Kuzey Mezopotamya ve Kuzey Levant’ta Geç Neolitik 1-2 (MÖ. 7000-6300): Geçim Ekonomisi, Maddi Kültür, İlk Çanak-Çömlekler ve Kültürel Temas

MÖ. 7. binyıl pek çok bakımdan Yakın-Doğu Tarihi’nde bir dönüm noktasıdır. Zira 7. binyılbaşlarken Çanak-Çömleksiz Neolitik (Erken Neolitik: MÖ. 10000-7000) tamamlanmış ve onunyerini Çanak-Çömlekli Neolitik (Geç Neolitik: MÖ. 7000-5500) almıştır. Geç Neolitik’te öncekidevrin anıtsal mimarisinden ve mega-köylerinden eser yoktur. Bu yüzden MÖ 7. binyıltoplumlarının kültürel açıdan “gerileme” yaşadıkları ve karmaşık toplum adımlarının zayıfladığıyanılgısına düşülür. Oysa küçülen köylerde hareketli (yarı-göçebe) çobanlık uygulamalarınageçilmiş; avcı-toplayıcı pratikler zayıflamış, geçim ekonomisi büyük ölçüde çiftçilik-besiciliğedayalı hale gelmiş; çömlek teknolojisi geliştikçe besin saklama ve taşıma olanakları artmış; ikincilürünler devrimi sayesinde evcil hayvanların eti kadar sütü ve yününden de yararlanılır olmuştur.İklimdeki soğuma ve kuraklaşma, Neolitik toplumlarının doğaya karşı mukavemetini artıran birfaktördür. İşte böylesi dönüşümler çağında, Yukarı Mezopotamya ve Kuzey Levant’ta ilk çanakçömleklerinüretildiğini görüyoruz. Bu metnin odaklandığı tarih aralığı, ilk bölgesel kültürlerinya da kültürel etkileşim evrenlerinin ortaya çıkışından hemen öncesidir. Makalenin amacı,Hassuna, Samarra ve Halaf kültürleri doğmadan önce, Akdeniz kıyılarından Kuzey Irak’a uzanan(Ras Şamra – Jarmo) 900 km.’lik bir hat boyunca kültürel temasın yoğunluğunu ve Geç Neolitik1-2 (MÖ 7000-6300) toplumlarının bu sayede aynı geçim ekonomisi ve maddi kültürdebirleştiklerini kanıtlamaktır.

Northern Mesopotamia and Northern Levant during the Late Neolithic 1-2 (7000- 6300 BCE): Subsistence Economy, Material Culture, Earliest Potteries and Cross- Cultural Encounters

The 7th millennium BCE can be regarded as a major turning point in history of Near East. At around 7000-6900 BCE, the first pottery appears (almost simultaneously) in Northern Mesopotamia and Northern Levant. The clay wares’ primary function is for cooking, but they also be used for the preservation and transportation of food. The end of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic (or Early Neolithic: 10000-7000 BCE.) saw a decline in site sizes. This is not a collapse, but rather a shift from sedentary crop-livestock farming to mobile pastoralism. During the Pottery Neolithic 1-2 (or Late Neolithic 1-2: 7000-6300 BCE.), there is a continuous decline in the role of hunting for subsistence. Adapting to and coping with the threat of climate change (especially household resilience to drought) is the most important factor of social change. Social change can evolve from number of different sources including culture contact. Cross-cultural encounters (contacts and interactions of various types: trade, acculturation/emulation, migration or colonization, displacement of pastoralists) make the Late Neolithic 1-2 community an oecumene concerning the subsistence economy and the material culture -from Northern Iraq to Syria’s Mediterranean coast-.

___

  • Akkermans, P. M. M. G. (2014). Settlement and emergent complexity in Western Syria, c. 7000-2500 BCE. C. Renfrew & P. Bahn (Eds.), The Cambridge World Prehistory (pp. 1462- 1473). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Albarella, U., Dobney, K. & Rowley-Conwy, P. (2006). The domestication of the Pig (Sus scrofa): New challenges and approaches. M. A. Zeder, D. G. Bradley, E. Emshwiller & B. D. Smith (Eds.), Documenting domestication: New genetic and archaeological paradigms (pp. 209-227). Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Bader, N. O. (1993a). Results of the excavations at the early agricultural site of Kültepe in Northern Iraq. N. Yoffee & J. J. Clark (Eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization: Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq (pp. 55-62). Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Bader, N. O. (1993b). Summary of the earliest agriculturalists of Northern Mesopotamia. N. Yoffee & J. J. Clark (Eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization: Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq (pp. 63-71). Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Bader, N. O. (1993c). The early agricultural settlement of Tell Sotto. N. Yoffee & J. J. Clark (Eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization: Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq (pp. 41-54). Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Balkan-Atlı, N. ve Özbaşaran, M. (2018). Akarçay Tepe, Metu-Taçdam, http://tacdam.metu.edu.tr/akarcay-tepe adresinden 01 Şubat 2018 tarihinden erişilmiştir.
  • Belcher, E. H. (2014). Embodiment of the Halaf: Sixth millennium figurines from Northern Mesopotamia (Ph.D. Thesis), Columbia University, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, New York.
  • Borrell, F. & Vicente, O. (2012). Sourcing the flint raw materials found at the Neolithic complex of Mamarrul Nasr (Douara Basin, Syria). F. Borrell Tena, M. Bouso García, A. Gómez Bach, C. Tornero Dacasa & O. Vicente Campos (Eds.), Broadening Horizons 3. Conference of Young Researchers Working in the Ancient Near East (pp. 85-100). Bellaterra: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Servei de Publicacions.
  • Bryce, T. & Birkett-Rees, J. (2016). Atlas of the ancient Near East: From prehistoric times to the Roman Imperial period. Oxon: Routledge.
  • Campbell, S. & Baird. D. (1990). Excavations at ginnig, the aceramic to early ceramic neolithic sequence in North Iraq. Paléorient, 16(2), 65-78.
  • Cauvin, M. C. (1973). Problèmes d’emmanchement des faucilles du Proche-Orient: les documents de Tell Assouad (Djezireh, Syrie), Paléorient, 1(1), 101-106.
  • Coşkunsu, G. (2011). Flint and obsidian industry of Mezraa- Teleilat (Urfa, south-east Anatolia), PPN-PN. E. S. C. Healey ve O. Maeda (Eds.), The state of the stone: Terminologies, continuities and contexts in Near Eastern Lithics (pp. 385- 394). Berlin: Ex Oriente.
  • Çıvgın, İ. (2017). Karmaşıklık yönünde ilk adımlar: Kuraklığın geçim ekonomisine etkisi. Aktüel Arkeoloji, 85, 36- 51.
  • Düring, B. S. (2016). The 8.2 event and the neolithic expansion in Western Anatolia, P. F. Biehl & O. P. Nieuwenhuyse (Eds.), Climate and cultural change in Prehistoric Europe and the Near East (pp. 135-150). Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • Flohr, P., Fleitmann, D., Matthews, R., Matthews, W. & Black, S. (2016). Evidence of resilience to past climate change in Southwest Asia: Early farming communities and the 9.2 and 8.2 ka events. Quaternary Science Reviews, 136, 23-39.
  • Fortin, M. (1999). Syria: Land of civilizations. Montreal: Musée de la civilisation.
  • Gibbon, E. (2015). A localized approach to the origins of pottery in Upper Mesopotamia. Laurier Undergraduate Journal of the Arts, 2, 29-45.
  • Gómez, A., Cruells, W. & Molist, M. (2014). Late Neolithic pottery productions in Syria. Evidence from Tell Halula (Euphrates valley): A technological approach. M. Martinón- Torres (Ed.), Craft and science: International perspectives on archaeological ceramics (pp. 125-134). Doha: Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation.
  • Hansen, S. (2014). Neolithic figurines in Anatolia. M. Özdoğan, N. Başgelen & P. Kuniholm (Eds.), The Neolithic in Turkey (ss. 265-292). İstanbul: Arkeoloji ve Sanat Yayınları.
  • Ibáñez, J. J. & Urquijo, J. G. (2006). Évolution technique et société dans le Néolithique du Moyen Euphrate. L. Astruc, F. Bon, V. Léa, P.-Y. Milcent & S. Philibert (Eds.), Normes techniques et pratiques sociales: De la simplicité des outillages pré- et protohistoriques, actes des XXVIe rencontres internationales d’archéologie et d’histoire d’Antibes, 20-22 octobre 2005 (pp. 361-376). Antibes: Éditions APDCA.
  • Lev-Yadun, S., Gopher, A. & Abbo, S. (2000). The cradle of agriculture, Science, 288, 1602-1603.
  • Liverani, M. (2014). The ancient Near East: History, society and economy. (S. Tabatabai, trans.). Oxon: Routledge. Luikart, G., Fernandez, H., Mashkour, M., England, P. R. &
  • Taberlet, P. (2006). Origins and diffusion of domestic goats inferred from DNA markers. M. A. Zeder et al (Eds.), Documenting domestication: New genetic and archaeological paradigms (pp. 294-305). Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Maisels, C. K. (1993a). The emergence of civilization: From hunting and gathering to agriculture, cities and the state in the Near East (revised paperback edition). London: Routledge.
  • Maisels, C. K. (1993b). The Near East: Archaeology in the ‘Cradle of Civilization’. London: Psychology Press.
  • Maisels, C. K. (2001). Early civilizations of the old world. New York: Routledge.
  • Mellaart, J. (2000). Le néolithique et le chalcolithique en Asie occidentale. C. Julien (Ed.), Histoire de l’Humanité - Volume I: De la préhistoire aux débuts de la civilisation (pp. 1026- 1065). Paris: Ed. UNESCO.
  • Merrett, D. C. & Meiklejohn, C. (2007). Is house 12 at Bouqras a charnel house?. M. Faerman, L. Kolska Horwitz, T. Kahana ve U. Zilberman (Eds), Faces from the Past. Skeletal biology of human populations from the Eastern Mediterranean (pp. 127-139). Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.
  • Mithen, S. (2003). After the ice: A global human history, 20000-5000 BC. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson.
  • Miyake, Y. (2010). Excavations at Salat Cami Yanı 2004- 2006: A pottery neolithic site in the Turkish Tigris Valley. P. Matthiae, F. Pinnock, L. Nigro & N. Marchetti (Eds.), Proceedings of the 6th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East: May 5th-10th 2008, “Sapienza” Università di Roma. Vol. 2. Excavations, Surveys and Restorations: Reports on Recent Field Archaeology in the Near East (pp. 417-429). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Molist, M., Anfruns, J., Bofill, M., Borrell, F., Clop, X., Cruells, W. … Buxó, R. (2013). Tell Halula (Euphrates Valley, Syria): New data from the late neolithic settlement. O. P. Nieuwenhuyse, R. Bernbeck, P. M. M. G. Akkermans & J. Rogasch (Eds.), Interpreting the Late Neolithic of Upper Mesopotamia (pp. 443-453). Turnhout: Brepols.
  • Munchaev, R. M. (1993). Some problems in the archaeology of Mesopotamia in light of recent research by the Soviet Expedition to Iraq. N. Yoffee & J. J. Clark (Eds.), Early stages in the evolution of Mesopotamian civilization: Soviet excavations in Northern Iraq (pp. 249-255). Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
  • Nieuwenhuyse, O. P. (2009). The late neolithic ceramics from Shir – A first assessment. Zeitschrift für Orient-Archäologie, 2, 310-356.
  • Nieuwenhuyse, O. & Suleiman, A. (2016). From Pre-Halaf to Halaf: The changing human environment in the Khabur Headwaters, Northeastern Syria. I. Thuesen (Ed.), Proceedings of the 2nd International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East – 22-26 May 2000, Copenhagen – Vol. 1 (pp. 41-53). Bologna: University of Bologna - Eisenbrauns.
  • Nieuwenhuyse, O. P., Akkermans, P. M. M. G. & Van der Plicht, J. (2010). Not so coarse, nor always plain – the earliest pottery of Syria. Antiquity, 84, 71-85.
  • Nieuwenhuyse, O. P., Roffet-Salque, M., Evershed, R. P., Akkermans, P. M. M. G. & Russell, A. (2015). Tracing pottery use and the emergence of secondary product exploitation through lipid residue analysis at Late Neolithic Tell Sabi Abyad (Syria). Journal of Archaeological Science, 64, 54-66.
  • Nishiaki,Y. (1990). Corner-thinned blades: A new obsidian tool type from a pottery neolithic mound in the Khabur Basin, Syria. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 280, 5-14.
  • Nishiaki, Y. (1993). Anatolian obsidian and the neolithic obsidian industries of North Syria: A preliminary review. H. I. H. Prince Takahito Mikasa (Ed.), Essays on Anatolian Archaeology (pp. 140-160). Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
  • Nishiaki, Y. (1995). Reexamination of Neolithic Stone Artifacts from Telul eth-Thalathat, Northern Iraq. H. I. H. Prince Takahito Mikasa (Ed.), Essays on Anatolia and its surrounding Civilizations (pp. 153-171). Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
  • Nishiaki Y. (2000). Lithic technology of neolithic Syria. Oxford: Hadrian Books Ltd.
  • Nishiaki, Y. (2001). The PPN/PN settlement of Tell Seker al- Aheimar, the Upper Khabur, Syria: The 2001 season. Neo- Lithics, 2, 8-10.
  • Nishiaki, Y. (2011). Preliminary notes on the Pre-Pottery and Pottery Neolithic lithics from Tell Seker al-Aheimar, the upper Khabur: the 2000–2001 seasons. E. Healey, S. Campbell & O. Maeda (Eds.), The state of the stone: Terminologies, continuities and contexts in near eastern lithics (pp. 457-464). Berlin: Ex Oriente.
  • Nishiaki, Y. (2016). Tell Seker al-Aheimar (Hassake). Y. Kanjou & A. Tsuneki (Eds.), A history of Syria in one hundred sites (pp. 69-71). Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Nishiaki, Y. (2018). Tell Kashkashok II, the Upper Khabur, Syria. University Museum - Univ. of Tokyo. http://www.um.utokyo. ac.jp/people/lab_nishiaki/tell_kashkashok_2.html adresinden 12 Ocak 2018 tarihinde erişilmiştir.
  • Nishiaki, Y. & Le Mière, M. (2005). The oldest Pottery Neolithic of Upper Mesopotamia: New evidence from Tell Seker al-Aheimar, The Khabur, Northeast Syria. Paléorient, 31(2), 55-68.
  • Nishiaki, Y. & Le Mière, M. (2008). Stratigraphic contexts of the early pottery neolithic at Tell Seker al-Aheimar, The Upper Khabur, Northeast Syria. H. Kühne, R. M. Czichon & F. J. Kreppner (Eds.), Proceedings of the 4th International Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East – Volume 2 (pp. 377-386) Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Portillo, M., Albert, R. M., Kadowaki, S. & Nishiaki, Y. (2010). Domestic activities at Early Neolithic Tell Seker al- Aheimar (Upper Khabur, Northeastern Syria) through phytoliths and spherulites studies. C. Delhon, I. Théry Parisot & S. Thiébault (Eds.), Des hommes et des plantes (pp. 19-30). Antibes: Éditions APDCA.
  • Portillo, M., Kadowaki, S., Nishiaki, Y. & Albert, R. M. (2014). Early Neolithic household behavior at Tell Seker al- Aheimar (Upper Khabur, Syria): A comparison to ethnoarchaeological study of phytoliths and dung spherulites, Journal of Archaeological Science, 42, 107-118.
  • Price, M. D. & Arbuckle, B. S. (2013). Early pig management in the Zagros Flanks: Reanalysis of the Fauna from Neolithic Jarmo, Northern Iraq. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 25(4), 441-453.
  • Quintero, L. A. & Wilkie, P. J. (1995). Evolution and economic significance of naviform core-and-blade technology in the Southern Levant. Paléorient, 21(1), 17-33.
  • Rosen, S. A. (1997). Lithics after the Stone Age: A handbook of stone tools from the Levant. Walnut Creek: AltaMira Press.
  • Russell, A. (2010). Retracing the steppes: A zooarchaeological analysis of changing subsistence patterns in the late neolithic at Tell Sabi Abyad, Northern Syria, c. 6900 to 5900 BC. (PhD Thesis), Universiteit Leiden, Leiden.
  • Scarre, C. & Fagan, B. M. (2016). Ancient civilizations (4th Edition), Oxon: Routledge.
  • Schechter, H. C., Marder, O., Barkai, R. Getzov, N. & Gopher, A. (2013). The obsidian assemblage from Neolithic Hagoshrim, Israel: Pressure technology and cultural influence. F. Borrell, J. J. Ibáñez & M. Molist (Eds.), Stone Tools in Transition: From Hunter-Gatherers to Farming Societies in the Near East (pp. 509-527). Bellaterra: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Servei de Publicacions.
  • Simmons, A. H. (2010). The neolithic revolution in the Near East: Transforming the human landscape. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press.
  • Tekin, H. (2012). The Contribution of Hakemi use to the prehistory of Upper Mesopotamia. O. P. Nieuwenhuyse, R. Bernbeck, P. M. M. G. Akkermans & J. Rogasch (Eds.), Interpreting the Late Neolithic of Upper Mesopotamia (pp. 493-502). Turnhout: Brepols Publishers.
  • Tekin, H. (2015a). Yukarı Mezopotamya Geç Neolitiğinde (Hassuna, Samarra, Halaf) terminoloji ve kronoloji sorunları. Anadolu Prehistorya Araştırmaları Dergisi, I, 89-112.
  • Tekin, H. (2015b). Yukarı Mezopotamya’nın ilk boyalı çanakçömlekleri: Hassuna, Samarra ve Halaf – yeni yorumlar ve yaklaşımlar I – Bölüm 1: Hassuna ve Samarra. OLBA, XXIII, 1-57.
  • “Umm Dabaghiyah-Sotto-Kultur”, Wikipedia – Deutsch, URL 15 Ocak 2019 tarihinde indirildi: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umm_Dabaghiyah-Sotto-Kultur
  • Van Zeist, W. & Waterbolk-van Rooijen, W. (1985). The Paleobotany of Tell Bouqras, Eastern Syria. Paléorient, 11(2), 131-147.
  • Wenke, R. J. & Olszewski, D. J. (2007). Patterns in prehistory: Humankind’s first three million years (5th Edition). New York – Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Willcox, G. (2005). The distribution, natural habitats and availability of wild cereals in relation to their domestication in the Near East: multiple events, multiple centres. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 14, 534-541.
  • Zeder, M. A. (2015). Core questions in domestication research. PNAS, 112(11), 1-8.