Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Hacilar

Coordinates:37°35′05.4″N30°05′04.1″E / 37.584833°N 30.084472°E /37.584833; 30.084472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Archaeological site in Burdur, Turkey
For other places with the same name, seeHacılar.
Hacilar
Hacilar
Hacilar is located in Turkey
Hacilar
Hacilar
Shown within Turkey
Show map of Turkey
Hacilar is located in Near East
Hacilar
Hacilar
Hacilar (Near East)
Show map of Near East
LocationTurkey
Coordinates37°35′05.4″N30°05′04.1″E / 37.584833°N 30.084472°E /37.584833; 30.084472
TypeSettlement
History
Founded7,040 BC
PeriodsPre-Pottery Neolithic
Statuette from Hacilar (5250-5000 BC),National Archaeological Museum (Florence)

Hacilar is an early human settlement in southwesternTurkey, 23 km south of present-dayBurdur. It has been dated back 7040BC at its earliest stage of development. Archaeological remains indicate that the site was abandoned and reoccupied on more than one occasion in its history.

Archaeological History

[edit]
Terracotta vase painted in red from Haçilar. Late Neolithic – early Chalcolithic (late 6th – beginning of the 5th millennium BC). Rome, National Museum of Oriental Art (Palazzo Brancaccio)

Hacilar lived and died in prehistory. What remained of Hacilar became a mound on the plain and remained so until 1956. It was in this year that a local teacher showed the mound to British archaeologistJames Mellaart. In 1957 the excavation of Hacilar began under Mellaart's direction and continued until 1960. The artifacts recovered during this excavation are currently on display at theMuseum of Anatolian Civilizations inAnkara.

Ceramics from Hacilar show similarities with those of theHalaf culture from about the same period. There are also similarities in their figurines.

Stratigraphy

[edit]

Up to 11 stratigraphic levels have been identified. The oldest strata belong toaceramic Neolithic, and are dated to the 8th millennium BC.[1]

To the 6th millennium BC, nine levels are assigned, the oldest with ceramics, that were almost entirely undecorated.

Level VI is dating back to 5600 BC, and there were many activities at this time. Nine buildings were found, grouped around a square. Livelihood mainly consisted of agriculture. Spelt, wheat, barley, peas and vetch were cultivated. Villagers engaged in the breeding of animals; bones of cattle, pigs, sheep, goats and dogs were found. The pottery is simple, although some specimens represent animals.[2]

Numerousnude female figures, made of clay, are quite remarkable, and possibly represent some divinity.

At level II (c. 5300 BC), the village was fortified and had a small temple.

The settlement of level I, dating after 5000 BC, differs significantly from the previous layers, so it is believed that there were newcomers who settled here. The site is now heavily fortified. The pottery is of high quality and is generally painted in red on a cream background.

Architecture

[edit]

Housing in Hacilar consisted of grouped units surrounding an inner courtyard. Each dwelling was built on a foundation of stone to protect againstwater damage. Walls were made of wood anddaub ormud-brick that wasmortared withlime. Wooden poles were located within each unit to support a flat roof. It is generally believed that these houses had an upper story made of wood.

The interiors were finished smooth with plaster and were rarely painted. Over time changes were made to the housing units;Querns,braziers andmortars appeared in the floors. Recesses in walls were also put to good use as cupboards. The kitchen was separated from the living rooms and the upper levels were used for granaries and/or workshops.

As Mellaart describes: 'The walls and floors were carefully plastered, laid on a pebble base. The plaster was frequently stained red and burnished or decorated with elementary geometric designs in red on cream.' In Hacilar houses no doorways were found. It seems possible that the entry was from the roof only.[3]

Chronology

[edit]
BCEuropeEgyptSyria
Levant
AnatoliaKhaburSinjar Mountains
Assyria
MiddleTigrisLow
Mesopotamia
Iran
(Khuzistan)
IranIndus/
India
China
11000Early Pottery
(18,000 BC)
10000Pre-Pottery Neolithic A
Gesher
Mureybet
(10,500 BC)
 
9000Jericho
Tell Abu Hureyra
8000Pre-Pottery Neolithic B
Jericho
Tell Aswad
Göbekli Tepe
Çayönü
Aşıklı Höyük
Initial Neolithic
(Pottery)
Nanzhuangtou
(8500–8000 BC)
7000Egyptian Neolithic
Nabta Playa
(7500 BC)
Çatalhöyük
(7500–5500)
Hacilar
(7000 BC)
Tell Sabi Abyad
Bouqras
JarmoGanj Dareh
Chia Jani
Ali Kosh
Mehrgarh I
6500Neolithic Europe
Franchthi
Sesklo
Pre-Pottery Neolithic C
(Ain Ghazal)
Pottery Neolithic
Tell Sabi Abyad
Bouqras
Pottery Neolithic
Jarmo
Chogha BonutTeppe ZaghehPottery Neolithic
Peiligang
(7000–5000 BC)
6000Pottery Neolithic
Sesklo
Dimini
Pottery Neolithic
Yarmukian
(Sha'ar HaGolan)
Pottery Neolithic
Ubaid 0
(Tell el-'Oueili)
Pottery Neolithic
Chogha Mish
Pottery Neolithic
Sang-i Chakmak
Pottery Neolithic
Lahuradewa


Mehrgarh II






Mehrgarh III
5600Faiyum A
Amuq A

Halaf






Halaf-Ubaid
Umm Dabaghiya
Samarra
(6000–4800 BC)
Tepe Muhammad DjafarTepe Sialk
5200Linear Pottery culture
(5500–4500 BC)

Amuq B
Hacilar

Mersin
24–22
 

Hassuna

Ubaid 1
(Eridu 19–15)

Ubaid 2
(Hadji Muhammed)
(Eridu 14–12)

Susiana A
Yarim Tepe
Hajji Firuz Tepe
4800Pottery Neolithic
Merimde

Amuq C
Hacilar
Mersin
22–20
Hassuna Late

Gawra 20

Tepe Sabz
Kul Tepe Jolfa
4500
Amuq D

Levant Chalcolithic
Gian Hasan
Mersin
19–17
Ubaid 3Ubaid 3
(Gawra)
19–18
Ubaid 3Khazineh
Susiana B

3800
Badarian
Naqada I
Ubaid 4
Succeeded by:Historical Ancient Near East

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Based on Spanish Wikipedia, see refs there
  2. ^Helbaek H (1970) The plant husbandry of Hacilar: a study of cultivation and domestication. In: Mellaart J, editor. Excavations at Hacilar. Edinburgh: University Press
  3. ^Mellaart, J. 1965. Earliest Civilizations of the Near East, p. 80) Thames & Hudson, London

Literature

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toHacılar, Burdur.
  • Mellaart, James. «Hacilar: A Neolithic Village Site» — Scientific American, August 1961, p. 86.
  • Mellaart, James. «Earliest Civilizations of the Near East» - Thames & Hudson, London 1965, p. 80.
  • [1]Mellaart, James, "Excavations at Hacilar. v. 2: plates and figures", British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara. Occasional publications, nos. 9 & 10, Edinburgh University Press, 1970
  • [2]Mellaart, James, "Excavations at Hacılar. v. 1", British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara, Edinburgh University Press
Aegean
Black Sea
Central Anatolia
Eastern Anatolia
Marmara
Mediterranean
Southeastern
Anatolia
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hacilar&oldid=1262735913"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp