Archaeologists have excavated remains dated mainly to the Middle and Late
Bronze Age.
Middle Bronze Tell el-Ajjul was established about south of
Tell es-Sakan, which was abandoned in the 23rd century BCE. Archaeologists
Pierre de Miroschedji and
Moain Sadeq suggest that Tell el-Ajjul was established as a successor settlement to Tell es-Sakan.
Middle Bronze II In the MBIIA, Tell el-Ajjul was an important city in the Southern Levant. In the MB IIB, the population increased and many sites developed in the southern Levant. Tell el-Ajjul had the largest number of Egyptian
Second Intermediate Period imports. The settlement of
al-Moghraqa was less than from Tell el-Ajjul and was active in the Middle Bronze Age; it may have functioned as a satellite settlement of Tell el-Ajjul.
Late Bronze Large quantities of pumice were deposited during the Late Bronze Age, which may have been caused by the
Thera (Santorini) volcanic eruption. The settlement of
Tell es-Sanam was established further downstream of the Wadi Ghazzah; archaeologists Joanna Clarke and
Louise Steel suggest that it may have been intended as a replacement to Tell el-Ajjul as the wadi silted up.
Treaty of Tell Ajul (1229) The
Sixth Crusade came to an end with the so-called
Treaty of Jaffa and Tell Ajul. These were in fact two different treaties, the first being the one signed at Tell Ajul by the competing
Ayyubid rulers of
Egypt,
Syria and various smaller principalities. This treaty settled their territorial disputes and left Sultan
Al-Kamil of Egypt in a very powerful position. The follow-up treaty was signed at Jaffa by Al-Kamil and the leader of the Sixth Crusade, Emperor
Frederick II, thus removing the threat posed to Al-Kamil by the European armies. ==Identification==