BIBLE HISTORY DAILY

Another Bronze Age Temple in Kuwait

Overlapping temples on Failaka Island

Excavations at the Bronze Age temple on Failaka Island. Courtesy NCCAL.

Archaeologists working in Kuwait made a remarkable discovery when they uncovered the remains of a Bronze Age temple on Failaka Island. Only a year earlier, the team had discovered another Bronze Age temple on the island. Both temples belonged to the kingdom of Dilmun, an important trade center from the fourth through the first millennia BCE, and they joined two others in the same area, underscoring Failaka Island’s incredible religious importance in antiquity.


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Multiplying Temples

The two Bronze Age temples were discovered superimposed one on top of the other, with the older temple revealed only after the later temple was fully excavated. Both temples date back to the early second millennium, with the later temple—discovered in the earlier excavation season—likely built as an intentional modification of the older one, much the same as Herod the Great’s Temple Mount expanded the initial Second Temple in Jerusalem.

The two temples are located in the southwest of Failaka, on a mound known to archaeologists as Tell F6. These Bronze Age temples join two other temples and a large administrative building excavated at the site, underscoring the area’s importance for religious and cultural purposes. Like the previously discovered temple, the new temple contained a large amount of pottery and stamp seals.

The kingdom of Dilmun held strategic control over the ocean trade routes that connected Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley. Extending across the lands of modern Kuwait, eastern Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain, ancient Dilmun had much in common with Mesopotamia, its northern neighbor, including inhabitants that used a dialect of Akkadian. Dilmun, however, had its own unique pantheon. At times, Dilmun was also directly controlled by Mesopotamian kingdoms and empires.

Dilmun plays a significant role in several Mesopotamian myths. In flood myths, the region is the eternal home of Utnapishtim, the Mesopotamian Noah. And in some myths, it is even the location where the world was created.


Related reading in Bible History Daily

Bronze Age Temple Discovered in Kuwait

Bronze Age Temple Discovered in Kuwait

All-Access members, read more in the BAS Library

A BAR Special Report: Archaeology Thriving in Saudi Arabia

Archaeological Work in Arabia Now Possible

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