Ancient Canaanite blade hub discovered in southern Israel
The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced in late July that the site is the first ancient blade workshop of its kind uncovered in this region. The discovery was made during a dig in Kiryat Gat, a city located approximately 40 miles south of Tel Aviv.
Ancient Workshop Sheds Light on Rare Industry
At the center of the site, archaeologists found hundreds of underground pits. These features were used for storing tools, crafting materials, and possibly for daily work connected to blade production.
Among the most striking discoveries at the site were what archaeologists call "flint cores." These are large stone chunks that served as raw material for creating precise, sharp blades. From these cores, workers produced long, thin stone blades used for various tasks.
The blades were more than just cutting tools — they also functioned similarly to sickles and may have been used in farming, animal processing, and other vital tasks in ancient society.
Evidence of Skilled Labor and Specialized Roles
The IAA noted that the consistency and quality of the blades indicate the presence of a specialized craft workforce. According to their findings, only highly trained individuals would have possessed the knowledge and skill to shape these blades efficiently.
“This is clear evidence that already at the onset of the Bronze Age, the local society here was organized and complex, and had professional specialization,” IAA researchers explained in their announcement.
That complexity reveals more than just economic abundance — it suggests the emergence of social hierarchies and professional roles within early community life in the Levant.
Ties to Biblical-Era Culture and Tools
The excavated workshop has been linked by the IAA to the ancient Canaanite industry, commonly referenced in biblical texts. The Canaanites were known to inhabit parts of the Levant before the arrival of the Israelites and are described in historical sources alongside figures such as Abraham.
While the tools found at the site are thousands of years old, the technology and methods behind them reflect a well-established and highly organized production system, consistent with other known Canaanite material culture items.
Items like the blades and flint cores are being connected to typical tools mentioned in ancient texts, showing how early technology supported daily survival and community structure in the region.
Historic Artifacts Bound for National Exhibit
The IAA confirmed that the recovered tools will be preserved and showcased at the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein National Campus for the Archaeology of Israel, located in Jerusalem. The exhibition will offer the public a close look at how early inhabitants of the region lived and worked.
Visitors will get a chance to see the flint cores and blades up close, including examples that were likely used for agriculture and possibly domestic food preparation. Each artifact offers a tangible connection to a period that predates most other known Middle Eastern industrial workshops.
These findings give researchers and the public alike the ability to better understand the scale, technology, and expertise involved in early human societies in the region.
Bridging the Past to Modern Understanding
According to the IAA, the detailed layout and preserved items from the workshop offer unparalleled insights into the operation of early skilled labor. For archaeologists, it represents a unique picture of how ancient economies may have worked — complete with dedicated specialists and social planning.
Even more importantly, it provides strong evidence that the society of that period had a clear understanding of resource allocation and job specialization, characteristics often associated with far more recent civilizations.
“The discovery of a sophisticated workshop indicates a society with a complex social and economic structure,” the IAA stated, reinforcing the value of the site as a case study in both archaeology and anthropology.




