Current Issue
Past Issues
Editoral Policy
About Us
Guide to Contributors
Call for Papers
Submission
‘Atiqot 95 (2019)
ISBN 2948-040X
A Nabatean Roadside Temple at Ḥorbat Ḥaẓaẓa in the Negev Highlands
(with a contribution by Donald T. Ariel)
(pp. 145–172)
Tali Erickson-Gini
Keywords: Early Roman period, Severan period, Arava Valley, trade route, Incense Road, Petra–Gaza road, milestone, stone basin, Gaza wine jars
The site was established in the mid-first century CE during the Nabatean rule over the area and was destructed in the second century CE, probably due to an earthquake. After a gap, the site was partially occupied in the post-annexation (second–third centuries CE) and early Byzantine (Phase 3; fourth–mid-fifth centuries CE) periods. Based on architectural considerations, the presence of large rectangular stone basins and numerous Nabataean coroplastic objects, it is suggested that the building served as a roadside temple along the road established by the Nabateans on the eastern side of the ‘Arava Valley.