Excavation area on the East Mound with Jebel Barkal in background. Drone photo: Kate Rose, 2019

Current Research

The Jebel Barkal Archaeological Project (JBAP) began in 2016. Our archaeological research is focused on understanding Jebel Barkal as an ancient city—the “lost city” of Napata. Previous work at the site has focused on its pyramids, temples, and palaces. Yet despite 200 years of attention from travelers, historians, and archaeologists, there have been no sustained efforts to locate the city that supported the temples and palaces at the site.

Image: Painted chapel wall from the pyramid of Queen Nawidemak at Jebel Barkal. Documented by the Royal Prussian Expedition directed by Richard Lepsius in 1844 but no longer preserved.

In our first work at the site, we identified a promising area called the “East Mound” using magnetic gradiometry (read our 2016 article on this here), and subsequently completed a geophysical survey of that area in 2018. We have had two short excavation seasons in 2019 and 2020.

The East Mound from the top of Jebel Barkal. Photo: Sami Elamin, 2020
Initial magnetometry results on the East Mound at Jebel Barkal. Image: Gregory Tucker, 2016

Excavation area on the East Mound with palm groves and the Nile River. Drone photo: Sami Elamin, 2020

The uppermost levels of the East Mound date to the 1st century BCE / 1st century CE—the “Meroitic” period when Kush was in conflict with and also traded with Roman Egypt. This level of the city would have been occupied at the same time as the palace of King Natakamani excavated by our Italian colleagues working in a different part of the site. It is also contemporary with a group of royal pyramid burials, including several of queens who were sole rulers of Kush. We have also found hints of earlier occupation on the East Mound. Investigations of the city in the Meroitic and earlier periods will be the focus of future seasons.

Excavated buildings on the East Mound. Plan: Nadejda Reshetnikova, 2020

Our team is also beginning a program of conservation of the temple area of the site.

We are doing this work in collaboration with the local community in the town of Kareima and the villages of Upper Jebel Barkal (Barkal Fowq) and Lower Jebel Barkal (Barkal Tahet).

We plan to give updates on the project through a newsletter that will appear once or twice per year. To sign up, please input your email in the section at the bottom of this page.


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