Timnah


Timnath or Timnah was a Philistine city in Canaan that is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible in and in connection with Samson. Modern archaeologists identify the ancient site with Tel Batash or Tell Butashi, a tell lying on a flat, alluvial plain, located in the Sorek Valley ca. north-west of Beit Shemesh, near moshav Tal Shahar in Israel. The site is not to be confused with the copper-smelting site of Timna in the Arabah near Eilat.
The Tel Batash mound was discovered in the 19th century by C. Clermont-Ganneau, who identified it as a Roman military camp. In subsequent years, the site was uncovered through 1977–1989, in 12 seasons of excavations, by Amihai Mazar and George L. Kelm while Kelm was serving as professor of Biblical backgrounds and archaeology at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, on a dig sponsored by the Seminary.

Geography

Tel Batash is strategically located in the Sorek Valley, an access point from the Coastal Plain through the Shephelah and into the Central Judean Mountains.

Hebrew Bible references

A place called Timnah is mentioned in in the context of the story of Judah and Tamar, although some place this episode in a different Timnah, at a site called in Arabic Khirbet et-Tibbaneh.
In, a place with this name is mentioned as a point on the border of the Tribe of Judah, and refers to Timnah's vineyards.
In, Samson went down to Timnah in order to find a wife. On his way there, he tore apart a lion. Samson married a "girl of the Philistines" from Timnah and posed a riddle for the men of Timnah, which they were only able to resolve following the intervention of his wife.

History

Excavations under the leadership of Mazar and Kelm during the 1980s-1990s uncovered twelve strata of continuous settlement at the site through the Hellenistic period, with sparse settlement nearby during the Byzantine period.
Not far from the tell, on the edge of Nahal Sorek, are the remains of a Roman road as well as settlement dating to the Chalcolithic and Canaanite periods.

Bronze Age

Tel Batash was first settled in the Middle Bronze Age by creating an earthen rampart that enclosed the 10 acre site.

Bronze to Iron Age

Tel Batash during the Philistine era was a fortified city with dense mud-brick construction.

Iron Age

The archaeologists discovered fortifications and buildings from the Kingdom of Judah period, dating to the 7th and 8th centuries BCE. In one of the buildings, a ceramic potsherd bearing a written LMLK seal was found.

Old identification

Khirbet Tibna is a ruin situated ca. south-west of Bet Shemesh, Israel. In the Survey of Palestine Map of 1928–1947, preserved at the National Library of Israel, it is listed in map section 14-12, at Grid reference 144.1 / 127.9, under coordinates 31o44'36.587" N / 34o56'12.72"E. The ruin lies ca. 2 kilometers north-east of Moshav Sdot Micha and about south-west of Bîr el-Leimûn. Access to the site is now restricted, as it sits in a military area, at an elevation of 225 metres above sea-level. Early explorers and historical geographers identified the ruin Kh. Tibna with the biblical town of Timnah, thought to be associated with stories of the biblical Samson. French orientalist Clermont-Ganneau also thought Tibna to be a corruption of the Hebrew word Timnah.
Edward Robinson visited the immediate area in 1838, and Tibna was already a deserted village. Archaeologist W.F. Albright visited the site in the winter of 1924–25, which he described as "Khirbet Tibneh, the Timnath of the Samson story." He wrote that the site was covered with "masses of Græco-Roman and Byzantine débris," although he was unable to come-up with Jewish potsherds. In the 1940s, archaeologist Benjamin Mazar conducted a surface survey in the region - including Tell Butashi, without digging. Some think that the Hebrew patriarch, Judah, may have gone to this Timnah to shear his sheep, when he met his daughter-in-law in passing, while others suggest that this would have happened in the Timnath now known in Arabic as Khirbet et-Tibbaneh.
Today, modern archaeologists think the biblical Timnath associated with the saga of Samson to have been situated where Tell Butashi is now located, a few kilometers to its north, along the Sorek valley, where extensive archaeological excavations have been conducted during the 1980s–1990s and where they have uncovered Middle Bronze Age artifacts. With the town's demise, the name "Timnah" is thought to have migrated to the site now known as Khirbet Tibna, owing to its fame and popularity.
In, the city is mentioned as a point on the border of the Tribe of Judah. refers to Timnah's vineyards.

Timnath, USA

The town of Timnath, Colorado in the United States is named for the city.