Nairi Lands
The Identity of the Local Communities of Eastern Anatolia, South Caucasus and Periphery During the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age. A Reassessment of the Material Culture and the Socio-Economic Landscape
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxbow Books
Published:31st Oct '19
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This study analyses the social and symbolic value of the material culture, in particular the pottery production and the architecture, and the social structure of the local communities of a broad area encompassing Eastern Anatolia, the South Caucasus and North-western Iran during the last phase of the Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age. This broad area is known from the Assyrian texts as ‘Nairi lands’. The second part of the study, furnishes a reassessment of pottery production characteristics and theories, as well as of the socio-economic structure and issues, tied to the sedentary and mobile local communities of the Nairi lands.
The study brings into focus the characteristics, the extension and the distribution of Grooved pottery, along with other pottery typologies, by providing an accompanying online catalogue with detailed descriptions and high-resolution images of the pots and sherds obtained from public and private institutions in Turkey and Armenia. Moreover, the socio-political organisation and subsistence economy issues are addressed in order to advance a possible reconstruction of the social structure of the Nairi lands communities. Particular attention is devoted to the pastoral nomad component and the role played within the Nairi phenomenon. The study includes a very large corpus of text images and high-resolution color images of the pottery of the area under examination, gathered by the author in order to offer a reliable tool and compendium.
[This volume] is undoubtedly useful in that it draws together a large amount of published material and would therefore make an excellent starting point for further study of the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in the region. Additionally, the work is valuable for its extensive archaeometric analysis of pottery that potentially provides a base for further studies and interpretation as more ceramics from other sites across the region are approached in similar ways. * Journal of Near Eastern Studies *
ISBN: 9781789252781
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
272 pages