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‘Atiqot 100 (2020)
ISBN 2948-040X
Pottery Vessels and Stone Artifacts from the Persian, Roman and Byzantine Periods at the French Hospital Compound, Yafo (Jaffa)
(pp. 157–188)
Peter Gendelman
Keywords: Mediterranean coast, cemetery, typology, chronology, funerary practices, ethnicity
The excavations within the French Hospital Compound revealed pottery and stone finds originating in burials dating to the Persian, Roman and Byzantine periods. The Persian-period (mid-fifth to mid/late fourth century BCE) burial goods comprised mainly perfume containers (juglets and bottles) and storage vessels (local and imported amphorae), in accordance with the burial customs practiced in contemporary burials along the coastal plain of Israel, mainly inhabited by Phoenicians. The finds from the Roman period (early second to the fourth or early fifth century CE) present a wide range of pottery types, including imported table wares, amphorae, large bowls, mortaria, diverse types of local cooking vessels and storage jars. The pottery from the Byzantine period (late fifth to the late sixth/early seventh century CE) includes both imported and local bowls, jugs, storage jars and amphorae.