Showing posts with label Byzantine Empire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Byzantine Empire. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 September 2022

Understanding the Roman-style forts of Upper Nubia.

The term Upper Nubia is used to identify the area along the banks of the River Nile between the Third Cataract and the confluence of the White and Blue Niles, and the areas of desert and semi-desert that surrounds it. This area is covered by a huge array of defensive structures, mostly dating to the medieval and post-medieval periods; the exact number of these structures is unclear, although it is probably over 300. Some of these structures have been extensively explored by archaeologists, but most have been only briefly surveyed, if at all. As a result of this, the origin of most of these forts is unclear, with estimates based upon surface materials recovered from the sites or just the general shape of the fortifications. 

The largest of these structures, such as Old Dongola and Bakhit, are still the largest structures ever built in this region, but many are much smaller, representing little more than military towers or fortified houses. Among these varied structures, one group stands out for their similarity, a group of small forts with quadrilateral structures resembling Late Roman fortlets. 

In a paper published in the journal Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa on 2 February 2022, Mariusz Drzewiecki of the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Warsaw, and Aneta Cedro of the Institute of Mediterranean and Oriental Cultures of the Polish Academy of Sciences, examine the origins of these forts and try to understand who built them and why.

Map of the Upper Nubia region of Sudan showing the locations of places mentioned in the text. Black squares mark quadrilateral forts, red squares potential forts. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

Drzewieki and Cedro were able to identify nine Roman-style forts in Upper Nubia, spanning about 550 km of the Nile Valley. These are presumed to have been built during Late Antiquity (the second to seventh centuries AD), a time of significant political change in the region. By the second century AD the Kushite Kingdom of Meroe was beginning to break apart into smaller states. In the fourth century, when the Axumite King Ezana sent an army to conquer the region. By the fifth-to-sixth centuries the region was divided into three kingdoms, Makuria, with its capital at Dongala, Nobadia, with its capital at Faras, and Alwa, with its capital at Soba, which, by the late sixth century, were at war with one-another, having converted to different branches of Christianity; the Makurians having adopted Melkitism, and the other two kingdoms having converted to Monophysitism.

The quadrilateral fort at the top of Jebel Umm Marrahi. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

Drzewieki and Cedro consider that three possible explanations for the forts are plausible. 

Firstly, the forts could have been built by the Kingdom of Meroe towards the end of its existence; this is supported by the locations of the forts, which span the final area which the Kingdom was able to hold onto before its eventual collapse. 

Secondly, the forts could have been built by one of the successor kingdoms which emerged in the fifth-to-sixth centuries. A number of forts between the Third and Fourth Cataracts (further downstream) are considered to have been built by the Kingdom of Makuria, though these are less regular in form than the Upper Nubian forts, being moulded to the local topography. All of the Roman-style forts lie within the boundaries of the historic Kingdom of Alwa, with the most southerly fort, Jebel Umm Marrahi, being only 50 km to the north of the city of Soba, which has led to the suggestion that the forts might have been built by the Alwans.

Finally, Drzewieki and Cedro hypothesise that the first of the forts could have been built by Meroe, but then integrated into the defence system of one of the later states and used as a template for the construction of more forts along the same lines.

The nine forts are remarkably similar in construction. The largest, Hosh el-Kab, is only four times the size of the smallest, Wad Mukhtar. The corners of the forts are reinforced by bastions, and most were built using a vertical masonry technique absent from other sites in the area, including the Makurian forts. 

The Middle Nile forts. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

In order to establish who built the forts, Drzewieki and Cedro reason, it would first be necessary to establish precise dates for their construction. Such dates can be obtained from a range archaeological material, but, for the dating of the construction times, only material from the lowest layers within the forts, and the layers immediately beneath their foundations, should be used. Material obtained from the cores of curtain walls or from higher layers within the forts may also prove useful, but their context must be evaluated very carefully.

Vertical masonry in the fort at Mikeisir. Urszula Stępień in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

Examination of material from the lowest layers within the forts can also shed light on the lives of the original occupants of the forts, which in turn may help to understand why the forts were built. Items such as ceramics or organic material can reveal a lot about the daily lives of the people who deposited them, as can presence or absence of luxury items, combined with analysis of any food remains. Were the fortified structures intended to house garrisons, act as storehouses, or as fortified dwellings for whole communities? Were they used over a long period of time, or did their construction relate to some specific threat, after which they were abandoned?

Although the forts are very regular in construction, their distribution is very uneven. As mentioned previously, the southernmost fort, Umm Marrahi, lies only 50 km to the north of the Alwan capital Soba. Three kilometres to the north of this lies the fort of Hosh el-Kab, while 500 m to the east of Hosh el-Kab is the fort of Abu Nafisa. This clustering seems to make it unlikely that all three of these forts were in use at the same time, which prompted  a team from the Polish Academy of Sciences to investigate these sites directly.

The location of Abu Nafisa, Hosh el-Kab and Umm Marrahi. Włodzimierz Rączkowski & Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

The fort at Umm Marrahi was surveyed by the British archaeologist Osbert Crawford in the 1950s, and some test excavations were carried out there by a team from Khartoum University in the 1970s. The Khartoum team recovered pottery fragments from the fort and from a nearby cemetery, which were of similar manufacture. Based upon this, it was calculated that the fort was in use at some time between the Late Meroitic and Early Christian periods, between about 325 and 650 AD. A radiocarbon date was established for a piece of pottery, which placed it at between 675 and 975 AD, with a confidence level of 94%, but this cannot realistically be extrapolated to a construction time for the fort. Further investigations in the area in the 1980s shed no further light upon the age of the fort. Neither of the other forts has been formally investigated, though some speculation about their origin has appeared in research publications about the area, with suggestions including Meroitic, Makurian, and Early Medieval.

The Polish Academy of Sciences team carried out fieldwork at Hosh el-Kab and Abu Nafisa in 2018, and at Umm Marrahi in 2019. Initial surveys of the sites, combined with interviews with local residents established that many of the structures visible within the forts were of much later origin than their construction, often dating to the Islamic Period. Umm Marrahi contains a mosque, and several associated buildings, which was constructed by a local Sufi brotherhood, while Abu Nafisa contains the tomb of an Muslim Holy Man, Sheikh Abu Nafisa.

The only structures that could be confidently associated with the construction of the forts are their walls. With this in mind the Polish team dug two excavation trenches along the insides of walls at each fort, where possible doing so at the sites of gates or the corners of the forts. Before doing this a careful surface survey was carried out, and previous excavations left by looters, or where paths or irrigation channels had been cut, were inspected.

The fort at Umm Marrahi showing the location of archaeological trenches. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

Before any excavation work was undertaken, a geophysical survey was carried out at each fort, in order to better understand the organisation and state of preservation of the buildings within them. At Abu Nasifa, an area of 7400 m² was surveyed, with the southeastern corner being excluded from the survey in order to avoid disturbing the tomb of the Holy Man. At Hosh el-Kab an area of 13 300 m² was surveyed, excluding only an area where the site had clearly been damaged beyond the usefulness of such surveys by modern irrigation work. At Umm Marrahi an area of only 1600 m² was surveyed, as the bedrock was exposed in many places at this fort.

The fort of Abu Nasifa is the closest of the three sites to the Nile, and has clearly been flooded on several occasions since it was in use. Both the excavations and the geophysical survey carried out here uncovered massive alluvial deposits, with little archaeological evidence from the time of the fort's use remaining. However, the remains of a settlement pre-dating the fort were uncovered, and a number of potentially datable fragments of charcoal collected, potentially providing a maximum age for the fort.

The fort at Abu Nafisa fort showing the location of the archaeological trenches. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

The walls of Abu Nafisa were worn down to their foundation, although it was possible to confirm that these walls were made using a vertical masonry technique. Most of the material collected here came from the surface or upper layers within the trenches, and could be dated to the Funj period (1504-1821 AD). However, a few fragments of older pottery and some beads were recovered from the lowest layers of the fort settlement, these being referable to the post-Merotic/Christian transition period (fifth-to-sixth centuries).

Samples of pottery associated with the beginning of the forts at Abu Nafisa (a)–(c) and Hosh el-Kab (d)–(f). Aneta Cedro in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

The largest of the forts surveyed was Hosh el-Kab, which is also distinctive in having thirteen bastions strengthening its corners and curtain walls. It is close to Abu Nafisa, but further from the river, towards the edge of the desert. The site was badly damaged in 2013-4, when a 10 m wide irrigation trench was cut through it. The walls remain to a height of about 70 cm, and are made of irregular stones, bound with mortar, with no signs of vertical masonry ever having been present. 

The fort at Hosh el-Kab with the remains of a church shown by an arrow. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

Geophysical surveys within Hosh el-Kab suggested that most of the buildings that had stood there were made from mud bricks. As with Abu Nafisa, most of the material found within the fort was close to the surface, and dates from the Funj period or later. Some pottery fragments dating to the post-Merotic/Christian transition period were found in the deeper layers of the trenches, and in the area around a former church within the fort.

The fort at Hosh el-Kab in 2018. Mariusz Drzewiecki in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

Unlike Abu Nafisa and Hosh el-Kab, the fort at Umm Marrahi is located on top of a hill, and contains numerous stone-built buildings, although investigation of these suggests that all are quite recent in origin. The fort is built directly onto the bedrock, which is still very close to the surface at the centre of the fort. Around the walls, however, a sediment layer was present, up to 1.4 m in depth. Excavations produced material dating to the early Holocene, post-Meroitic, early Christian, Funj and modern eras, with the earliest layers within the walls yielding fragments of cooking and storage vessels, as well as pieces of thin, black-burnished handmade bowls of post-Meroitic origin. No pottery of Merotic origin was found anywhere within the fort, which Drzewieki and Cedro take as evidence that the fort post dates the Kingdom of Meroe.

A total of 22 organic samples were recovered during the excavations, of which 19 yielded radiocarbon dates. The earliest of these dates are from the first half of the fifth century AD, roughly 70 years after the Axumite King Ezana's invasion of the area. Based upon the dates recovered, the most likely origin of all the forts was in the late sixth or early seventh century AD.

The best dated site is Abu Nafisa, the construction of which can be placed between 561 and 574 AD, based upon both material from below the fort and material from the lowest level within the fort. Hosh al-Kab is probably slightly younger, with the lowest layers here dated to between 571 and 604 AD. Umm Marrahi is the least well constrained, but was probably built between 536 and 564 AD. All of these dates are around 200 years after the fall of Meroe, ruling out a Meroitic origin of the forts.

At Hosh el-Kab and Umm Marrahi, the forts appear to have remained in use into the Early Christian era, but then to have been abandoned until the Funj period, with no material dating from the Classic and Late Christian periods present. Abu Nafisa appears to have been abandoned earlier, with no Early Christian material present. 

This suggests that all the forts were only in use for a short period of time, and that Abu Nafisa was abandoned quite soon after its construction. This may relate to the site's vulnerability to flooding; considerable amounts of alluvial sediment were found within the walls of the fort, and the site was inundated during the floods which hit Sudan in 2019. If this was also the case in the sixth century, then it is quite possible that the fort was abandoned in favour of the dryer site at Hosh el-Kab, which would also explain why the two sites were so close together. This larger fort was at the edge of the water in 2019, suggesting that its builders had taken the likely extent of flooding into account when building it.

Google Earth images of Abu Nafisa and Hosh el-Kab during the flood of 2019. Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

While vertical masonry was used at Abu Nafisa, it is absent at Hosh el-Kab and Umm Marrahi. If Abu Nafissa does predate Hosh el-Kab, this may indicate that Umm Marrahi was built at roughly the same time as the latter; since it was only half the side of Hosh el-Kab it may have been an auxiliary post intended to work in conjunction with the main fort in some way. Whatever the precise relationship between the forts, they clearly point towards the area being a site of strategic importance in the second half of the sixth century AD.

The material recovered from the lower layers within the forts was remarkably uniform across all three sites, with the smallest civil sites in the Middle Nile Valley producing a much more varied range of material, including luxury items and goods brought in from long distances away, all of which were missing from the forts.

The geophysical survey carried out at Hosh el-Kab found traces of mud-brick buildings along the southern and parts of the northern walls of the city, as well as free-standing buildings, including a church, throughout the enclosed area. This was confirmed by a small trench on the northern wall, which uncovered the remnants of a mud-brick structure. Early Christian pottery and other material were found in the area around the church. 

Most of the original structures within Umm Marrahi appear to have been demolished in the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty first centuries, to make way for newer construction. The buildings of Abu Nafisa appear to have been almost totally eroded away by the action of repeated flooding, although a few places may show the remains of stone floors of buildings.

Pottery is the most common material at all three sites, with a total of 1554 fragments collected in total. The distribution of this pottery was not even; Abu Nafisa, having apparently been used only briefly and then subjected to repeated flooding events, unsurprisingly yielded little pottery. Hosh el-Kab had apparently been the subject of numerous excavations in the post-medieval and modern periods, during which much material had been removed, probably for construction purposes in local villages. Umm Marrahi became a centre of religious activity in more recent times, and as such had been relatively undisturbed by local villagers. Excavations here yielded a range of pottery from different periods. However, none of the sites was completely excavated, and it is likely that the discovered pottery represents only a fraction of the total amount present.

The most distinctive feature of the pottery from the lowest layers at Umm Marrahi is that none of it is wheel-made. All of the pottery is hand made, and though it can be divided into coarse ware with thick walls and crude outer surfaces, and finer ware with smoother surfaces, the difference between the two appears to be purely functional. The finer ware, which is usually covered by a slip, generally black in colour, and burnished or polished, and occasionally decorated, is used exclusively for the production of small bowls or dishes. The cruder pottery, which lacked any slip or burnishing, and often preserved the fingerprints of its makers, was used for making larger bowls.

Black-polished bowls from the earliest phase of the Umm Marrahi fort. Aneta Cedro in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

One distinctive group of larger bowls have a shallow, open shape with vertical or steeply sloping walls. The upper parts of these walls are typically thicker, and have a pattern of fingerprints or diagonal cuts along their rims. Fragments of these bowls were found at Umm Marrahi, Abu Nafisa, and Hosh el-Kab, and are also known from Soba. Some of these bowls have soot on their outsides, suggesting that they may have been used for cooking. Fragments of a type of bowl known as a doka, used for the baking of flatbread, were also found, as were pieces of what appear to be storage vessels, including short, wide-mouthed bottles, plain neckless jars, and 'beer jars' which have globular bodies and slender necks.

Examples of coarse ware pottery from the earliest phase of the Umm Marrahi fort. Aneta Cedro in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

A lot of the pottery from the lowest layers at Umm Marrahi is very similar to pottery previously recovered from the city of Soba. Notable example of this are the presence the black slip-ware and of a type of thin-walled bowl with carinated (ridged) walls and either a black or red slip. Examples of this sort of bowl, with both black and red slips, have also been recovered from Soba.

Examples of bowls from the Umm Marrahi fort (left) and their parallels from Soba (right). Aneta Cedro and Ewa Czyżewska-Zalewska in Drzewieki & Cedro (2022).

While the lowest layers at Umm Marrahi produced only hand-made pottery, the higher layers did produce wheel-made pottery. All of this could be dated to the Early Christian period, although some of it was clearly inspired by Late Roman patterns. Again, this was similar to material found at Soba, and likely to have been made in the same workshops.

Some of the pottery items found at Umm Marrahi showed signs of repair, including items which would normally have been considered to have been of low value, such as course bowls and storage jars, but which were apparently worth having their lives extended here. Also found were two potsherds which had been polished and cut into circular shapes, which Drzewieki and Cedro take as evidence that they had been used as spindles, thus providing evidence of yarn production.

The excavations carried out at Umm Marrahi by a team from Khartoum University in the 1970s also uncovered ceramics, including two complete vessels, a small bowl and a cooking pot. All of this pottery conformed to the same types recorded by the Polish team. Evidence of the repair of pottery was also present in this sample.

The pottery from Umm Marrahi is remarkably functional, with no examples of 'luxury' items, or anything else that might be used to denote social status. Even the best made bowls, while well executed, are strictly functional in form, and were probably made at local workshops. No amphorae, or other objects which might be associated with long-distance trade were found.

After pottery, the most common finds at the sites were Animal remains, comprising a collection of 562 bones, teeth, and fragments. The majority of the material from the lowest layers can be assigned to Sheep and/or Goats, with a smaller amount of Cattle remains. Also present were pieces of bone from a Rodent and a Hippopotamus. Notably absent were the remains of any non-consumed domestic Animals (such as Dogs, Cats, Donkeys, or Camels), or bones from parts of Animals not typically consumed (such as the phalanges), suggesting that all the Animal remains originally came to the site as meat for consumption, not live Animals.

The preponderance of Sheep/Goat remains, particularly in comparison to the number of Cattle remains, is puzzling, as at other sites in the area, including Soba and Makurian sites, the reverse is true, with Cattle remains being the most abundant. At Soba, the remains of Pigs are also quite common, but these are absent at the forts.

A very small number of other items were uncovered at the forts, including nine beads, eleven stone tools (grinding stones and pestles), and a piece of copper. The complete lack of luxury goods at the sites suggests that the inhabitants were not members of a ruling or wealthy class. The uniform nature of the pottery implies that everyone present was using essentially the same utensils, storage spaces, and goods, while the preserved remains of the original buildings at Hosh el-Kab reveals that living spaces were arranged according to a regular plan.

This does not necessarily imply that all of the residents were of equal status. The fortified nature of the buildings makes it likely that these were military outposts, where rank would probably be clearly recognised, even if the materials used by all ranks were strictly functional. The one problem with this interpretation is that no weapons have been found at the site, which would normally be expected from a garrison fort, although most weapons known from post-Meroitic Nubia are known from burial sites, so this is perhaps not as remarkable as it would be elsewhere in the world.

Part of the problem with interpreting the purpose of the forts is that the political situation in Upper Nubia in the sixth century is poorly understood. The Byzantine scholar and historian John of Ephesus (c.507-c.588 AD) records that in the latter part of the sixth century the kingdoms of the Middle Nile were starting to convert to Christianity, as well as frequently fighting amongst themselves. Little is directly recorded about Alwa or its neighbouring states, but a line of forts between Alwa and Makuria probably implies that the two states were at least close to conflict with one-another. There was also a potential for conflict with Beja nomads inhabiting the Eastern Desert, as well as various nomadic groups crossing the Bayuda Desert.

The King of Alwa is known to have been baptised into the Monophysite branch of Christianity in 580, by the Byzantine missionary Bishop Longinus, who had travelled from Nobadia for the event. Some correspondence between the two monarchs survives, and suggests that the conversion was part of the forging of an alliance against the Makurians, although what this dispute was about, when it started, and how long it lasted, are all unclear.

The Kingdom of Alwa may have reached as far as the Fourth Cataract in the sixth century, with the last of the nine forts being at El-Ar, just upriver of that cataract. This is a huge area, including all of the central part of the former state of Meroe. However, by the end of the sixth century the Kingdom of Makuria is known to have reached to the Fifth Cataract, presumably at the the expense of the Alwans. Some of the forts in this region, such as Mikeisir, were abandoned at this time, while others, such as El-Ar, were modified and used for other purposes, while forts in the Makurian style, such as Karmel and Ras el Gezira, were erected. 

How long this conflict lasted is unclear, though the forts at  Hosh el-Kab and Umm Marrahi clearly remained in use into the Early Christian period. By the middle of the seventh century the Kingdom od Nobadia had fallen to an Islamic Arab army under Abdallāh ibn Sa΄d ibn Abī Sar, which had marched up the Nile and was now threatening Makuria, possibly lessening that state's enthusiasm for war with Alwa.

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Sunday, 3 October 2021

Tracing the origins of glass tesserae from the Roman city of Gerasa in northwest Jordan.

The city of Gerasa in northwestern Jordan was an important economic and cultural centre in the Eastern Roman Empire and later the Byzantine Empire, and one of the cities that made up the Decapolis (self-governing cities with populations largely made up of Greeks and Romans in an area otherwise dominated by local cultures). The city covered about 800 000 m² in Early Roman times, and was home to a number of important public buildings and temples, including the Artemision, a temple to the goddess Artemis, and one of the largest religious buildings in the Roman world. From the fifth century these were largely succeeded by Christian churches, with a new phase of building showing the importance of the city in the Byzantine period.

In a paper published in the journal Archaeometry on 7 January 2021, Cristina Boschetti of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the Université d’Orléans, Achim Lichtenberger of the Institut für Klassische Archäologie und Christliche Archäologie and Archäologisches Museum at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Rubina Raja at the Danish National Research Foundation’s Centre of Excellence for Urban Network Evolutions and the Department of Classical Studies at Aarhus University, Will Wooton of the Classics Department at King’s College London, and Nadine Schibille, also of the  Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the Université d’Orléans, report on the work of the Danish-German Jerash Northwest Quarter Project, which has been investigating a section of the Northwest Quarter of the city since 2011, with an emphasis on understanding long-term change and development of this quarter. 

One aspect of this investigation has been the study of the numerous mosaics found in the area, and the materials used to make them. These mosaics were largely made up of glass tesserae (tiles), of which many have survived even if the mosaics have been lost (much of the city was destroyed by an Earthquake in the eighth century AD. The chemical composition of these tiles can be used to identify their age and origin (by comparison to other tiles of known origin) helping to understand the trade in glass in northern Jordan in Roman and Byzantine times.

 
Scaled plan of Gerasa, with the North Western Quarter outlined in green at top left. Boschetti et al. (2021).

Previous studies of glass tesserae from northern Jordan have found that the overwhelming majority of tiles dating from the fourth to eighth centuries AD are of Levantine origin, with very few examples of Egyptian origin - the exception to this being a gold-glass tesserae from the Petra Church. Other glass artefacts in the region are also predominantly of Levantine origin, although some Egyptian artefacts are known from the Deir ‘Ain ‘Abata sanctury and the Petra Great Temple. The closeness of Gerasa to the glass furnaces of the Levant makes it likely that Levantine tesserae glass would have been easily available in the city. However, examination of fifth to sixth century glass objects from Gerasa, and fifth to eighth century artefacts from Umm el-Jimal (about 50 km to the east of Gerasa), have found them to be made almost exclusively of recycled glass. Recycled glass also dominates in third to fourth century artefacts from Petra and Khirbet et-Tannur, and early fifth century artefacts from Petra. However, with the exception of the material from Petra, no tesserae from the Byzantine period of northern Jordan have previously been examined for their chemical composition.

Both the Romans and Byzantines made extensive use of tesserae in mosaics used to cover floors and walls. However, relatively few Roman mosaics have been uncovered at Gerasa, largely because the residential district of the Roman city is largely covered by the modern town. At the moment only a single Early Roman period mosaic is known, along with a number fragmentary examples. However, a number of Late Roman and Early Byzantine mosaics are known, along with a larger collection of later Byzantine examples, predominantly from the late fifth to early seventh centuries. The majority of these mosaics are from the floors of religious buildings, some of which also had mosaics on their walls, although some are also known from civic buildings and private homes. Recent excavations by the Danish–German Jerash Northwest Quarter Project have added a sixth century 'Mosaic Hall' (attached to the Synagogue Church) and an early Islamic home to this collection.

 
Late second to early third century Roman mosaic from Gerasa, Jordan. Yale University Art Gallery.

Boschetti et al. selected 76 glass tesserae from early fourth and eighth century backfills, excavated at Gerasa between 2013 and 2016. These tesserae included examples of all colours known from the site, and were excavated from fifteen different trenches, across the area of the city excavated by the Danish–German Jerash Northwest Quarter Project. These tesserae were examined by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry at the Centre Ernest-Babelon at the Université d’Orléans, with a single spot analysis being carried out on each sample.

 
Specimens from the North Western Quarter divided by base glass composition and colour, with an indication of sample number, trench letter and date of the backfill. Boschetti et al. (2021).

All of the tesserae were found to be comprised of low magnesium and potassium silica-soda-lime glass, which is indicative of the use of natron (sodium carbonate) as a fluxing agent. This way of glassmaking was the dominant method from the Hellenistic period till the ninth century AD, and therefore fits with expectations for the Gerasa tesserae. 

The proportions of aluminium oxide to silicon dioxide, and of titanium oxide to aluminium oxide can be used to determine the proportions of feldspars and heavy minerals mixed with the original silica from which the glass was made, and therefore can be used to identify the origin and date of manufacture of tesserae, by comparison to other glass artefacts of known origin. This methodology was used by Boschetti et al. to split the sample into a number of groups. 

The first group was distinguished by the presence of a low titanium oxide to aluminium oxide ratio and a moderate aluminium oxide to silicon dioxide ration. This group of tesserae date from the first to fourth centuries AD, and is identified as being of Roman origin, and specifically from the Roman Levantine coast. As this glass does not have a mixed manganese-antimony composition, it is likely to have been made from manganese-decoloured raw glass close to the original workshops of the Levantine coast. During this time antimony compounds were commonly used to colour glass; calcium antimonate was used to produce a blue colour and lead antimonate to produce yellows and greens. This method of colouring glass predominated from the Hellenistic period till the third century AD, when it was largely replaced by a new method with replaced the antimony compounds with tin compounds.

 
Specimens from the North Western Quarter divided by base glass composition and colour, with an indication of sample number, trench letter and date of the backfill. Boschetti et al. (2021).

The majority of the examined specimens (57 of the 76 tesserae) had a composition with a low titanium oxide to aluminium oxide ratio and a slightly higher aluminium oxide to silicon dioxide ratio, combined with higher calcium and potassium levels and lower sodium levels than the Roman tesserae. These examples are considered to belong to a type known as Levantine I, which was primarily made at Apollonia (in modern Israel) in the sixth and seventh centuries. However, while this glass is assigned to the Apollonian Levantine I type, the majority of the tiles are in the overlap between Leventine I, Roman manganese glass, and Levantine glasses produced in Jalame in the fourth century. Thus, it is quite likely that these tesserae were made from recycled glass a mixture of sources, dominated by Apollonian glass, but with some earlier Levantine and Roman glass. A previous study of glass vessels from the same area found many appeared to be a mixture of Apollonian and Roman glass, so finding this composition in tesserae is not unanticipated. These samples also typically have higher potassium and phosphorus levels and lower chlorine levels than is typical for Apollonian glass, which is known to be a symptom of repeated remelting of glass.

Previous studied of glass from Jordan have shown a strong correlation between their potassium and phosphorus contents, something which has been taken as evidence for the use of Olive stones as a fuel. Curiously, the Gerasa glass tesserae showed no such pattern, possibly due to the methods used to opacify the glass. The white, blue, and turquoise tesserae show raised levels of calcium phosphate, which is probably indicative of the use of bone ash as an opacifier, a practice known in the Mediterranean and Near East from the beginning of the fifth century onwards. However, it is difficult to be confident about this, as repeated recycling of glass also raises phosphorus levels. Tesserae from the Petra Church have been shown to contain crystals of calcium phosphate by electron microscopy, and both the Gerassa and Petra Church tesserae have phosphate levels unrelated to their potash (potassium salt) levels, something which differs from other glass objects from Jordan. These other glasses all have a phosphorus pentoxide content of less than 0.2% by weight, while in the tesserae have levels between 0.12 and 2.23% by weight, with textures ranging from opaque to bubbly translucent, which may be another indication of bone ash in the opacification process.

This use of calcium phosphate as an opacifyer, combined with the use of lead stannate (or lead-tin-yellow) to produce green and yellow-green glass provides an extra distinction between the Roman and Levantine tesserae. Comparison between cobalt and nickel compositions of the blue tesserae. The Roman tesserae typically have low nickel levels, and therefore a high cobalt/nickel ratio, whereas tesserae made from the fourth century onwards have a higher nickel content, and therefore a lower cobalt/nickel ratio. 

Eight gilded tesserae were present in the sample, and these show a different base glass composition to all the other tiles. The base colour of these tesserae varies from green to amber-yellow, something done deliberately to modify the appearance of the gold foil covering the tiles. One of these tesserae shows raised levels of titanium, vanadium, chromium, zirconium, and hafnium, something typical of HIMT (High Iron, Manganese, Tin) glass, which is thought to have originated from northern Egypt in the fourth and fifth centuries. Another six tesserae have a low titanium oxide/aluminium oxide ratio which is associated with Foy 2.1 group glasses, which again came from Egypt, and which are found across Europe and the Mediterranean in the fifth and sixth centuries. One of these final gilded tesserae showed raised levels of transition metals, notably cobalt, copper, and iron, which is probably indicative of recycling, as well as a high cobalt/nickel ratio, which may indicate the inclusion of some older Roman glass into its base mix. Another gilded tesserae has a unique composition, with low levels of calcium and aluminium oxides and a high titanium oxide/aluminium oxide ratio, combined with raised levels of antimony, lead, zirconium, europium, and hafnium. Boschetti et al. suggest that this composition might indicate a recycled origin involving Roman and HIMT glasses, which might also imply that it is of Egyptian origin.

Chemical analysis of the Gerasa tesserae indicates a definable archaeological sequence. This begins with Roman glasses from the first to fourth centuries AD, which were found in Roman occupied areas from the second century onwards, a period when Gerasa was entering a long, prosperous interval, and mosaics were installed in public buildings and the homes of prosperous citizens. Few of these tiles appear to be recycled, indicating new tesserae were easily available. These are succeeded by Levantine tiles in the sixth century, which are found across the whole site, apparently linked to the widespread replacement of Roman sanctuaries with Christian churches, and a desire to decorate these new structures with mosaics, provoking a sudden demand for locally made coloured glass. This seems to be a general pattern in Byzantine Jordan, with recycled glass becoming common, something which suggests the availability of imported glass went down, provoking the development of an efficient glass recycling system. Analysis of Byzantine glass artefacts from other sites in Jordan has suggested that this process often involved colouring clear recycled glass with reused tesserae, but the pattern at Gerasa appears to have been different, with fresh colouring agents and opacifiers being added to the glass mix. Apart from the single HIMT tesserae, all the gilded tesserae from Gerasa appear to date from this Byzantine period, and therefore are also probably associated with the church building episode. However, at other Byzantine and early Islamic sites in Jordan and nearby, gilded tesserae appear to have been made locally, whereas those at Gerasa appear to have been imported from Egypt, which is unusual in that few other objects of Egyptian origin are found in Gerasa or northern Jordan at this time.

 
Base glass compositions thus far identified in fourth- to eight-centuries Jordan. Boschetti et al. (2021).

Mosaics made up of glass tesserae appear to have been common at Gerasa from at least the second century AD. The earlier 'Roman' tesserae were probably made on the Levantine coast to a Roman recipe, with the later 'Levantine' tesserae probably being made more locally, possibly within the city itself. Examination of material from late Byzantine and early Umayyad backfills revealed an abundance of older tesserae but none that could be comfortably assigned to the eighth century, suggesting that by this time mosaics were being made entirely with recycled tesserae, although these backfills could represent recycling centres, where tiles were collected for reuse, and new tesserae would not be found even if they were being produced at this time. The gilded tesserae appear to have been imported from Egypt, a rare example of Egyptian goods in Jordan at this time, highlighting their status as a specialist product, although why they were imported from Egypt, and not the Levantine coast, where such tesserae are known to have been manufactured, is unclear.

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