This book discusses Samaritan burial customs outside Samaria based on
the finds of yet unpublished tombs excavated in the second half of the
20th century in the central Coastal Plain of Israel (within the northern
city limits of modern-day Tel Aviv, which forms part of the southern
Sharon Plain). The burial sites analyzed here include the cemetery of
Khirbet al-?Aura / Tel Barukh, a burial cave at Khirbet al-?adra /
HaGolan Street and another one at Tell Qasile. The burial caves
excavated at these sites are associated with Samaritan rural populations
because of their location and the finds discovered, which include
elements of Samaritan material culture (non-epigraphic and epigraphic
alike). Our study constitutes a full report on the excavations of these
burial sites and offers an archaeological re-evaluation of Samaritan
settlement history and material culture. The appendices complete this
study by bringing forward small-scale unpublished excavations of
probable Samaritan settlements or revising published material that
normally bears relevance to research on this subject. Our re-evaluation
is holistic in nature, based upon the sites we studied in full, as well
as other published Samaritan sites that have been excavated and surveyed
in the central Coastal Plain. This publication contributes to our
understanding of daily habits and afterlife beliefs of the Samaritans
outside their heartland in the heyday of their expansion to the
Palestinian lowlands.