Archaeologists have uncovered a rare, inscribed Tetrarch boundary stone at the site of Abel Beth Maacah in northern Israel. Originally marking land borders under Roman Emperor Diocletian’s tax reforms, the stone provides insight into ancient land ownership, local settlement patterns, and imperial administrative practices. The discovery also introduces two previously unknown place names, expanding our understanding of the region’s historical geography and socio-economic landscape.
Archaeologists Prof. Naama Yahalom-Mack and Dr. Nava Panitz-Cohen from the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University, and Prof. Robert Mullins from Azusa Pacific University uncovered this significant relic of ancient administrative practices during their excavation of the biblical site of Abel Beth Maacah, which is located near Metula in northern Israel.
The find, which was deciphered by Dr. Avner Ecker and Prof. Uzi Leibner from the Hebrew University, is a boundary stone, originally inscribed to delineate agrarian borders between villages during the reign of the Roman Tetrarchy (a short-lived system instituted by the emperor Diocletian in 293 AD to govern the Roman Empire by dividing it between two emperors, the augusti, and their junior colleagues and designated successors, the caesares) and was found in secondary use in a Mamluk-period installation.
This basalt slab, etched with a detailed Greek inscription, has provided a wealth of historical insights. And its connection to the Roman Tetrarchy system helps create a unique context of interpretation for the meaning of the boundary stone and the inscription that it carries, one marked by administrative change emerging from political upheaval.
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The inscription revealed two previously unknown village names, Tirthas and Golgol, which may correspond to ancient sites identified in the 19th-century Survey of Western Palestine. The slab also mentions an imperial surveyor, or “censitor,” whose name is attested here for the first time.
These markers reflect the sweeping tax reforms initiated by Diocletian in the late third century AD, emphasizing the role of land ownership and settlement structures in the economic landscape of the Roman Near East.
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The inscription, with and without highlighting of the letters. (Ecker, A., & Leibner, U./ Palestine Exploration Quarterly)
“This discovery is a testament to the meticulous administrative re-organization of the Roman Empire during the Tetrarchy,” said Prof. Uzi Leibner. “Finding a boundary stone like this not only sheds light on ancient land ownership and taxation but also provides a tangible connection to the lives of individuals who navigated these complex systems nearly two millennia ago.”
Dr. Avner Ecker added, “What makes this find particularly exciting is the mention of two previously unknown place names and a new imperial surveyor. It underscores how even seemingly small discoveries can dramatically enhance our understanding of the socio-economic and geographic history of the region.”
This discovery adds to a unique corpus of over 20 boundary stones concentrated in the northern Hula Valley and surrounding areas. The stones mark a period of heightened administrative control aimed at standardizing taxation and clarifying land ownership.
Map of Boundary stones in the northern Hula Valley. (R. Sabar/ Palestine Exploration Quarterly)
Remarkably, this specific find highlights the interconnectedness of historical geography, economic policies, and local settlement patterns. Scholars believe the abundance of boundary stones in this region underscores the high concentration of farmers who operated independently of major urban centers in northern Israel during the third and fourth centuries and were subject to rules that were issued by Roman administrators with great power over their lives.
“The territory was probably filled with fields and farms owned by small landholders who paid their taxes independently of the city, providing insight into the complex relationship between taxation, land ownership, and settlement history,” the researchers who discovered the boundary stone wrote in an article published in Palestine Exploration Quarterly.
Interestingly, a contemporaneous rabbinic tradition mentions a burden imposed by the emperor Diocletian on this specific area, and apparently also reflects the hardships the tax reform drew on the local population. It is not surprising that the people would review the reforms this way, as they were essentially being asked to pay for their own repression by a far-off authority that was unresponsive to their concerns.
Aerial view of Abel Bet Maacah looking south-east. (Robert Mullins/ Palestine Exploration Quarterly)
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This exciting find enriches understanding of the socio-economic dynamics in the lands of Israel during the Roman Empire’s Tetrarchy, particularly the implications of Diocletian’s reforms on rural communities. Prof. Leibner and Dr. Ecker emphasize that such discoveries provide a unique glimpse into the lives of ancient inhabitants, the pressures they faced under imperial rule, and the enduring traces of their communities in the archaeological record.
This exceptional artifact now joins the broader narrative of Roman imperial administration in the Levant, a fascinating topic that has really only begun to be explored.
Top image: The boundary stone from Abel Beth Maacah. Source: Tal Rogovsky/Palestine Exploration Quarterly
This article is an edited version of a press release from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, entitled ‘A New Chapter in Roman Administration: Insights From a Late Roman Inscription,’ that was originally published on EurekAlert!
Source: www.ancient-origins.net