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'Atiqot 88 (2017)
ISBN 2948-040X
The Northeastern Fringes of Yafo (Jaffa) in Light of the Excavations on Jerusalem Boulevard and Its Vicinity
(with contributions by Peter Gendelman, Alexander Glick)
(Hebrew, pp. 43*–70*; English summary, pp. 157–158)
Eriola Jakoel and Jenny Marcus
Keywords: Jaffa, historical maps, photographs, British Mandate, numismatics, city plan, infrastructure
Excavations in the northeastern part of Yafo exposed a massive wall from the Hellenistic period, which might have been part of a farmstead. The pottery, metal artifacts and numismatic finds from this period indicate that the occupants were wealthy and maintained trade contacts. The most prominent finds date to the late Ottoman period (nineteenth–mid-twentieth centuries CE), including the remains of seven buildings, a road, seven built cesspits and an underground drainage system. The late Ottoman remains attest to extensive development of the area at a time when there was a flourishing trade in citrus fruit and the city’s population reached its peak.