Teppe Hasanlu
تپه حسنلو | |
West Azarbaijan, Iran | |
Coordinates | 37°00′16″N 45°27′30″E / 37.00456560313389°N 45.45824974408474°E |
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Type | Settlement |
Teppe Hasanlu or Hasanlu Tepe (
Hasanlu Tepe is the largest site in the
The site was inhabited fairly continuously from the 6th millennium BC to the 3rd century AD. It is famous for the Golden bowl of Hasanlu.[2] Since June 2018, the Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization has pushed for the entire archeological site to be declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[3]
Name and etymology
The site is named after the nearby village of
Archaeology
After some licensed commercial digging by dealers, the site was first dug by
Originally, excavations in the Ushnu-Solduz Valley were intended to explore a series of stratified occupation levels in the area with the objective of reconstructing a regional cultural history from Neolithic times until Alexander the Great's conquest of Persia beginning in 334 BC, such that any conclusions would rely solely on material evidence from the region itself, independent of linguistic or literary evidence from adjoining regions.[15] The unexpected discovery of the famous "Gold Bowl" at Hasanlu in 1958 led to the project shifting its focus to the Iron Age levels at this site, although several other sites in the region were also excavated in order to stay in line with the project's broader objective. A silver cup was found at the same time.[16] These other excavations were conducted at Dinkha Tepe, Dalma Tepe, Hajji Firuz Tepe, Agrab Tepe, Pisdeli, and Seh Girdan.
The Hasanlu Publications Project was initiated in 2007 to produce the official monograph-length final reports on the excavation.[17] Currently two Excavation Reports and several Special Studies volumes have been completed.[18][19][20][21]
Dalma Tepe
Dalma Tepe is a small mound located about 5 km southwest of Ḥasanlū Tepe, near the modern village of Dalma, which is a type site of Dalma culture. It is approximately 50 m in diameter. It was excavated by Charles Burney and T. Cuyler Young Jr., in 1958–1961 in three seasons totally less than one month.[22]
Large quantities of handmade, chaff-tempered pottery were found.[23]
'Dalma painted ware' is decorated with large patterns of triangles in deep shades on red.
Similar pottery has been found at Seh Gābī and Godin Tepe, attributed to Period X. Kul Tepe Jolfa is another related site from the same period. It is located north of Lake Urmia.[24]
History
The excavators originally divided the site’s occupation history into ten periods based on the nature of material finds in the different strata: the oldest, Level X, stretches back to the Neolithic period, after which there was fairly continuous occupation until the early Iron Age (ca 1250–330 BC), followed by a hiatus before subsequent reoccupation; occupation finally ends in Iran’s medieval period (Hasanlu period I).[25]
Middle Bronze Age (Level VI)
Starting in the Middle Bronze III period or Hasanlu VIa (1600–1450 BC), there are important changes in material culture. This is best attested at the site of Dinkha Tepe, but is also present at Hasanlu. The most obvious change is the rapid abandonment of old styles of pottery, especially painted
Late Bronze Age (Level V)
In the Late Bronze Age or Hasanlu Period V, Monochrome Burnished Ware came to dominate the ceramic assemblages of the Ushnu and Solduz valleys of the southern Lake Urmia Basin. Some scholars link changes in pottery forms to cultural contact with
Iron Age (Level IV - III)
At around 1250 BC, there are some changes in the material culture at Hasanlu and in the graves excavated at Dinkha. This marks the beginning of the Iron I period, formerly identified with Hasanlu Period V but now the equivalent of Hasanlu IVc.[27] While this period is designated the Iron I, there is virtually no iron in use during this period — two iron finger rings are known from Hasanlu.
In previous scholarship, it was believed that there was an abrupt change in material culture due to the arrival of iron-using population to the area before the Hasanlu IVc period. But subsequent research by Michael Danti tried to clarify these matters, and currently these theories are no longer accepted.[28]
The High Mound of Hasanlu was almost certainly fortified during this period, and an internal gateway, large residential structures, and possibly a temple were located in this citadel. The Low Mound was also occupied, the best evidence of this coming from a house excavated in 1957 and 1959 dubbed the "Artisan's House". This structure derives its name from the fact that evidence for metalworking, primarily the casting of copper/bronze objects, was found there.[29]
At the end of Hasanlu IVc/Iron I, Hasanlu was destroyed by a fire. Evidence of this destruction was discovered on the High and Low Mound. This destruction dates to around 800 BC, based on radiocarbon dating, and it marks the beginning of the Iron II period. While the destruction was extensive, the settlement's occupants seem to have rebuilt the citadel and the buildings of the Lower Town rapidly, cutting down the mudbrick walls of the burned structures to their stone footings and erecting new brick walls. The buildings of the Iron II settlement were based on their Iron I precursors, but were also larger and more elaborate in their layout and ornamentation. The primary example of this being the monumental columned halls of the citadel.
The continued presence in significant quantities of Assyrian goods or copies, alongside objects of local manufacture, attest to continued cultural contact with
We know a great deal about Iron II/Hasanlu IVb because of the violent sacking and burning at around 800 BC, probably by the Urartians.[33] Over 285 human victims were found where they had been slain. Some victims were mutilated and distributions of other bodies and the wounds they received suggest mass executions. Amid the burned remains of the settlement the excavators found thousands of objects in situ. Hasanlu IVb is a veritable Pompeii of the early Iron Age Near East. Some have suggested that the Iron II culture of Hasanlu, which has close ties to Mesopotamia and northern Syria, indicates the settlement came under the control of a foreign power, or experienced an influx of new occupants, or perhaps made internal changes to its political system.[26]
The Iron II settlement was fortified and was perhaps entered via a fortified road system located on the southwest side of the High Mound, although this interpretation of the archaeological remains of this area has come under increasing scrutiny in more recent analyses. Two areas of the citadel were investigated by the Hasanlu Project. In the west, buildings that served to control access into the citadel, a possible arsenal (Burned Building VII), and a large residential structure (Burned Building III) were investigated. South of this was Burned Building (BB) I and BB I East. These buildings formed a fortified gateway into the Lower Court area. BBI was also an elite residence. It was in this building in 1958 that the famous Gold Bowl of Hasanlu was discovered. The buildings of the Lower Court (BBII, BBIV, BBBIV East, and BBV) were arranged around a stone-paved court. Burned Building II likely served as a temple, and it was in this building that the excavators found over 70 massacred women and children — only a few adult males were found among the victims.
Following Hasanlu's destruction, the High Mound was used as the site for a Urartian fortress. A fortification wall with towers at regular intervals was constructed around the edges of the High Mound. Hasanlu was occupied fairly continuously during Period IIIa (the Achaemenid Period) and Period II (the Seleuco-Parthian Period).[34]
Post Iron Age (Levels II and I)
In Level II was found a house of the 4th Century BC. An Islamic settlement of the 14th century AD was discovered in Level I.[35]
Ethno-linguistic affiliation
After examining the genetics of individuals associated with the site during the Bronze and Iron Ages, Iosif Lazaridis et al. (2022) concluded the inhabitants of Hasanlu may have spoken a language related to Armenian, or perhaps a non-Indo-European language.[36]
Photo gallery
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Bronze drinking vessel, Hasanlu, 1st mil BC. National Museum of Iran
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Egyptian blue, Hasanlu, 1st mil BC. National Museum of Iran
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crescent-shaped plaque, Hasanlu, early 1st mil BC. National Museum of Iran
See also
- Kul Tepe Jolfa
- Golden cup of Hasanlu
- Hasanlu Lovers
- Cities of the Ancient Near East
- Short chronology timeline
Notes
- ^ ISBN 0-521-20091-1. Pages 57–58, 138.
- ^ [1] The Hasanlu Golden Bowl. Thirty Years Later, Expedition, vol. 31, no. 203, pp. 87–106, 1989
- ^ "Millennia-old Hasanlu under restoration, landscaping project". Tehran Times. Aug 15, 2018. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- ^ "معنی تپه | لغتنامه دهخدا". www.vajehyab.com.
- ^ "Tepe". Nişanyan Sözlük.
- ^ Clauson, Gerard (1972). "Töpü". An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkishn. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 436.
- ^ [2] Aurel Stein, Old Routes of Western Iran. London: Macmillan, pp. 390–404, 1940
- ^ Crawford, Vaughn E. "Hasanlu 1960." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, vol. 20, no. 3, 1961, pp. 85–94
- ^ Dyson, Robert H. "The Hasanlu Project." Science, vol. 135, no. 3504, 1962, pp. 637–47
- ^ Dyson, Robert H. "HASANLU AND EARLY IRAN." Archaeology, vol. 13, no. 2, 1960, pp. 118–29
- ISBN 0-934718-49-0
- ISBN 1-931707-66-9
- ^ Oscar White Muscarella, Hasanlu 1964, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin New Series, vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 121–135, 1966
- ^ Oscar White Muscarella, The Excavation of Hasanlu: An Archaeological Evaluation, Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 342, pp. 69–94, 2006
- ^ Dyson, Robert H (1989). "Rediscovering Hasanlu"; Expedition, Vol. 31, Nos. 2–3, pp. 3–11. (see external link, below)
- ^ "THE SILVER CUP OF HASANLU." Archaeology, vol. 12, no. 3, 1959, pp. 171–171
- ^ Hasanlu Publications Project;
- ISBN 0-934718-34-2
- ISBN 0-934718-33-4
- ISBN 0-924171-26-X
- ISBN 1-934536-17-2
- ^ Hamlin, Carol. “Dalma Tepe.” Iran, vol. 13, 1975, pp. 111–27.
- ^ T. Cuyler Young, Jr. (1963), [3]Cuyler Young, Jr., .T."Dalma Painted Ware" Expedition Magazine 5.2 (1963): Expedition Magazine. Penn Museum, 1963 Web. 15 Oct 2022
- ^ HENRICKSON, Elizabeth F., and Vanda VITALI. “THE DALMA TRADITION : PREHISTORIC INTER-REGIONAL CULTURAL INTEGRATION IN HIGHLAND WESTERN IRAN.” Paléorient, vol. 13, no. 2, 1987, pp. 37–45
- ^ [4] Hasanlu Publications Project: see 'overview' tab for chronology.
- ^ a b Dyson, Robert H (1965). "Problems of Protohistoric Iran as Seen from Hasanlu"; Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 24, No. 3, pp. 193–9.
- ISBN 978-1-934536-61-2
- ^ Megan Cifarelli, The Iron Age at Hasanlu, Iran New Perspectives in (2019) Proceedings of the International Conference on Iron Age in Western Iran and the Neighboring Regions. 2-3 November 2019, Kurdistan University, Sanandaj, Iran, Vol. 2, edited by Yousef Hassanzadeh, Ali Vahdati and Zahed Karimi (Tehran and Sanandaj: National Museum), 21-44
- ^ Danti, Michael D. “THE ‘ARTISAN’S HOUSE’ OF HASANLU TEPE, IRAN.” Iran, vol. 49, 2011, pp. 11–54
- ^ Oscar White Muscarella, Hasanlu in the Ninth Century B. C. and Its Relations with Other Cultural Centers of the Near East, American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 75, No. 3, pp. 263–266, 1971
- ^ Kuhrt, Amélie (1995). The Ancient Near East (Vol. 2); Routledge, New York, p.548ff.
- ^ Dyson, Robert H (1989). "Constructing the Chronology and Historical Implications of Hasanlu IV"; Iran, Vol. 27, pp.18–9, 22.
- ^ Inna Medvedskaya, Who Destroyed Hasanlu IV?, Iran, vol. 26, pp. 1–15, 1988
- ^ Robert H. Dyson Jr., The Architecture of Hasanlu: Periods I to IV, American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 81, no. 4, pp. 548–552, 1977
- ^ Muscarella, Oscar White. “Excavations at Dinkha Tepe, 1966.” The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, vol. 27, no. 3, 1968, pp. 187–96
- PMID 36007020.
References
- Megan Cifarelli, The Iron Age at Hasanlu, Iran New Perspectives in (2019) Proceedings of the International Conference on Iron Age in Western Iran and the Neighboring Regions. 2-3 November 2019, Kurdistan University, Sanandaj, Iran, Vol. 2, edited by Yousef Hassanzadeh, Ali Vahdati and Zahed Karimi (Tehran and Sanandaj: National Museum), 21-44.
- Danti, Michael, Hasanlu V: The Late Bronze and Iron I Periods, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 2013 ISBN 978-1-934536-61-2
- de Schauensee, Maude. "A Note on Bit Types at Hasanlu, Iran." Iraq, vol. 68, 2006, pp. 129–38
- Robert H. Dyson Jr., The Achaemenid Painted Pottery of Hasanlu IIIA, Anatolian Studies, vol. 49, Anatolian Iron Ages 4. Proceedings of the Fourth Anatolian Iron Ages Colloquium Held at Mersin, 19–23 May 1997, pp. 101–110, 1999
- FRANCFORT, HENRI-PAUL. "A Note on the Hasanlu Bowl as Structural Network: Mitanni-Arya and Hurrian?" Bulletin of the Asia Institute, vol. 22, 2008, pp. 171–88
- Oscar White Muscarella, A Fibula from Hasanlu, American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 69, no. 3, pp. 233–240, 1965
- Michelle I. Marcus, The Mosaic Glass Vessels from Hasanlu, Iran: A Study in Large-Scale Stylistic Trait Distribution, The Art Bulletin, vol. 73, no. 4, pp. 536–560, 1991
- MUSCARELLA, OSCAR WHITE. "LION BOWLS FROM HASANLU." Archaeology, vol. 18, no. 1, 1965, pp. 41–46
- Paul Collins, An Assyrian-Style Ivory Plaque from Hasanlu, Iran, Metropolitan Museum Journal, vol. 41, pp. 19–31, 2006
- Maude De Schauensee, A Note on Three Glass Plaques from Hasanlu. Iraq, vol. 63, pp. 99–106, 2001
- Vincent Pigott and Darrel J. Butterbaugh, A Programme in Experimental Mudbrick Preservation at Hasanlu Tepe, Iran, vol. 16, pp. 161–167, 1978
- Catherine Brahic (Sep 15, 2018). "Iran's Pompeii: Astounding story of a massacre buried for millennia". New Scientist.
External links
- Hasanlu Publications Project
- University of Pennsylvania Museum excavations at Hasanlu
- Expedition Magazine Special Issue (Vol.31 No.2-3): East of Assyria—The Highland
- More pictures, Tishineh Settlement of Hasanlu