Yarim Tepe: Difference between revisions

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The hill known as Yarim-Tepe I belongs to Hassuna culture. The high central, oval-shaped core is 80 meters long and 30 meters wide. Some objects found here are reminiscent of those of [[Tureng Tepe]] in Iran.
The hill known as Yarim-Tepe I belongs to Hassuna culture. The high central, oval-shaped core is 80 meters long and 30 meters wide. Some objects found here are reminiscent of those of [[Tureng Tepe]] in Iran.


13 building layers are found here, reflecting the main stages of this culture. There are more than 1500 rectangular furnaces and ceramic ovens used for cooking. The findings include ceramic vases, stone crushers, hacksaws, clay figurines, and other items. Metal items were also found, such as copper beads, as well as copper ore. Bovine bones were also found.
13 building layers are found here, reflecting the main stages of this culture. There are more than 1500 rectangular furnaces and ceramic ovens used for cooking. The first ever [[kiln]] was found here.
The findings include ceramic vases, stone crushers, hacksaws, clay figurines, and other items. Metal items were also found, such as copper beads, as well as copper ore. Bovine bones were also found.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 02:26, 21 October 2017

Yarim Tepe is an archaeological site of an early farming settlement that goes back to about 6000 BC, located in the Sinjar valley some 7km southwest from the town of Tal Afar in northern Iraq. The site consists of several hills reflecting the development of the Hassuna culture, and then of the Halaf and Ubaid cultures.

The settlement was investigated between 1969 and 1976 by the Soviet archaeological expedition under the leadership of Rauf Munchaev and Nikolai Merpert.[1]

Yarim Tepe I

The hill known as Yarim-Tepe I belongs to Hassuna culture. The high central, oval-shaped core is 80 meters long and 30 meters wide. Some objects found here are reminiscent of those of Tureng Tepe in Iran.

13 building layers are found here, reflecting the main stages of this culture. There are more than 1500 rectangular furnaces and ceramic ovens used for cooking. The first ever kiln was found here.

The findings include ceramic vases, stone crushers, hacksaws, clay figurines, and other items. Metal items were also found, such as copper beads, as well as copper ore. Bovine bones were also found.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Merpert N. Ya. 1993. The archaic phase of the Hassuna culture. In N. Yoffee, J. J. Clark (eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization. Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq. The University of Arizona Press, Arizona: 115–127

Bibliography

  • Natalia Petrova, A technological study of Hassuna culture ceramics (Yarim Tepe I settlement). Documenta Praehistorica XXXIX (2012)
  • 1993. Yarim Tepe I. In N. Yoffee, J. J. Clark (eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization. Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq. The University of Arizona Press, Arizona: 73–114.
  • Merpert N. Ya. 1993. The archaic phase of the Hassuna culture. In N. Yoffee, J. J. Clark (eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization. Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq. The University of Arizona Press, Arizona: 115–127.
  • Munchaev R. M., Merpert N. Ya.1981. Earliest Agricultural Settlements of Northern Mesopotamia. Nauka Press. Moscow. (in Russian)
  • Merpert, Nikolai I., and Rauf M. Munchaev. 1987. “The Earliest Levels at Yarim Tepe I and Yarim Tepe II in Northern Iraq.” Iraq 49:1–37
  • Merpert, Nikolai I., and Rauf M. Munchaev. 1973. “Early Agricultural Settlement in the Sinjar Plain, Northern Iraq.” Iraq 35:97–113

External links