Ashkelon was the oldest and largest seaport in
Ancient Israel, one of the "five
cities" of the
Philistines, north of Gaza and
south of Jaffa
(Yafa). Archaeological excavations
begun in 1985 led by Lawrence
Stager of Harvard
University are revealing the site
with about 50 feet (15 m) of accumulated rubble from successive Canaanite, Philistine, Phoenician,
Iranian, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine,
Islamic, and Crusader occupation.

An ancient sarcophagus in Ashkelon.

Beach of Ashkelon at sundown.
In the oldest layers are shaft graves of pre-Phoenician Canaanites. The city was
originally built on a sandstone outcropping
and has a good underground water supply. It was relatively large as an ancient
city with as many as 15,000 people living inside walls a mile and a half (2.4
km) long, 50 feet (15 m) high and 150 feet (50 m) thick. Ashkelon was a thriving
Middle Bronze
Age (2000-1550 BC) city of more
than 150 acres (607,000 m²), with commanding ramparts including
the oldestarched city
gate in the world, eight feet wide, and even as a ruin still standing two
stories high. The thickness of the walls was so great that the mudbrick Bronze
Age gate had a stone-lined tunnel-like barrel vault, coated with white plaster,
to support the superstructure: it is the oldest such vault ever
found.
The Bronze Age ramparts were so capacious that later Roman and Islamic
fortifications, faced with stone, followed the same footprint, a vast
semi-circle protecting Ashkelon on the landward side. On the sea it was defended
by a high natural bluff.
Within the huge ramparts, in the ruins of a sanctuary, a votive silver calf was
found in 1991. During the Canaanite period, a roadway more than 20 feet (6.1 m)
in width ascended the rampart from the harbor and entered a gate at the top.
Nearby, in the ruins of a small ceramic tabernacle was found a finely cast
bronze statuette of a bull calf, originally silvered, 4 inches (100 mm) long.
Images of calves and bulls were associated with the worship of the Canaanite
gods El and Baal.
The Amarna
letters correspondence of
Ashkelon/(Ašqaluna), of 1350 BC, contains seven letters to the Egyptian pharaoh,
from its 'King'/mayor: Yidya.
Yidya was the only ruler of Ašqaluna during the 15-20 year time
period. One letter from the pharaoh to Yidya, was subsequently discovered in
the early 1900s.
The Philistines conquered Canaanite Ashkelon about 1150 BC. Their earliest
pottery, types of structures and inscriptions are similar to the early Greek
urbanised centre atMycenae in
mainland Greece,
adding weight to the hypothesis that the Philistines were of Mycenaeic origin
possibly one of the populations among the "Sea
Peoples" that upset cultures throughout the eastern Mediterranean at
that time. Ashkelon became one of the five Philistine cities that were
constantly warring with the Israelitesand
the kingdom
of Judah. According to Herodotus, its temple of Venus was the oldest of its
kind, imitated even in Cyprus, and he mentions that this temple was pillaged by
marauding "Scythians" during the time of their sway over the Medes (653-625 BC).
When this vast seaport, the last of the Philistine cities to hold out againstNebuchadnezzar finally
fell in 604 BC, burnt and destroyed and its people taken into exile, the
Philistine era was over.
Ashkelon was soon rebuilt. It was an important Hellenistic seaport.
In the period of theHasmonean Kingdom,
Rabbi Simeon
ben Shetach - Pharisee scholar
and Nasi of
theSanhedrin in
the First Century B.C. - is reported to have on a single day sentenced to death
eighty Ashkelon women who had been charged with witchcraft. Later, the women's
relatives took revenge by bringing false witnesses against Simeon's son and
causing him to be executed in turn.[citation
needed]
Ashkelon may have been the birthplace of Herod
the Great. Josephus makes
it clear that Ashkelon was not ceded to Herod the Great in 30 BC (War 1.396;
Ant. 15.217), yet he built monumental buildings there: bath houses, elaborate
fountains and large colonnades.[2]
During the period of the Crusades,
Ashkelon (which was known to the Crusaders asAscalon) was an important
city due to its location near the coast and between theCrusader
States and Egypt.
In 1099, shortly after the Siege
of Jerusalem (1099) an Egyptian Fatimid army
which had been sent to relieve Jerusalem was
defeated by a Crusader force at the Battle
of Ascalon. The city itself was not captured by the Crusaders because of
internal disputes amongst their leaders. This battle is widely considered to
have signified the end of the First
Crusade. Until 1153, the Fatimids were able to launch raids into the Kingdom
of Jerusalem from Ashkelon which
meant that the southern border of the Crusader
States was constantly unstable.
In response to these incursions into Outremer,
King Fulk
of Jerusalem constructed a number
of Christian settlements around the city during the 1130s, in order to
neutralise the threat of the Muslim garrison. In 1148, during the Second
Crusade, the city was unsuccessfully besieged for eight days by a small
Crusader army which was not fully supported by the Crusader States. In 1150 the
Fatimids fortified the city with fifty-three towers as it was their most
important frontier fortress. Three years later, after afive
month siege, the city was captured by a Crusader army lead by King Baldwin
III of Jerusalem. It was then added to the County
of Jaffa to form the County
of Jaffa and Ascalon which became
one of the four major seigneuries of the Kingdom
of Jerusalem. In 1187 Saladin took
Ashkelon as part of his conquest of the Crusader
States following the Battle
of Hattin. In 1191, during the Third
Crusade, Saladin demolished the city because of its potential strategic
importance to the Christians, but the leader of the Crusade, King Richard
I of England, constructed a citadel upon the ruins. Ashkelon subsequently
remained part of the diminished territores of Outremer throughout most of the
13th century and Richard,
Earl of Cornwall reconstructed
and refortified the citadel during 1240-41, as part of the Crusader policy of
improving the defences of coastal sites. The Egyptians regained Ashkelon in 1247
during As-Salih
Ayyub's conflict with the Crusader States and the city was returned to
Muslim rule. The Mamluk dynasty
came into power in Egypt in 1250 and the ancient and medieval history of
Ashkelon was brought to an end in 1270, when the Mamluk sultan Baybarsordered
the citadel and harbour at the site to be destroyed. As a result of this
destruction, the site was abandoned by its inhabitants and fell into disuse.
After the Crusader
conquest of Jerusalem the six
elders of the Karaite Jewish
community in Ashkelon contributed to the ransoming of captured Jews and holy
relics from Jerusalem's new rulers. The Letter
of the Karaite elders of Ascalon, which was sent to the Jewish elders of
Alexandria, describes their participation in the ransom effort and the ordeals
suffered by many of the freed captives.