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Hassuna

 

Archaeological site, northern Iraq. An ancient Mesopotamian town located south of Mosul, it was excavated in 1943 – 44 and was found to represent an advanced village culture that apparently had spread throughout northern Mesopotamia. At Hassuna itself, six layers of houses were uncovered, each progressively more substantial. Vessels and pottery dating from the early to mid-6th millennium BC were discovered. Similar wares found elsewhere in the Middle East show that, even as early as the 6th millennium BC, an extensive trade network existed in the region.

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Wikipedia: Hassuna
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Holocene epoch
Pleistocene
Holocene
Preboreal (10.3 ka – 9 ka),
Boreal (9 ka – 7.5 ka),
Atlantic (7.5 ka5 ka),
Subboreal (5 ka2.5 ka)
Subatlantic (2.5 ka – present)

Coordinates: 36°10′00″N 43°06′00″E / 36.166667°N 43.100000°E / 36.166667; 43.100000

The geographic location of the Chalcolithic Hassuna culture in relation to the contemporaneous Halaf culture.

Hassuna or Tell Hassuna is an ancient Mesopotamian site situated in Iraq, south of Mosul.

Excavations were initiated at Hassuna in the 1930s by British archaeologist Seton Lloyd who worked closely with the Oriental Institute in Chicago. [1]

By around 6000 BC people had moved into the foothills (piedmont) of northernmost Mesopotamia where there was enough rainfall to allow for "dry" agriculture in some places. These were the first farmers in northernmost Mesopotamia (the region known as Assyria). They made Hassuna style pottery[2] (cream slip with reddish paint in linear designs). Hassuna people lived in small villages or hamlets ranging from 2 to 8 acres (32,000 m2).

At Tell Hassuna, adobe dwellings built around open central courts with fine painted pottery replace earlier levels with crude pottery. Hand axes, sickles, grinding stones, bins, baking ovens and numerous bones of domesticated animals reflect settled agricultural life. Female figurines have been related to worship and jar burials within which food was placed related to belief in afterlife. The relationship of Hassuna pottery to that of Jericho suggests that village culture was becoming widespread.

References

  1. ^ Matthews, 2003. The Archaeology of Mesopotamia: Theories and Approaches. Routledge. London.
  2. ^ Hassuna style pottery

See also


 
 
Learn More
Jalluli family
Abd al-Rahman al-Azzam
Mesopotamia (ancient region)

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