12 Friday, October 3, 1980 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Caesarea Expedition Digging Up an Ancient City - -VW into Early, Middle, or Late) heads. (Continued from Page 10) racing, lewd theater and female Another beautiful mosaic are made on the basis of the I was assigned to a gladiatorial games. Trade, however, contin- has been found on the quality of the clay, the color, square, G9 which, under the previous volUnteers in ued to make the city pros- grounds of the home of De- the texture, the method of June, had been dug in the perous, bringing goods from troiter Paul Zuckerman, construction. All of the in- who lives part of the year in formation is recorded for center to about two meters the Middle East and grain ,. Caesarea. each bucket and significant deep, exposing a Byzantine from the Plain Of Sharon to We worked until second pieces are saved to be road. Our objective was to fill the warehouses along breakfast, which was labeled for further study or dig alongside the road hop- the wharf, despite Herod's brought into the field at display. ing to connect with and ex- shortcomings. After his Many of the volunteers plain the peristyle of a death and that of his son, 8:30 a.m. A combination Roman villa from Imperial procurators were sent out festive and resting occasion, crowded around the times in the next square from Rome to administer af- it brought together all of the table to learn the char- that had been excavated fairs of the city that had be- workers in each field into a acteristic features that during a previous season. come the commercial capi- shaded area where we at- would date the shards, tacked generous helpings of The peristyle was tal; among the procurators yogurt, hard-boiled eggs, the experts . picking out classiC examples from the Pontius Pilate, whose was paved with colorful bread, jam, peanut butter, mosaics, and it was name is inscribed on a tab- cheese, fruit, olives, to- hundreds. of fragments from each bucket. hoped that our square let in the theater. After -supper there were Other squares in G Field matoes, cucumbers, and cof- would help to clarify the fee, tea or milk. lectures each evening in rooms adjacent to the unearthed portions of the At 9:15 we returned to villa. Instead we had Herodian wall next to the work until 12:30, by history, geography, ar- theological processes, dat- kibutz banana field. Dr. found a Byzantine road. which time the sun had ing, the up-coming weekend the Bull says that frequently G, Field In I, baked the site and the trips, mosaics, coins, and synagogue, which is close to the kibutz and the expedi- the sea in what must have tion are both interested in workers. The last hours underwater archeology. with the sun overhead The last two fields of exper- been the Jewish quarter, "digging" the same field. were the hardest, and tise were presented by the The objective in Field C was excavated by the Israeli archeologist Aviyona many was to explore the munici- ended with a final careful same specialist, Prof. years ago. It shows evidence pal buildings that lay sweeping of the cobbles- Robert Hohlfelder of the tones of the road and of University of Colorado, who of having been rebuilt sev- alongside the great prom- eral times in antiquity, but enade, the Cardo Maximus, the various loci and along served the dig in both no modern restoration has a major north-south artery the meter of the baulk on capacities. He showed slides of the with covered porticos along each side to see if foot- been attempted. Seals from books belong- each side of the street that prints in the morning underwater grid and the betray unwelcome submersible vacuum hoses ing to a yeshiva have been Herod had built to lead from might . . visitors, and also to or- by which excavation is found by Prof. Bull, but as the forum to the theater. It ganize the work for the being carried out in the yet the site of the rabbinical had been partially exca- harbor in front of the school has not been iden- vated in previous seasons, following day. The vans came to pick up Crusader Fortress. He tified. The population of revealing a broad esplanade Herod's city was mixed, part for both pedestrian and veh- the crew and the equip- showed the great piles of Jewish, part foreign icular traffic, a third-of-a- ment, all of which had to be columns from the Cardo mile long, its porticos loaded into the vans and Maximus, and he explained (Greeks, Syrians, Samari- formed by flanking rows of hauled out to the fields each how the underwater dig is a tans, etc.). morning and hauled in each joint effort between the imported marble columns. Herod was unpopular Many of these columns afternoon, along with the University, of Haifa diving with the Jews for many rea- sons: ,first, because of his lie now in the sea as part precious buckets of pot- team under the direction of of the arm of the harbor shards and the finds for the Elisha Linder and the di- mixed ancestry (although installations from Cru- day. vers from the joint expedi- outwardly observant of cus- The wheelbarrow and the tion of Drew. sader times. Prof. Bull toms, he was not of Jewish gufas were chained to a post Only experienced divers origin); second, because he hopes that with the fi- at a nearby Israeli military can contribute to the suc- nancial aid of Baron Ed- was morally corrupt, wel- coming the Romans and mond de Rothschild, a station. Frequently an Is- cess of the dig where the being used by them to keep benefactor in the area, raeli patrol jeep would come currents are often, danger- order; and third, because of the columns can be along and the soldiers ous along the coast. The dig his paranoid cruelty extend- brought up from the sea would come out to see what was completed when we ar- ing even to members of his and reset on bases found we had found during the rived for-the second session along the road. Some of day. ' and the diving rig and the own family. We returned for shower's gear were being brought in , He embraced Roman the buildings in C Field manners in constructing were "carpeted': with and lunch at 1:30 p.m. in the from the sea. a temple to Augustus and colorful mosaics made of Kayit cafeteria. Lunch was Also using air tanks, Rome and even commis- tiny stone and glass tes- a feast of Mid-eastern members of earlier ex- eggplant dishes and salads sioned colossal statues in serae from both the peditions had entered their honor. A foot of one Byzantine and Roman/ followed by fish fresh from one of the vaults along the sea, or chicken or meat. of these colossal works Herodian times. Both At 4 p.m. every other day, the sea, the first of what decorates the entrance to figural and geometric de- we were assigned to pottery has proved to be a series in _ signs have been found the theater today. of underground ware- Equally offensive to the style like those at washing crews. All of the houses which lined the hundreds of carefully Tiberias with the seasons Jews was the moral deea- harbor, described by dente in their eyes of horse represented as colorful labeled buckets of potshards Josephus as being as that had been recovered each day had to be washed ° large as the harbor at and loaded into mesh bags Athens (Piraeus). The foul air required that to dry overnight so that they could be "read" at pottery the rooms be entered with extreme caution. The first reading the following day. This reading is the most penetration resulted in the crucial part of the dig. Each exciting find of a warehouse bag of shards is emptied converted into a Mit- onto a table before a group hraeum, a shrine for wor- of experts headed by Robert shipping the Persian god Bull. It is the lowly shards Mithras, who was popular that are almighty in dating with the Roman soldiers. the level. Before the altar was found a The assignments of Hel- medallion of Mithras slay- lenistic, Roman, Byzantine, ing the bull, and the altar of Islamic (each broken down the converted underground Prof. Goldman holds a lamp that she restored. shrine was designed so that a ray of light coming through a hole in the .ceiling fell on the altar at the skim- mer solstice. Further exploration has revealed another room with Christian frescos, unique in the area, and there is great eagerness to continue exploring the vaults next season. Prof. Robert Hohlfelder of the University of Colorado is shown searching the inner face of the southern breakwater of Herod's harbor in Caesarea for dateable artifacts. Beth Alpha, Beth Shearim, Beth Shean, Tiberias, Benyas), and one to the south (Lachish, Hessi, Beersheva, and Masada). My supervisor was a med- ical administrator from Loma Linda, Calif., and my co-workers included two graduate seminary stu- It houses the most im- dents, a biology teacher and portant piece of principal of an elementary sculpture from the dig — school, a professor of history the Tyche or Good For- and archeology, a French tune of the ancient har- major and a business ad- bor city in the form of a ministration student. Of di-- woman. Its collection of verse backgrounds and coins, pottery, columns, ages, we worked together capitals and sculpture with amazing energy and are excellent, but the col- good will. lection of lamps, of The choreography of get- course, were of special ting 80 people he used and interest to me. fed and into the Hertz vans After the first week I was out to the fields and back apprenticed to the lamp ex- each day was so efficiently pert, who was photograph- planned and executed that ing and the recording the Dr. Bull can well be proud of pottery lamps and frag- his organi'zation and his ments found during the sea- workers. Frequent visitors son. Over 600 fragments from the Israel Department were discovered, and each of Antiquities, the Ameri- piece revealed valuable in- can State Department, sponsoring institutions, formation. We had an opportunity to members of the press, and examine each fragment, fellow scholars gave Dr. speculating on the dating Bull an almost daily tour of and the manufacture, since explanations 'ofthe fields. One scholar came from we could look inside. The lamps found intact Oxford, doing a count of were all carefully drawn, murex shells (from which and I had the assignment of the ancient purple dye was gluing together fragments made), for whom we kept a so that they could be photo- running count of every graphed whole. Some of the murex shell excavated. We were in bed and molds were also found, along with the material out sleeping by 9:30. During the night I would listen to of which molds were made. Many of the best lamps the surf pounding the came from my square in G beach along the shore, Field, in the wall alongside and I would imagine the the peristyle of the Roman Roman ships coming into villa, so that I had an oppor- harbor a mile or so up the beach, and all of the suc- tunity to be present when the lamps were unearthed cessive ships that had and to learn about them landed or tried to land when they were being along these same photographed and beaches. The sea was rough catalogued. The expedition consists summer, often churning up of a consortium of col- yellow sand instead of leges and universities blue-white waves. We had from the U.S. and only about five days that Canada, many of them were not "black flag" (no religious affiliated. swimming), and at night I Everybody was very in- would waken and listen to terested in Bible study the sea. The Romans are gone: the and in visiting the ar- cheological and religious Herodian city is gone; gone sites, both Jewish and are the Byzantines and the Christian, on the two followers of Islam and the tours which were offered, Crusaders. But the waves one to the Galilee and the are constant — the chang- north (Megiddo, Hazor, ing sea. Many of the finds from the dig are housed in a small, but very important museum on the grounds of Kibutz Sodot Yam, and we were given several oppor- tunities to tour the museum under the guidance of its di- rector Aaron Wegman, one of the pioneers of the kibutz.