.SP, vol. 35, 2009, pp. 43-50, figs. 19-21. - Geoglyphs on the Har Karkom plateau (Negev, Israel), Making history of prehistory. The role of rock art, PreAtti XXIII Pre-Atti Valcamonica Symposium Papers, 2009, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 2009, pp. 43-50 pp., figs. 19-21-b. - The Geoglyphs of Har Karkom (Negev, Israel), classification and interpretation, Arte e comunicazione nelle società pre-letterate, Art and Communication in Pre-Literate Soieties, XXIV Valcamonica Symposium 2011, Milano (Jaca Book), 2011, pp. 278-283, 10 figs. - Geoglyphs: Origins and meaning, The Intellectual and Spiritugal Expressions of Non-Literate Peoples, Colloquio UISPP-CISNEP Capo di Ponte 22-24 June 2012, Capo di Ponte (Atelier, 2012, pp. 149-154. MAILLAND F., M.E. Peroschi, S. Amicone, I. Mailland, & E. Anati - A Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Site (PPNB) at Har Karkom (Negev, Israel), Report on the hk/361 site, B.C.SP, vol. 35, 2009, pp. 51-72, figs. 22-38. MAILLAND Federico (ed.) - Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Atti del Convegno di Studi, Associazione Lombarda Archeologica, 18 January 1997, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche Raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, 127 pp. 89 - With E. Anati, Archaeological Survey of Israel, Map of Har Karkom (229), Geneva (Esprit de l’Homme & Capo di Ponte, BS (CISPE), 2010, 256+L pp, ills. MAILLAND Federico & Ida - The Har Karkom Plateau During the Palaeolithic, Valcamonica Symposium’93, 1993, 13 pp. - Har Karkom nel Paleolitico, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 20-23, ill. MAILLAND Ida - Har Karkom : proto-arte agli albori del Paleolitico Superiore, Making history of prehistory. The role of rock art; Pre-Atti, XXIII Valcamonica Symposium Papers, 2009, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 2009, pp. 215224, 18 figs. MAILLAND I., M.E. Peroschi, S. Amicone, F. Mailland, & E. Anati - A Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Site (PPNB) at Har Karkom (Negev, Israel), Report on the hk/361 site, B.C.SP, vol. 35, 2009, pp. 51-72, figs. 22-38. MANFREDI Valerio - Ricognizione e scavo del sito 221 bis nella zona di Har Karkom (Negev, Israel), Valcamonica Symposium’93, 1993, 17 pp. - Ricognizione e scavo del sito 221 bis nella zona di Har Karkom (Negev Israeliano), B.C.SP, vol. 28, 1995, pp. 106-114. - Una nuova via sacra di accesso all’altipiano di Har Karkom, B.C.N, vol. Marzo 2001, pp. 25-28. BIBLICAL EXEGESIS ANATI Emmanuel - Har Karkom e la cronologia dell’Esodo, B.C.N, vol. 4/2, 1987, pp. 25-36. - Gian Franco Ravasi: Il dibattito su Har Karkom e Commenti di E. Anati, B.C.N, vol. 4/3, 1987, pp. 28-31. - Har Karkom: la montagna di Dio?, Archeo, n. 35, January 1988, pp. 24-29. - Exodus et Sinai: Une réconsideration, Dort ziehen Schiffe dahin... Collected Communications to the XIVth Congress for the Study of the Old Testament, Paris, 1992, Frankfurt am Main (Peter Lang), 1996, pp. 11-25. - Esodo tra mito e storia, Studi Camuni,, vol. 18, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 1997, 300 pp. - Har Karkom 1997, B.C.N, vol. Marzo 1998, pp. 13-14. - Locating Mount Sinai, The Canadian Jewish News, 05.06.2003, p. 9; 12.06.2003, p. 9. - AZZAROLI A. - I cavalli nella narrazione dell’Esodo e la cronologia di Har Karkom, B.C.SP, vol. 25, p.11. - Har Karkom: Esegesi e Topografia, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 10-13, ill. - L’epoca dell’Esodo, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 14-19, ill. BARBAGLIA Silvio - Har Karkom interroga l’esegesi e la teologia. Un primo bilancio della ricezione dell’ipotesi di e. anati nei dibattiti sulle origini di israele., Liber AAnnuus, vol. 61, 2010, pp. 17-35. BARBIERO Flavio - La Bibbia Senza Segreti, Milan (Rusconi) 1988, pp. 296-440. - Sacralità di Har Karkom, Valcamonica Symposium’93, 1993, 14 pp. - Indizi per l’utilizzo del Monte Horeb come luogo di conservazione di cimeli, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 85-91. - I cristiani ad Har Karkom, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 1 p. - Diario di viaggio di Egeria, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 28-35, ill. BASTONI Rosetta - Sinai e il dio Sin, Valcamonica Symposium’96, 1996, 1 p. - Arte rupestre: Har Karkom e il dio Sin, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 25-34, 119. - Har Karkom & the God Sin, Bay Area Rock Art News, vol. 18/2, 2000, pp. 1-3. - Mitologia mesopotamica e relazione con Har Karkom. fIl Sinai ritrovato, Making history of prehistory.The 90 role of rock art, XXIII Pre-Atti Valcamonica Symposium Papers, 2009, Capo di Ponte (Edizioni del Centro), 2009, p. 62. BONTEMPI Franco - Simbologie di Har Karkom e simbologie bibliche, Valcamonica Symposium’96, 1996, 1 p. - Le scoperte di Har Karkom e l’esegesi, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milano (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 25-34, 103-104. - Har Karkom, la montagna sacra e la storia di Isacco ed Ismaele, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Decifrare le immagini, XVII Valcamonica Symposium, 1999, 1 p. - Il monoteismo di Mosé, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 4 pp. - Har Karkom, la montagna sacra e la storia di Isacco ed Ismaele, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Decifrare le immagini, XVII Valcamonica Symposium, 1999, 1 p. CHETWYND Tom - The Age of Myth, London (Harper Collins) 1991, pp. 156-160. - The Gap. Why Justy There: The Promised Land, Valcamonica Symposium’92, 1992, 3 pp. FINKELSTEIN Israel - Raiders of the Lost Mountain, BAR, July 1988. GABBI Giorgio - I Monti di Dio, L’Airone, suppl. n. 39, 1992. GILBERT M. - Har Karkom et le Mt. Sinai, B.C.SP, vol. 23, 1986, pp. 9-10. GIROLOMONI Gino - Presenze sul Sinai. Da Abramo a Emmanuel (2000 a.C. – 2000 d.C.), in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 93-97. - Sulle tracce di Abramo, Mediterraneo, Vol. 2/7, 1998, pp. 46-53. - Il Monte Sinai all’epoca dei patriarchi. Racconto biblico e ritrovamenti, Quaderni valtellinesi, n. 76, 1998/3, 1998, pp. 5-13. - Abramo. Agar, Ismaele, Madian, Jetro, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Decifrare le immagini, XVII Valcamonica Symposium, 1999, 4 pp. - Abramo. Agar, Ismaele, Madian, Jetro, Mediterraneo, vol. 3/11, 1999/2000, pp. 30-34. - Anati ci restituisce il Sinai, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 1-2, ill. - Har Karkom 2009. La spedizione archeologica di Anati, Mediterraneo, vol. 12/32, 2010, pp. 30-33. GIROLOMONI Gino (ed.) - Mediterraneo Dossier, Isola del Piano, PU (Fondazione Alce Nero), 2006 LASSALE André - Iconographie, narrations bibliques et découvertes archéologiques, Valcamonica Symposium’94, 1994, 11 pp. LONGONI Piergiorgio - Essodo, cammino dell’anima, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 2 pp. LUCKERMAN M.A. - The Dating of Har Karkom and Joshua, B.C.SP, vol. 23, 1986, pp. 11-12. MANFREDI Valerio - Il Monte Sinai nella cartografia antica, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 69-83, 125-127. - Il Monte Sinai nella cartografia antica, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 45-49, ill. PITKÄAHO RISTO - Joseph and Imhotep, in “Valcamonica Symposim’97, Grafismo e semiotica”, B.C.SP, vol. 30-31, 1999, pp. 91 197-206, ill. POZZI Rodolfo & Maria Grazia - Har Karkom è il Monte Sinai? Quaderni Erbesi, vol. XIII, 1992, pp. 1-29. RAVASI Gian Franco - Il dibattito su Har Karkom, B.C.N, vol. IV\3, pp. 28-31. RICHIARDI Marcello - Esodo tra mito e storia. Gli aspetti militari - Topografia e datazione nell’esodo secondo le testimonianze archeologiche, in E. Anati, Arte rupestre e tribale: Conservazione e salvaguardia dei messaggi, XVIII Valcamonica Symposium, 2000, 7 pp. SINI S. - Har Karkom and the Ten Commandments, B.C.SP, vol. 25-26, 1990 pp. 9-10. SOGGIN J.A. - Har Karkom e le narrazioni bibliche dell’esodo, B.C.SP, vol. 23, pp. 8-9. - Ubicazione del Monte Sinai secondo l’esegesi biblica, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp. 99-101. SPEDICATO Emilio - A new chronology for Egypian and related Ancient Histories, in F. Mailland (ed.), Har Karkom e Monte Sinai: Archeologia e Mito, Milan (Comune di Milano, Settore Cultura e Musei, Civiche raccolte Archeologiche), 1998, pp.105-106. WARNOD Jeanine - The Mount Sinai of Har Karkom, Bay Area Rock Art News, May 1994, pp. 1-4. the books of ATELIER ATELIER colloqui OTHER DISCIPLINES BARICCHI Walter - Troppa gente senza guida, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 57-58, ill. DIAMOND Larryn - La geologia di Har Karkom, deserto del Negev meridionale, Israele, in E. Anati, Har Karkom. Montagna sacra nel deserto dell’Esodo, 1984, pp. 101- 107. - The Geology of Har Karkom, Southern Negev Desert, Israel, in E. Anati, The Mountain of God, (It. ed.: La Montagna di Dio. Har Karkom; Fr. ed.: La Montagne de Dieu. Har Karkom), pp. 333-341. HARRIS James R. - Was Thamudic of the Negev a Midianite script derivered from Proto-Dynastic? Valcamonica Symposium’95, 1995, 9 pp. HARRIS James R. & Dann W. HONE - The Name of God at Har Karkom, B.C.SP, vol. 29, 1996, pp. 142-146. - The dating & ethnic origins of Midianites of the Negev inscriptions, Valcamonica Symposium’96, 1996, 22 pp. HOROWITZ A. - The Climate of the Central Negev in the Third Millennium B.C., in E. Anati, The Mountain of God, (It. ed.: La Montagna di Dio. Har Karkom; Fr. ed.: La Montagne de Dieu. Har Karkom), p. 346. LONGONI Piergiorgio - La Porta del Cielo, in G. Girolomoni (a cura di), Mediterraneo Dossier, 2006, pp. 59-60, ill. PIRELLI Paola & Giovanna DAVINI - La vegetazione di Har Karkom, in E. Anati, Har Karkom. Montagna sacra nel deserto dell’Esodo, 1984, pp. 108-112. - The Vegetation at Har Karkom, in E. Anati, The Mountain of God, (It. ed.: La Montagna di Dio. Har Karkom; Fr. ed.: La Montagne de Dieu. Har Karkom), 1986, pp. 347-349. SAMORINI Giorgio - Sulla presenza di piante allucinogene ad Har Karkom, in E. Anati, Har Karkom. Montagna sacra nel deserto dell’Esodo, 1984, p. 113; - Hallucinogenic Plants at Har Karkom, in E. Anati, The Mountain of God, (It. ed.: La Montagna di Dio. Har Karkom; Fr. ed.: La Montagne de Dieu. Har Karkom), 1986, p. 350. TCHERNOV Eitan 92 I segni originari dell’arte Riflessioni semiotiche a partire dall’opera di Anati Proceedings of the Colloquium organized by the University of Urbino in 2010. It includes papers of authors from nine different disciplines: anthropology, archaeology, art, art history, philosophy, psychoanalysis, psychology, semiotics, sociology. The intellectual and spiritual expressions of non-literate peoples Espressioni intellettuali e spirituali dei popoli senza scrittura Proceedings of the UISPP Colloquium in 2012. It includes papers of 30 authors from the humanities and social sciences, from 11 countries. Books in conceptual anthropology I SAGGI DI ATELIER ANTROPOLOGIA CONCETTUALE Saggi I 2011 Maschere Saggi IV 2012 Mito tra utopia e verità Chi sei? Chi sono? Origini delle religioni Nascere e crescere da nomadi Origini della Musica Iniziazione e riti di passaggio Saggi II 2011 Alla ricerca dell’identità Saggi III 2012 Saggi VI 2013 Saggi V 2012 La relazione madre - figli nelle società primarie Saggi VII 2013 Professor Emmanuel Anati is President of CISPE (International Centre for Prehistoric and Ethnologic Studies) and Chairman of UISPP-CISENP (Union International des Sciences Prehistoriques et Protohistoriques –International Scientific Commission “The Intellectual and Spiritual Expressions of non-literate societies”. He is founder and President (hon.) of Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici in Capo di Ponte, Italy. He has been Professor of Prehistory at Tel-Aviv University, Israel and Professor Ordinarius of Palaeo-ethnology at the University of Lecce, Italy. He is the founder of the International Committee on Rock Art (CAR) of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS). For nine years he served as the first Chairman of the Executive Board. His main scientific interests are the art and religion of prehistoric and tribal cultures. He has conducted research in Europe, the Near East, Africa and other regions. Anati’s work in Valcamonica, where he founded and heads the Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici, has led to UNESCO’s inclusion of the rock art of this Alpine valley in its list of World Cultural Heritage. His research project in the Negev desert, Israel, is world renown for the discovery of a holy mountain with numerous ancient sanctuaries which is likely to be the Biblical Mount Sinai. On behalf of UNESCO and various governments he has carried out research and has served as consultant for the creation and development of archaeological reserves and parks, major exhibitions and other field projects. Anati has edited several prestigious publications. He is the director of the periodical, “World Journal of Prehistoric and Tribal Art” (BCSP) And of “Atelier publishing”. He headed the series “The Footsteps of Man” for the Cambridge University Press, and the series “Le Orme dell’Uomo” for Jaca Book, Milan. He has written over 70 volumes and numerous monographs for leading publishers in Europe and America. Works by Anati have been published in over twenty languages. Atelier is a w the intellectu It is a meeti philosophers students of Atelier organ a publishing laboratory-m Membership share their k For further in