Yotvata – a Roman fortress

Ruins of a Roman fort in the Arava, north of Timna. A British police station was built over the ruins. The site may have been one of the stations of the Israelite exodus.

ruins of the Roman fortress, Yotvata

Home > Sites > Negev > Yotvata (Yotveta)

Contents:
Background
History
Location
Photos
* General view
* South
* East
* South West
* West
* North-West
* Cemetery
* Nature
Biblical
Etymology
Links

Background:

Ruins of a Roman fort in the Arava, north of Timna. A British police station was built over the ruins.

The site may have been one of the Israelites stations after the exodus. It is described in Deuteronomy 10, 7: “From thence they journeyed … to Jotbath, a land of rivers of waters”. Indeed, south-east of the fort are the springs of Yotvata, and the site is an Oasis in the Arava desert.

History:

  • Biblical history of the area

   The springs of Yotvata were an important stop on the north-south road in the Arava desert, located between the Negev the Jordan hills. The “Red Sea” road was a major ancient trade route. According to the Bible, Jotbathah (Yotavata) was one of the places where the Israelites camped during their journey through the wilderness after the Exodus from Egypt on their way to the promised land.

   During the times of Solomon the route was used to trade with southern kingdoms such as Ophir (Africa?), Sheba and Arabia (as per I Kings 10).

    A site located on the south-western side of the Kibbutz, on the foothills, was inhabited from the Iron age through the Byzantine period.

  • Late Roman period

 The Romans constructed a small fort on the side of the ancient road, and designed as a square walled area with 4 towers on each corner. It may have been called Ad Dianam (named after the Roman Goddess Dianna). Diana was the goddess of the hunt, wild animals, and the moon in Roman mythology. She was associated with the woodland and was considered a protector of the wilderness and animals. Diana was also considered a goddess of fertility and was worshipped in connection with childbirth and women’s health. In Roman mythology, Diana was the equivalent of the Greek goddess Artemis. The two were often associated with one another and their attributes and stories were often similar. Diana was widely worshipped in ancient Rome and her temple on the Aventine Hill was one of the largest and most important in the city. Her cult was popular throughout the Roman Empire, and she was widely considered one of the most important and revered deities in the Roman pantheon.

 The site is indicated on the Peutinger Map (Tabula Peutingeriana) – a medieval map which was based on a 4th century Roman military road map. The map shows the major roads, with indication of the cities, and geographic highlights (lakes, rivers, mountains, seas). The roads are shown as brown lines between the cities and stations. Along the links are  stations and distance in Roman miles (about 1.5KM per mile).

 In the section shown on the right is the area of the Ad Dianam, drawn in a rotated direction (Egypt on the left, the Mediterranean sea on the top, and Jordan on the bottom). Eilat is marked as “Haila“, and three roads pass here – to Jerusalem (to the right), through Petra to Damascus (bottom), and to Egypt via Mount Sinai (to the left). Sinai desert is marked as the place where the Israelites wandered 40 years, and Mount Sinai as the place where they accepted the laws of Israel.

 

  •   Plan of the fort

  The fort was constructed in the beginning of the 4th century AD and consisted of a square area (33 x 34M) protected by high thick walls. A monumental inscription was found that tells that the fort was built by the Syrian governor Priscus at about 300AD.

   This fort followed prototype Roman fortresses, and can be found in other Roman sites, such as Qasr (Qaser) Beshir (located east of the Dead sea in modern Jordan), which was built at the same time (292) but was a bigger square (51M at its front side).

  In the mid 4th century there was a fire in the fort, as seen by ash deposits in most of the rooms.

         Yotvata fort:   Plan of  the external walls

  • Late Byzantine / Early  Arab period

   The fort was reoccupied and repaired at the 6th or 7th century AD, and operated for some years. It then was abandoned again for 1200 years until the late Ottoman period.

  • Ottoman and British Mandate

   The site was back in use at the end of the 19th century or beginning of the 20th century during the late Ottoman period. In 1930 the British built a small police station on top of the mound. This  single room building can still be seen today.

  • Modern times

   In 1952  a Kibbutz was established 1KM north to the site, initially as a quasi-military / agriculture unit (called Nahal, that established many young sites in Israel). The new settlement initially supplied fresh milk and agriculture products to the city of Eilat. It became one of the leading milk products production plants in Israel, specializing in high quality Chocolate milk products. It is highly recommended to make a stop in the restaurant located on the east side of the Kibbutz, and try one of their fine diary products. It is hard to believe how a desert can yield such results, a lesson to be made in other dry areas of the world.

Location:

Yotvata is located in the  west side of the Arava desert, part of the Syrian-African fault line, and about 40KM north of Israel’s southern city of Eilat.

The ruins of the fort are located 20M west of the modern Eilat road, and about 1KM south of the Kibbutz. It is located on the east side of the Negev foothills.

It can be easily spotted on the side of the road and is easily accessible. It is advised to make a stop here on the way to Eilat or back, and see how the ancient site is excavated.


Photos:

(a) General view:

   The following photo shows a view from the east corner. Two levels can be seen: the upper level is the British police room, while the lower level is the  excavated rooms of the Roman fort. The three corners of the excavated square fort can be seen. The sand bags mark the edges of the excavation digs of the rooms.

 Click on the photos to view in higher resolution…

ruins of the Roman fortress, Yotvata - view from the east corner

   An overview photo below shows the location of the fort in relation to the modern road. The fort is in the center, behind it is the modern road, then the Hai-Bar nature reserve and the Yotvata springs. In the far background are the mountains of Jordan.

View of Yotvata Roman fortress towards the east

A wider panoramic view of the site can be seen in the following photo. Clicking on the photo will open a flash viewer, which will allow you to move around, and open  a full-screen view.

Panoramic view of the Yotvata fort - looking east.

(b) South  corner:

This is the view of the south corner.  The excavated rooms, as seen on the right, consist of 3 layers at different heights from different construction dates, since the fort was rebuilt several times  (twice during the Roman/Byzantine periods and once during the late Ottoman period).

There was a tower on each of the 4 corners of the square fort, and a door is seen on the upper-left side that lead to the tower on this corner.

South corner of the Yotvata fortress

(c) East walls:

   A view of the eastern side, where the main gate was once located in the middle of this wall. The thick exterior wall (2M wide) can be seen on the left side. The base of the south tower, seen on the far left side,  extended outside the walls (both the east and south sides).

Eastern walls of the fort.

The rooms on the eastern side are seen below, adjacent to the building of the British police station. Inside the room on the top-left side is a circular stone installation whose purpose is not known.

(d) South-West walls:

A back door is located on the south-west wall, as seen in the photo below.

Door on the south-west wall

(e) West:

The west corner rooms and tower are seen in the photo below.

West corner.

(f) North-West:

A panoramic view of the north-west side is seen below. On both edges are the two corner towers.

Panoramic view of the north-west side.

(g) Cemetery:

On the west side of the fort is a cemetery, perhaps of  Bedouins.  Small natural tombstones mark the graves. Behind the area are the eastern foothills of the Negev mountains.

Cemetery behind the fort

(h) Nature photos:

The desert trees and bushes create beautiful pictures that cannot be omitted from the site’s description.  The photo below is taken towards the east (Jordan).

Another view – this one capturing the hillsides of the Negev hills on the rear side of the Roman fort.

View towards the west

Biblical sources:

Numbers 33, 33-34:

  Jotbathah (Yotvata) was one of the stations where the Israelites camped on their way to the Holy Land. Note that according to some scholars, such as Y. Aharoni, Yotvata is located elsewhere in Taba, south of Eilat, which preserved its name.

“And they went from Horhagidgad, and pitched in Jotbathah. And they removed from Jotbathah, and encamped at Ebronah”.

Deuteronomy 10, 7:

Jotbath (Yotvata) is described here as a “land of rivers of waters”, which can be interpreted as a desert Oasis:

“From thence they journeyed unto Gudgodah; and from Gudgodah to Jotbath, a land of rivers of waters”.

Etymology (behind the name):

  • Yotvata – may have been based on “Tov” (Good in Hebrew)

Links:

 


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This page was last updated on Feb 10, 2023 (Add book link, map and info on Ad Dianam)

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