

December 2017
Vol. V, No. 12
Of Stones and Social Complexity – The Shamir Dolmen Field and the Intermediate Bronze Age
By Uri Berger and Gonen Sharon
Dolmens – megalithic stone tombs – are among the earliest archaeological features documented in the Levant, first reported in 1817. In 1850 the French researcher De Saulcy first used the term “dolmen” to describe the megaliths at Adeimeh in Jordan. During the 1880s, C.R. Conder of the Palestine Exploration Fund laid the foundation for dolmen studies, mapping, describing, and drawing dozens of them from Syria, the Jordan Valley, the Upper Galilee, and the Golan Heights. Yet 200 years later dolmens remain among the less understood archaeological phenomena in the Levant. The precise definition of dolmens is under debate, as well as their use, significance, and geographical distribution. Above all, the precise chronology of the dolmens has yet to be established.
In recent years dolmen studies have been advanced primarily by researchers east of the Dead Sea Rift Valley. In addition, the growing number of dolmens excavated during construction and development in Israel has led to better understanding of these megaliths in the Galilee and Golan. More than 5600 megalithic structures were documented during the archaeological survey of the Golan, most of which are dolmens. Dolmens are so numerous that the term dolmen field had to be abandoned, as no margins could be observed separating the massive concentrations covering the central and south Golan. Much more awaits discovery.
Levantine dolmens are large structures, dominating the landscape, and many were either robbed or reused after their initial construction. The combination of this heavily disturbed history and poor preservation has resulted in the absence of reliable datable material from most excavated dolmens. Not a single radiocarbon date has been obtained. Levantine dolmens have been assigned chronologically to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic (based on the absence of ceramics), the Chalcolithic, all stages of the Bronze Age, and to later periods.
Recent research suggests that east of the Jordan Rift Valley and south of the Yarmuk River dolmen burial was a common practice during the Early Bronze Age I (mid-4th millennium BCE). This supports the suggestion that the dolmens of the Golan and Galilee should be distinguished from those east of the Jordan Rift Valley. The Golan dolmens differ from the southern dolmens in the type of rock used for construction (basalt vs. limestone and sandstone), in size (typically much larger), in their design (typically passage tombs covered by an earthen tumulus), building technology (unworked stones), and in their chronology. It seems that the Golan and Galilee dolmens find their cultural roots in the north, in the megalithic traditions of Syria and Anatolia. In all of the many dolmens excavated and surveyed in the Golan and its escarpments, the earliest material unearthed clearly belongs to the Intermediate Bronze Age (IBA, ca. 2500-2000 BCE).
Upper Galilee landscape around the Shamir Dolemn Field. All images courtesy of Gonen Sharon.
The Shamir Dolmen Field
The Shamir Dolmen Field is located on the western slopes of the Golan Heights overlooking the Hula Valley, where the Golan slopes down in a series of basalt flows creating a step-like landscape. These massive basalt slabs were the raw material used by the Shamir dolmen builders to construct their megalithic structures. A member of Kibbutz Shamir, the late Moshe Kagan, first surveyed the area and published a map in 1961. Kagan counted more than 400 dolmens surrounding the kibbutz, a number that does not include the numerous dolmens to the east. After Kagan’s survey, a few dolmens were excavated, but these salvage excavations did little to advance understanding of the Shamir dolmen phenomenon.
Map showing the location of Kibbutz Shamir and the surrounding domens.
Map showing the location of Kibbutz Shamir and the surrounding domens.
Aerial view of other excavated dolmens.









