'En Esur

'En Esur
עין אֵסוּר
Aerial photo of Tel Esur in the foreground with En Esur to the left, Highway 65 in the middleground, and Barkai in the background
En Esur
Shown in Israel
En Esur
En Esur (Eastern Mediterranean)
Alternative name'Ein Asawir
LocationMenashe, Haifa, Israel
RegionCanaan, Southern Levant
Coordinates32°28′55″N 35°1′10″E / 32.48194°N 35.01944°E / 32.48194; 35.01944
TypeSettlement
Area50 ha (120 acres)
History
Foundedc.5000 BC
Abandonedc.2900 BC
PeriodsPottery Neolithic (PN) – Early Bronze Age I (EBI)
CulturesYarmukian (PN), post-Wadi Rabah culture (Early Chalcolithic), Ghassulian (Late Chalcolithic), Canaanite (Early Bronze Age IA)
Site notes
Archaeologists
  • Adam Zertal (2000–2002)
  • Shay Bar (2010–2014)
  • Itai Elad, Yitzhak Paz, Dina Shalem (2017–2019)

'En Esur, also En Esur (Hebrew: עין אֵסוּר; [ʕen ʔesuʁ] eh-N eh-s-oor) or Ein Asawir (Arabic: عين الأساور, lit.'Spring of the Bracelets'), is an ancient site located on the northern Sharon Plain, at the entrance of the Wadi Ara pass leading from the Coastal Plain further inland. The site includes an archaeological mound (tell), called Tel Esur or Tell el-Asawir, another unnamed mound, and two springs, one of which gives the site its name.

A 7,000-year-old Early Chalcolithic large village already showing signs of incipient urbanisation and with an open space used for cultic activities was discovered at the site below later, Bronze Age remains.

During the Early Bronze Age, around 3000 BCE, a massive fortified proto-city with an estimated population of 5,000 to 6,000 inhabitants existed there. It was the largest city in the region, larger than other significant sites such as Megiddo and Jericho, but smaller than more distant ones in Egypt and Mesopotamia. The city was discovered in 1977, but its massive extent was realized only in 1993. A major excavation between 2017 and 2019 ahead of the construction of a highway interchange exposed the city's houses, streets and public structures, as well as countless artifacts including pottery, figurines and tools. Archaeologists announced its discovery in 2019, calling it the "New York of the Early Bronze Age".