Jan 25, 2014

Map of the Dead Sea with Southern and Northern location of the Pentapolis

Northern and Southern location for the Cities of the Plain
To assist my student working on the proposed sites for the northern and southern location of the five Cities of the Plain (Pentapolis), I have created this map of the sites. Note that the Southern cities were destroyed in the Early Bronze Age (EB ca. 2350 BC), while the Northern locations were destroyed in the Middle Bronze Age (MB ca. 1600 BC). Most evangelical scholars place Abraham in the period of the Middle Bronze Age (1950 and 1550 BC). See Kenneth A. Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament, Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2003, 313-72 and Price, J. Randall. The Stones Cry Out: What Archaeology Reveals About the Truth of the Bible. Eugene, Oreg.: Harvest House, 1997, 106. Here is another close-up map of just the Northern end of the Dead Sea. LINK

2 comments:

Unknown said...

The Sodom Event: Let's step beyond the Bible perspective for a moment, and consider larger contexts as evidence. First, has the terminal destruction layer been similarly dated at other sites between Kings Road and the Dead Sea in the wadis and plains between the Jabbok and Arnon?

Dr. David E. Graves said...

Tall al-Kafrayn has been excavated 2000-2009 by Thanasis J. Papadopoulos. "Destruction of the settlement by fire during the transitional period LBA/Early Iron Age." End of MB period like Tall el-Hammam - Τhanasis J. Papadopoulos, “The Hellenic Archaeology Project of the University of Ioannina in Jordan: A Preliminary Synthesis of the Excavation Results at Ghawr as-Sāfī and Tall Al-Kafrayn (2000-2004),” in Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan, ed. Fawwaz al-Khraysheh, IX (Amman: Department of Antiquities, 2007), 189.

Tall Nimrin excavated in 1989-90, 93, 95 by James Flanagan and David McCreery. MB II in Stratum II but no LB occupation. - James W. Flanagan, David W. McCreery, and Khair N. Yassine, “Tell Nimrin: Preliminary Report on the 1993 Season,” ADAJ 38 (1994): 217-18.- Steven Falconer, “The Middle Bronze Age,” in Jordan: An Archaeological Reader, ed. Russell B. Adams (London, U.K.: Equinox, 2008), 268.

Tall Bleibel and Tall el Mustah have never been excavated but there have been surface surveys by Nelson Glueck (1051) and Ibrahim, Yssine and Sauer (1975-76) and Change Ho and lee (2000). They report MB but no LB or IA I pottery. Khouri reports that when a road cut through the site there was remains of ancient walls and house foundations, burning and much pottery.

These sites all have the same occupational footprint as Tall el-Hammam.