| Geographical range | Korean peninsula |
|---|---|
| Period | Late Stone Age,Bronze Age |
| Dates | c. 1500 – c. 300 BC |
| Preceded by | Jeulmun pottery period |
| Korean name | |
| Hangul | 무문토기시대 |
| Hanja | 無文土器時代 |
| Revised Romanization | Mumun togi sidae |
| McCune–Reischauer | Mumun t'ogi sidae |
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TheMumun pottery period is anarchaeological era inKorean prehistory that dates to approximately 1500–300 BC.[1][2][3] This period is named after the Korean name for undecorated or plain cooking and storage vessels that form a large part of thepottery assemblage over the entire length of the period, but especially 850–550 BC.
The Mumun period is known for the origins ofintensive agriculture and complex societies on both theKorean Peninsula and theJapanese Archipelago.[2][3][4] This period or parts of it have sometimes been labelled as the "KoreanBronze Age", afterThomsen's 19th centurythree-age system classification of human prehistory. However, the application of such terminology in the Korean case may be misleading since local bronze production is not proven to have occurred until approximately the 13th century BCE, early bronze artifacts are rare, and the distribution of bronze is highly regionalized until after 300 BC.[5][6] A boom in the archaeological excavations of Mumun Period sites since the mid-1990s has recently increased collective knowledge about this formative period in the prehistory ofEast Asia.
The Mumun period is preceded by theJeulmun pottery period (c. 8000–1500 BC). The Jeulmun was a period of hunting, gathering, and small-scale cultivation of plants.[6] The origins of the Mumun Period are not well known, but themegalithic burials, Mumun pottery, and large settlements found in theLiao River Basin andNorth Korea c. 1800–1500 probably indicate the origins of the Mumun Period of Southern Korea.Slash-and-burn cultivators who used Mumun pottery displaced people using Jeulmun period subsistence patterns.[7]
The Early (or Formative) Mumun (c. 1500–850 BC) is characterized byshifting cultivation, fishing, hunting, and discrete settlements with rectangular semi-subterranean pit-houses. The social scale of Early Mumun societies was egalitarian in nature, but the latter part of this period is characterized by increasing intra-settlement competition and perhaps the presence of part-time "big-man" leadership.[8] Early Mumun settlements are relatively concentrated in the river valleys formed by tributaries of theGeum River in West-central Korea. However, one of the largest Early Mumun settlements, Eoeun (Hangeul:어은), is located in the Middle Nam River valley in South-central Korea. In the latter Early Mumun, large settlements composed of manylong-houses such as Baekseok-dong (Hangeul:백석동) appeared in the area of modernCheonan City, Chungcheong Nam-do.
Important long-term traditions related to Mumun ceremonial and mortuary systems originated in this sub-period. These traditions include the construction ofmegalithic burials, the production of red-burnished pottery, and production of polished groundstone daggers.


The Middle (or Classic) Mumun (c. 850–550 BC) is characterized by intensive agriculture, as evidenced by the large and expansive dry-field remains (c. 32,500 square metres) recovered atDaepyeong, a sprawling settlement with several multiple ditch enclosures, hundreds of pit-houses, specialized production, and evidence of the presence of incipient elites and social competition.[2][3][9] A number of wet-field features have been excavated in southern Korea, indicating thatpaddy field rice-farming was also practiced.

Burials dating to the latter part of the Middle Mumun (c. 700–550 BC) contain a few high status mortuary offerings such as bronze artifacts. Bronze production probably began around this time in Southern Korea. Other high status burials contain greenstone (orjade) ornaments.[4][9] A number of megalithic burials with deep shaft interments, substantial 'pavements' of rounded cobblestone, and prestige artifacts such as bronze daggers, jade, and red-burnished vessels were built in the vicinity of the southern coast in the Late Middle Mumun. High status megalithic burials and large raised-floor buildings at the Deokcheon-ni (Hangeul:덕천리) andIgeum-dong sites in Gyeongsang Nam-do provide further evidence of the growth of social inequality and the existence of polities that were organized in ways that appear to be similar to simple "chiefdoms".[4]
Korean archaeologists sometimes refer to Middle Mumun culture asSongguk-ri Culture (Hanja:松菊里 文化; Hangeul:송국리 문화).[1] Co-occurring artifacts and features that are grouped together as Songguk-ri Culture are found in settlement sites in theHoseo andHonam regions of southeast Korea, but Songguk-ri Culture settlements are also found in western Yeongnam. Excavations have also revealed Songguk-ri settlements in the Ulsan and Gimhae areas. In 2005 archaeologists uncovered Songguk-ri Culture pit-houses at a site deep in the interior ofGangwon Province. The ultimate geographic reach of Songguk-ri Culture appears to have beenJeju Island and westernJapan.
Mumun culture is the beginning of a long-term tradition of rice-farming in Korea that links Mumun culture with the present day, but evidence from the Early and Middle Mumun suggests that, althoughrice was grown, it was not the dominant crop.[3] During the Mumun people grewmillets,barley,wheat, legumes, and continued to hunt and fish.

The Late (or Post-classic) Mumun (550–300 BC) is characterized by increasing conflict, fortified hilltop settlements, and a concentration of population in the southern coastal area. A Late Mumun occupation was found at the Namsan settlement, located on the top of a hill 100 m above sea level in modernChangwon City, Gyeongsang Nam-do. A shellmidden (shellmound) was found in the vicinity of Namsan, indicating that, in addition to agriculture, shellfish exploitation was part of the Late Mumun subsistence system in some areas. Pit-houses at Namsan were located inside a ring-ditch that is some 4.2 m deep and 10 m in width. The purpose of this massive ring-ditch may be related to intergroup conflict. Archaeologists propose that the Late Mumun was a period of conflict between groups of people.
The number of settlements in the Late Mumun is much lower than in the previous sub-period. This indicates that populations were reorganized and settlement was probably more concentrated in a smaller number of larger settlements. There are a number of reasons why this could have occurred. There are some indications that conflict increased or climatic change led to crop failures.
According to the traditionalYayoi chronological sequence, Mumun-esque settlements appeared in NorthernKyūshū (Japan) during the Late Mumun. The Mumun period ends when iron appeared in the archaeological record along with pit-houses that had interior composite hearth-ovens reminiscent of the historic period (agungi).
Some scholars suggest that the Mumun pottery period should be extended toc. 0 BC because of the presence of an undecorated ware that was popular between 400 BC and 0 BC calledjeomtodae (Korean: 점토대). However, bronze became very important in ceremonial and elite life from 300 BC. Additionally, iron tools are increasingly found in Southern Korea after 300 BC. These factors clearly differentiate the time period 300 BC – 0 from the cultural, technological, and social scale that was present in the Mumun pottery period. The unequal presence of bronze and iron in increased amounts from a few high status graves after 300 BC as sets this time apart from the Mumun pottery period. Thus, the Mumun is described as ending, as a cultural-technical period, by approximately 300 BC.
From about 300 BC, bronze objects became the most valued prestige mortuary goods, but iron objects were traded and then produced in theKorean peninsula at that time. The Late Mumun-EarlyIron Age Neuk-do Island Shellmidden Site yielded a small number of iron objects,Lelang and Yayoi pottery, and other evidence showing that beginning in the Late Mumun, local societies were drawn into closer economic and political contact with the societies of the LateZhou dynasty, FinalJōmon, and Early Yayoi.
As anarchaeological culture, the Mumun is composed of the following elements:
According toJuha Janhunen andAlexander Vovin,Japonic languages were spoken in parts of theKorean Peninsula before they were replaced byKoreanic speakers.[10][11] According to Whitman and several other researchers, Japonic/proto-Japonic arrived in the Korean peninsula around 1500 BC[12][13] and was brought to the Japanese archipelago by Yayoiwet-rice farmers at some time between 700–300 BC.[14][15] Whitman and Miyamoto associate Japonic as the language family associated with both Mumun and Yayoi cultures.[16][13] Several linguists believe that speakers of Koreanic/proto-Koreanic arrived in the Korean Peninsula at some time after the Japonic/proto-Japonic speakers and coexisted with these peoples (i.e. the descendants of both the Mumun and Yayoi cultures) and possibly assimilated them. Both Koreanic and Japonic had prolonged influence on each other and a laterfounder effect diminished the internal variety of both language families.
... there are strong indications that the neighbouring Baekje state (in the southwest) was predominantly Japonic-speaking until it was linguistically Koreanized.