Field research undertaken in recent decades in northern Syria and southeastern Turkey has significantly improved our understanding of the material culture and settlement patterns in the area, offering new evidence that merits discussion. Although the new stratigraphic sequences brought to light in the recent excavations have enhanced the archaeological profile of some sites, a comprehensive picture of the com- position and development of the settlements and ceramic assemblages during the second half of the sec- ond millennium BC is still lacking, mainly due to the very limited number, and the limited size, of settle- ments excavated to date. One of the key issues in the debate on the second millennium BC in northern Mesopotamia concerns the nature and development of the settlement pattern at the time of the Middle Assyrian conquest and the changes that occurred under the Mittani and Assyrian hegemonies in the upper Khabur and upper Tigris valleys. This paper offers a general overview of Late Bronze Age settlements in the valleys of the upper Kha- bur and Tigris Rivers, and takes into account the results from both early and more recent excavations as well as small and large regional surveys, aiming to highlight some interesting advances in our knowl- edge of the area whilst also drawing attention to the many questions that remain unanswered in our at- tempts to reconstruct the cultural sequence and historical events of these territories.
The Upper Khabur and the Upper Tigris Valleys during the Late Bronze Age: Settlements and Ceramic Horizons
D'Agostino A
2014-01-01
Abstract
Field research undertaken in recent decades in northern Syria and southeastern Turkey has significantly improved our understanding of the material culture and settlement patterns in the area, offering new evidence that merits discussion. Although the new stratigraphic sequences brought to light in the recent excavations have enhanced the archaeological profile of some sites, a comprehensive picture of the com- position and development of the settlements and ceramic assemblages during the second half of the sec- ond millennium BC is still lacking, mainly due to the very limited number, and the limited size, of settle- ments excavated to date. One of the key issues in the debate on the second millennium BC in northern Mesopotamia concerns the nature and development of the settlement pattern at the time of the Middle Assyrian conquest and the changes that occurred under the Mittani and Assyrian hegemonies in the upper Khabur and upper Tigris valleys. This paper offers a general overview of Late Bronze Age settlements in the valleys of the upper Kha- bur and Tigris Rivers, and takes into account the results from both early and more recent excavations as well as small and large regional surveys, aiming to highlight some interesting advances in our knowl- edge of the area whilst also drawing attention to the many questions that remain unanswered in our at- tempts to reconstruct the cultural sequence and historical events of these territories.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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