During June 2003 a season of cleaning, surveying, and excavation was conducted in the 'Circles Building' at Tel Bet Yerah (G-18/03; map ref. NIG 2539/7360; OIG 2039/2360). The excavation, on behalf of the Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University and aided by the Nature and National Parks Authority, was directed by R. Greenberg, with the assistance of S. Paz, Y. Paz and M. Isserlis (field supervison), D. Porotzky (surveying). J. Amsalem (ecofact retrieval), and workmen from the nearby National Parks. Additional partners in the research include A.M. Rosen (sediment analysis), L.K. Horwitz (archaeozoology), N. Liphschitz (archaeobotany), and R. Shimmelmitz (lithics). The study of the 'Circles Building' is undertaken with the assistance of an Israel Science Fund grant; fieldwork was made possible by an additional grant from the TAU internal fund.
The Early Bronze III 'Circles Building', also known as the Tel Bet Yerah Granary, was first excavated in 1946 by M. Stekelis. The only report on these excavations included a blank plan, lacking elevations and architectural or stratigraphic sections. After 1948, the building was incorporated in the Tel Bet Yerah National Park, and basic preservation and maintenance were carried out through the 1980s. In recent decades the building was covered with a thick mantle of vegetation––grass, bushes, and trees––that threatened it with imminent disintegration. To complete the plan of the structure and subject it to closer scrutiny, extensive clearing of the vegetation was carried out in 2002, and completed in 2003. This was followed by the excavation of a number of soundings intended to verify its function and date its construction. These soundings (Fig. 1) were located at the southern end of the internal pillared hall (1); under the floor that covered the northeast corner of the structure (2), and in the alleyway bordering the building on the west (3). All sediments from sealed contexts were dry-sieved, and a further systematic sample was wet-sieved.
In Sounding 1 we attempted to ascertain whether additional floor levels could be identified beneath the surface reached by the original excavators. Such a possibility was suggested by descriptions left by Stekelis of a section excavated in the northwest corner of the hall, in which a floor ‘with olives’ and a further surface were reached. As it turned out, undisturbed remains could be identified only in the southwest corner of the sounding, the remaining portions having been subject to disturbance, both by the original excavators and by subsequent maintenance activities. The surviving deposits cast no new light on the function of the hall. Beneath the packed-earth surfaces and the later disturbance were patches of pavement that appear to antedate the construction of the 'Circles Building'. This pavement was apparently cut by the deep foundations of the building, here standing nine courses high. Finds were dated to EB IB. Near Sounding 1, on the far side of the east wall of the pillared hall, a section of the fine cobblestone courtyard was revealed. A probe beneath this pavement yielded a few EB II sherds, but no floor of that date was identified above the EB I remains.
The most significant finds of the season were found in Sounding 2. The probe beneath the bathhouse floor was focused on Circle VII, which had been partly revealed by Stekelis outside the bathhouse. With the removal of the mortar bedding of the bath’s marble-slab floor, which should probably be dated to the Early Islamic period, the brick walls and earth fill of the 'Circles Building' began to emerge, showing little evidence of late disturbance. The brickwork––both at the circle’s circumference and on the interior walls––was preserved c. 0.2 m high above the stone foundations. The segment revealed in Circle VII included the internal east–west and part of the north–south brick cross-walls. There was evidence for several building phases: In the latest phase the east–west brick cross-wall ran across the entire diameter of the circle, dividing it into two spaces, each consisting of two rooms. This phase was furnished with a coarse stone pavement, in which three depressions were found, one in each excavated quadrant of the circle (the fourth quadrant remains unexcavated). These depressions might have served as pillar bases. This stone floor was preceded by an earlier, more carefully laid, stone pavement. The relation of this earlier pavement to the cross-walls is unclear. The ceramic material on both floors was of EB III date, including Khirbet Kerak Ware, but there was a noticeable difference between the northern space, which yielded a fair amount of pottery, and the southwest quadrant, where the principal finds belonged to an ad-hoc flint tool industry. Evidence for small-scale industrial use of the 'Circles Building' had been observed by the Stekelis expedition, particularly with the discovery of a potter’s kiln built on the paved courtyard. Thus it emerges that this public structure, which covered an area of some 1200 sq m, was parceled out to various artisans during EB III––clearly not the original purpose for which the structure was built.
In Sounding 3, the fine stone-slab pavement of the street bordering the 'Circles Building' on the west was re-exposed. Upon cleaning, it became evident that the original orientation of the pavement was slightly different from that of the structure. Furthermore, the west side of the street was bordered by a wall built on top of the pavement slabs. In the section excavated beneath the street, a bedding composed of material brought from the shore of Lake Kinneret––a combination of coarse gravel, sand and mollusc shells––contained EB II pottery. This bedding might represent an earlier phase of the street. The wall of the 'Circles Building', here preserved five courses high, was set in a foundation trench that cut the paved street. Beneath the trench and the gravel bedding were remains of brick walls built to a different orientation from that of the building. A floor segment that abutted these brick-wall remains carried EB IB pottery. Sounding 3 therefore shows that the 'Circles Building' was introduced into an extant urban layout, comprising orthagonal paved streets that originated in EB II. The 'Circles Building' itself was probably built in EB III, but its construction may well have involved the removal or remodeling of an earlier structure, for which we have yet to find clear evidence.
The 2003 excavations in the 'Circles Building' have furthered our understanding of this unique structure. First, they showed that there are undisturbed portions of the building that could provide important evidence for the function of the structure. Second, they confirmed the original excavators’ contention that there was secondary use of the structure, probably by small-scale industries. Third, they provided new evidence of the potency of the urban fabric, hinting at a complex process of urban renewal involved in the construction of the 'Circles Building'. The pilot season thus offers a starting point for a renewed investigation of the 'Circles Building' at Bet Yerah, and for the study of the various issues regarding its plan, its construction, and its function.