A new archaeological discovery at Kach Kouch in Morocco challenges the long-held belief that the Maghreb (north-west Africa) was an empty land before the arrival of the Phoenicians from the Middle East in around 800 BCE. It reveals a much richer and more complex history than previously thought. Map of the region. H Benattia Everything found at the site indicates that during the Bronze Age, more than 3,000 years ago, stable agricultural settlements already existed on the African coast of the Mediterranean. This was at the same time as societies such as the Mycenaean flourished in the eastern Mediterranean. Our…
Author: Hamza Benattia, Prehistory, Universitat de Barcelona
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