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ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Socialization of the universe: The Neolithic in the Near East.

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Presentation on theme: "ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Socialization of the universe: The Neolithic in the Near East."— Presentation transcript:

1 ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Socialization of the universe: The Neolithic in the Near East October 1 and 6, 2009

2 Anthony Giddens wrote that if the overall history of human existence on the face of the world is taken as a day, agriculture would have come at 11:56 pm and civilizations 11:57 pm. Early arrivals Palaeolithic 1,000,000 - 9600 BC

3 11,000 BC Closing of the Glacial Period 10,800-9600 BC Younger Dryas – a cold and arid spell 9600-5000 BC Climatic optimum: winter days were mild, summer nights humid The Near Eastern Neolithic 9600-6000 BC 5600 BC: Black Sea joins the Mediterranean (Ryan and Pitman hypothesis)

4 200 mm annual rainfall line and the distribution of barley and wheat in the Near East, with some Epipalaeolithic and Proto-Neolithic settlements.

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6 The Neolithic: transformations of prehistoric societies (Pre-pottery Neolithic 9600-7000 BC Pottery Neolithic 7000-6000 BC) New social relations in the context of the settled life: political contestation, family rivalry etc. Neolithicization as socialization. New conceptions of the landscape: now partially cultivated, not entirely hostile environment Beyond the hunt: Changing relationships between animals and humans. Domestication of sheep and goat, cattle... Agricultural technologies: domestication of wheat and barley, legumes... Pottery technologies: discovery of possibilities of clay, with the rising need of long term storage of footstuffs. Architectural technologies: mudbrick building with extensive use of wood. Mud, mudbrick, pise. Cladding techniques such as plastering, white-washing, wall paintings. Three-dimesnional cult imagery incorporated into the architectonics of the house. Neolithic house as a space where most daily practices concentrate. Textile production.Figurines: stone, bone, clay. Emergence of representationality through multiple media: textile patterns, pottery decoration, figurines, architectural sculpture, wall paintings... New burial practices: intramural or in cemeteries. Deposition of grave goods. Differentiation of burials according to social status, age, gender, etc.

7 Obsidian a volcanic glass, mined and exchanged heavily across regions in the Neolithic period, adaptable to multiple uses, from acting as mirrors, projectile points, swords, ornaments, knives.

8 Neolithic in the Near East: early sites of socialization “neolithic revolution”: domestication of wheat, barley, sheep, goat: early settled communities (ca 10,000 to 6000 BC)

9 gobeklitepe site before archaeology

10 gobeklitepe landscape

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12 “starting as a sacred spot...” Pre-pottery Neolithic 9600-8000 BC

13 gobeklitepe pre-agricultural social interaction and cult practice, feasting, visual/architectural culture

14 gobeklitepe archaeology of a ritual place

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17 gobeklitepe pillars and animal iconography

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22 Neolithic in the Near East: early sites of socialization

23 nevali cori settlement and architecture

24 nevali cori reconstruction of settlement with houses and cult building (8400-8100 BC)

25 nevali cori cult buildings

26 ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Socialization of the universe: The Neolithic in the Near East October 6, 2009

27 Neolithic in the Near East: early sites of socialization “neolithic revolution”: domestication of wheat, barley, sheep, goat: early settled communities (ca 10,000 to 6000 BC)

28 “starting as a sacred spot...”

29 gobeklitepe pre-agricultural social interaction and cult practice, feasting, visual/architectural culture

30 nevali cori reconstruction of settlement with houses and cult building (8400-8100 BC)

31 Neolithic in the Near East: early sites of socialization Central Anatolian Late Neolithic

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33 6850-6300 BC East Mound Late Neolithic 7000-6300 BC West Mound Chalcolithic 6000 BC Largest known Neolithic site in Turkey

34 catalhoyuk: neolithic-chalcolithic transition in Anatolia

35 Excavations by James Mellaart 1961-1963

36 Ian Hodder New excavations: 1993 onwards

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38 Second Life Okapi Island – Remixing CatalhoyukRemixing Catalhoyuk

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41 Catalhoyuk, 2006 Season. Plan view of Building 56 in South Area

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44 body and architecture poetics of construction

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49 restored head clay figurine from Catalhoyuk, excavated by Mellaart in a grain bin, now in Ankara Anatolian Civilizations Museum restored head

50 prehistoric figurines : an intimate world

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53 Figurines Project at Neolithic Catalhoyuk (Lynn Meskell and Carolyn Nakamura)

54 Neolithic in the Near East: early sites of socialization

55 Ain Ghazal, Jordan Ca 7300-6500 BC Middle Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (MPPNB) 7,250 - 6,500 bc Late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (LPPNB) 6,500 - 6,000 bc Pre-Pottery Neolithic C (PPNC) 6,000 - 5,500 bc Yarmoukian Pottery Neolithic 5,500 - ? 5,000 bc

56 Ain Ghazal, Jordan Ca 7300-6500 BC Middle Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (MPPNB) 7,250 - 6,500 bc Late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (LPPNB) 6,500 - 6,000 bc Pre-Pottery Neolithic C (PPNC) 6,000 - 5,500 bc Yarmoukian Pottery Neolithic 5,500 - ? 5,000 bc

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61 The (new) life and times of Ain Ghazal “statues” (middle to late pre-pottery Neolithic plaster human-shaped figures, 7250-6000 BC)

62 The new life and times of Ain Ghazal “statues”: from retreavel to exhibition: reverting rituals of destruction and ancestor cult

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