How a Woman Toppled the Legend of the Walls of Jericho: The Legacy of Kathleen Kenyon

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The seven trumpets of Jericho, by James Tissot.

How a Woman Toppled the Legend of the Walls of Jericho: The Legacy of Kathleen Kenyon

According to the Bible, in the Book of Joshua, the Israelites encountered the city of Jericho as the first Canaanite stronghold they had to conquer in order to settle in their promised new land. In archaeological terms, Joshua the war lord, would have approached Jericho during the Late Bronze Age, circa 1400 BC.  The Biblical legend has it that the Israelites destroyed the fortified walls of Jericho by circling it with the Ark of the Covenant for seven days. Or did they not? Not only did Kathleen Kenyon almost single handedly change the way in which archaeological excavations in the Levant were approached, but she also proved that there was no sign of Jericho during the Late Bronze Age.

Dame Kathleen Kenyan (1977) (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Dame Kathleen Kenyan (1977) (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Early Life and Career

Born on 5 January 1906, the daughter of Sir Frederick Kenyon, director of the British Museum, Kathleen Kenyon was almost born to the role of ‘Grand Dame of Archaeology’, which she would later become.  She attended Oxford University, where she studied modern history, but due to her father’s influence she had developed a keen interest in archaeology. One can almost imagine her spending her free time as a little girl in the corridors and vast storage chambers of the British Museum, privy to treasures most members of the public would never see.  Her parental home was after all attached to the museum.

Inside of the Great Enclosure which is part of the Great Zimbabwe ruins. (Public Domain)

Inside of the Great Enclosure which is part of the Great Zimbabwe ruins. (Public Domain)

Kathleen graduated in 1929 and her first experience of field work was in far-away Africa, where she joined an all-women archaeological team, excavating Great Zimbabwe.  Under the guidance of Gertrude Caton-Thompson she was exposed to rigid archaeological method, proper excavation, meticulous documentation and careful interpretation.  Flinders Petrie had been a great advocate of paying attention to stratification and three-dimensional reconstruction by field cards and notes, photographs, demarcated areas and constant taking of levels.  Caton-Thompson stuck to Petrie’s strict archaeological techniques and her findings created controversy at the British Association to whom she had to report. She attributed the Zimbabwe Ruins to a sophisticated ancient black civilization.  Caton-Thompson’s adherence to the evidence of her findings, despite the controversy, proved a valuable lesson for Kathleen Kenyon later in her life.

Roman Theatre at Verulamium excavated by Kathleen Kenyon (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Roman Theatre at Verulamium excavated by Kathleen Kenyon (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Kathleen continued her career as archaeologist by working summer seasons at the Roman site of Verulamium (St Albans) under leadership of Mortimer Wheeler in the early 1930s.  She was entrusted with the Roman theatre. Mortimer Wheeler had a major impact on Kathleen’s later success as he exposed her to his ‘box’ or ‘grid-and-baulk’ system of excavation, comprising of squares, interspersed with unexcavated space.  The baulks would maintain a record or snap shot of the stratigraphy of the excavated material.


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