Early Bronze ). The time period is during the first kingdom of
Ebla around 2340 BC. To the east, the kingdom of Nagar controlled most of the Khabur basin at that time Both Tall Bazi and Tall Banat were located along the Euphrates river. During the Early Bronze Age, a massive town wall protected this whole settlement area away from the river. This Banat-Bazi complex started about 2600 B.C., and continued during the Early Bronze Age III and IV. An Early Bronze palace was found beneath the Middle Bronze temple. The earlier occupation of the Citadel dates back to the Late Early Dynastic period and Akkadian period. Numerous clay bi-conical sling shots as well as leaf shaped flint arrowheads were found especially around a fortified wall gate. The citadel, along with occupation on Tell Bannat, was destroyed c. 2300 BC and a gap in occupation ensued. The main mound has been dubbed the "Citadel". It contained a large (37.6 meter long by 15.8 meter wide) temple built in the Middle Bronze Age (on top of an Early Bronze Age palace) still in use when it was destroyed at the same time as the 200 meter by 250 meter lower town in the Late Bronze Age. In the Middle Bronze II, Tall Bazi would have been in between larger powers like Carchemish (north), Aleppo (west;
Yamhad), and Mari (southeast).
Late Bronze (Mitanni Period) In this period the 18 hectare city was probably named Baṣīru. The two cuneiform tablets found at the site indicate that, in the Mittani period, the city did not have a king, but was governed by the city elders. When the settlement was destroyed the temple was looted and equipment smashed, then burned like the lower town. More post destruction looting then occurred. The Western Town (
Weststadt, 1 hectare) is a single period area of the Late Bronze Age. It represents a later expansion of the city, and it lasted up to a century before being violently destroyed. Destruction appears to have come quickly as most material was still in place. Each house had its own oven for baking and vats for the production of beer. Most houses had a table-like installation on the short wall opposite the door associated with vessels, bones, and other objects leading the excavator to consider them to be for domestic cult practices. In one house a large number of weight stones belonging to different weight systems were found, suggesting it was an office of merchants. The Northern Town and Citadel were destroyed at the same time. No human remains were found. Due to the sketchy nature of
radiocarbon dating for this period dates radiocarbon samples have reported dates ranging from 1400 BC down to 1200 BC for the
destruction layer. A
Mitanni period cylinder seal was found. A few geometrically-shaped
faience tokens, generally called "gaming tokens" were found as well beads and pendants fashioned from ostrich shells.
Roman period During the Roman Empire, a fortified sanctuary was built on Tall Bazi, which can be dated to the late 1st or 2nd century AD.
Modern times As a result of the Syrian Civil War the top of the mound was turned into a military emplacement with much of the remains, including the temple, being destroyed by bulldozer activity. Archaeological finds still being held at the site were robbed away by ISIS. ==Tell Banat Complex==