Page 4 - DILMUN NO 6
P. 4

On the Date of the Temple at Barbar

           in Bahrain
                                                                Reprinted with kind permission by Peder
                                                           Mortensen which appeared in Artibus Asiae
           By Peder Mortensen                              Vol. XXXIII, 4.

                                                          goblets found in abundance in the fill of the
               The mound covering the temple at Barbar
                                                          platfoi m and by a painted sherd, found in a
          was found by Professor Glob during a survey in
                                                          layer north of the first temple.
          1953, and it was excavated by Danish archaeolo­
          gists during eight seasons from 1954 to 1961. It
          is situated about 300 meters from the sea on the                                       /W
          edge of a slightly lower plateau which seems to
          have been under water in old times, so that
          originally the temple may have been lying at a
          bay, perhaps surrounded by water on two sides.                                       jv>a
          It is very peculiar that the temple was not
          surrounded by a town. The only houses con­                                          W
          nected with the temple belong to a period when                                     m
          it was already in decay, but there seems to be a
          modest town of the same period as the temple,
          in the tell on which the modern village of
          Barbar is built, not far from .the temple site.                                    3M
               During the excavations we were able to                                         ifUMuv
          distinguish three main phases in the architec­
          tural development of the temple. But unfor­
          tunately the structures of the earliest phases
          were partly destroyed by the later buildings
               The earliest temple was built on a rectan­
          gular platform nearly 25 m. long and 16-18 m.
          wide, surrounded* by a stone wall. On top
          of the platform there were along .the edge
          remains of small rooms placed around an open
          courtyard. From the west a ramp or stairway
          led up to the temple, and in the southwestern
          corner two staircases descended to a square
          well. Undoubtedly, the water in this well
          played an important part in the cult already
          in the time of the earliest temple, and the     Fig. 1. Clay goblets from the foundation deposit
          significance of the well is shown by the fact   of the first temple.
          that it was also in use - in a slightly altered
         outer form during the second and third phases        The goblets, which are 10-14 cm. high,
         of the temple. A deposit consisting of nearly   have a conical upper part and a low foot, that
         a hundred conical clay goblets and a few        in some cases is solid and in other cases hollow.
         weapons of copper was found in the fill of the  They are irregularly shaped, made of clay con­
         platform.                                       taining some lime and tempered with fine sand,
              The most reliable evidence for the dating   and fired so that the surface as well as the core
         of the earliest temple is provided by the clay  has a pale red colour.

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