Objects at Umm Al-Jimāl
While Umm Al-Jimāl is often referenced by scholars for its excellent architecture and inscriptions, over the past four decades excavations and surveys have revealed a significant number of everyday objects. Archaeologists often refer to recovered items like these collectively as material culture, since the objects reflect the cultures and perspectives of the people that created them. Thinking carefully about their design, use, and decoration may provide information about how their creators lived.
Broadly speaking, objects found at Umm Al-Jimāl illustrate the lives of its citizens as a rural community focused on animal husbandry and agriculture. In addition to widespread ceramics, lamps and other household goods, small jewelry and cosmetic items, small amounts of glassware, as well as ornamental architectural features have all been uncovered in the site's homes, buildings, and cemeteries. Together, these everyday artifacts—and their location within the project's excavations—are evidence which reinforces the perspective that while Umm Al-Jimāl's residents successfully adapted to life on the frontiers of empire, material luxuries are not as commonly found here as at large urban centers such as Bostra.















