Abstract

Abstract. The present paper concentrates on the use of remote sensing by satellite imagery for detecting ancient tracks and roads in the area between Palmyra and the Euphrates in Syria. The Syrian desert was traversed by caravans already in the Bronze Age, and during the Greco-Roman period the traffic increased with the Silk Road and trade as well as with military missions annexing the areas into empires. SYGIS - the Finnish archaeological survey and mapping project traced, recorded and documented ancient sites and roads in the region of Jebel Bishri in Central Syria in 2000-2010 before the outbreak of the civil war in Syria. Captured data of ancient roads and bridge points bring new light to the study of ancient communication framework in the area. Archaeological research carried out by the project on the ground confirmed the authenticity of many road alignments, new military and water harvesting sites as well as civilian settlements, showing that the desert-steppe area was actively used and developed probably from the second century AD. The studies further demonstrated that the area between Palmyra and the Euphrates was militarily more organised already in the second and third centuries AD than earlier believed. Chronologically, the start of this coincided with the “golden age” of the Palmyrene caravans in the second century AD. Topography and landscape were integral parts of the construction of graves/tumuli as sign-posts guiding in the desert, as well as roads and all kinds of settlements whether military or civilian.

Highlights

  • The Finnish archaeological survey and mapping project SYGIS has been tracing, recording and documenting ancient sites in the mountainous region of Jebel Bishri belonging to the Palmyrides in Central Syria during 2000-2010

  • Associated pottery collected along these road alignments near Tabūs and ‘Ayyāsh generally dated from the Late Roman period, but there were examples of Bronze Age pottery indicating that there may have been an earlier road connecting the sites on the right bank of the Euphrates between Mari and sites in central Syria

  • The remote sensing and archaeological studies conducted by the Finnish archaeological survey and mapping project in Syria in 2000-2010 has shed new light on the study of ancient communications, the road networks and especially the defence systems of the eastern Roman border zone in the desert area of Jebel Bishri, a region which previously had received very little scholarly attention

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The Finnish archaeological survey and mapping project SYGIS has been tracing, recording and documenting ancient sites in the mountainous region of Jebel Bishri belonging to the Palmyrides in Central Syria during 2000-2010. Poidebard (1934) in using remote sensing methods in recording and mapping environmental features and archaeological remains in the region. By Stevenson) and the military tabulas such as the Tabula Peutingeriana as well as the Notitia Dignitatum dating from the Late Antiquity, list several Roman or Palmyrene sites in this region. ISPRS Annals of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume II-5/W3, 2015 25th International CIPA Symposium 2015, 31 August – 04 September 2015, Taipei, Taiwan region of Jebel Bishri through the western oases of El Kowm and Qdeir, and reaching Sura at the Euphrates

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THE USE OF DATA IN REMOTE SENSING
DETECTING DESERT TRACKS USED BY CARAVANS
IDENTIFIED NEW ROADS ON THE EUPHRATES SIDE OF JEBEL BISHRI
CONCLUSIONS
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