Tell Shemshara
Tell Shemshara | |
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Shusharra | |
| |
Location | Iraq |
Region | Sulaymaniyah Governorate |
Coordinates | 36°12′03″N 44°56′18″E / 36.200709°N 44.938253°E |
Type | tell |
Length | 270 m (890 ft) (lower mound) |
Width | 60 m (200 ft) (main mound) |
Height | 19 m (62 ft) (main mound), 6 m (20 ft) (lower mound) |
History | |
Periods | Hassuna, Middle Bronze Age, Islamic |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 1957–1959, 2012 |
Archaeologists | J. Eidem, H. Ingholt, J. Læssøe, A. al-Qadir at-Tekrîti |
Condition | periodically flooded by Lake Dukan |
Tell Shemshara is an archaeological site located along the Little Zab in Sulaymaniyah Governorate, northeastern Iraq. The site was excavated between 1957 and 1959 by Danish and Iraqi archaeologists and was inundated by Lake Dukan until recently. The excavations showed that the site was occupied, although not continuously, from the Hassuna period (early sixth millennium BCE) until the 14th century CE. A small archive recovered from the Middle Bronze Age layers (early second millennium BCE) revealed that, at least in that period, the site was called Shusharra and was the capital of a small, semi-independent polity called māt Utêm or "land of the gatekeeper" ruled by a man called Kuwari.
History of research
The site was first recorded in 1955 during an archaeological survey of the Ranya Plain, which was to be flooded by the reservoir of the planned Dukan Dam. In 1957, a Danish team of archaeologists started a rescue excavation because the site would be flooded by Lake Dukan once the Dukan Dam would be finished. The Danish excavation was directed by Professors Harold Ingholt, who also excavated the citadel mound of Hama, and Jørgen Læssøe.[1] It was funded by the Carlsberg Foundation and the Danish Government Foundation for the Promotion of Research.[2] The excavations were continued in 1958 and 1959 by Iraqi archaeologists of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage (SBAH) under the direction of Abd al-Qadir at-Tekrîti.[1] The excavations have revealed that the site was occupied at least from the Hassuna period onward and the latest occupation phase dates to the 12th–14th centuries CE. The objects found during the Danish excavation were divided between the National Museum of Iraq and the National Museum of Denmark.[3] So far, the prehistoric material of the Hassuna layers and the majority of the archives from the second millennium BCE have been published.[4][5][6]
In 2012, teams of the Netherlands Institute for the Near East and the Central Zagros Archaeological Project (CZAP) conducted new investigations at the site, as part of a larger archaeological project focussing on the entire Ranya Plain.[7][8]
The site and its environment
Tell Shemshara sits along the Little Zab, a tributary of the Tigris. Its strategic location in the northeastern corner of the Ranya Plain in the Zagros Mountains gave Shemshara control over travelling routes in all directions, particularly toward the north and east. Shemshara is a tell, or settlement mound, that can be divided in two parts; a high main mound and an elongated lower mound. The main mound is 60 metres (200 ft) in diameter and 19 metres (62 ft) high, whereas the lower town is 270 metres (890 ft) long and 6 metres (20 ft) high.[3] Shemshara is now partially submerged under Lake Dukan.[1]
Occupation history
The excavations at the main mound revealed 16 occupation layers, ranging in date from the Hassuna period (early sixth millennium BCE) to the 14th century CE. Layers 16–9 dated to the Hassuna period. This occupation was characterized by rows of stones that are interpreted by the excavators as foundations for mudbrick walls, a pebble floor and a clay basin in the final occupation layer.[9] Pottery, which has only been found in abundance in layers 13–9, shows stylistic links with that of Hassuna and Tell es-Sawwan.[10] Obsidian was the preferred material for stone tools, with flint making up only 15 percent of the total assemblage. Whereas the flint was procured locally, the obsidian was obtained from two sources in eastern Turkey – one as yet unidentified, the other one being the volcanic Nemrut Dağ more than 300 kilometres (190 mi) away from Shemshara.[11] A unique piece in this assemblage is a dagger of over 35.5 centimetres (14.0 in) in length, broken in four pieces due to a fire.[12] Other artefacts that have been found at the site include stone bowls, bracelets and quern-stones and small objects made of bone.[13] Whereas the main mound seems to have been abandoned after the Hassuna occupation, scarce archaeological material from the Uruk (fourth millennium BCE) and Jemdet Nasr periods (early third millennium BCE) has been found on the lower town.[14][15]
Both the main mound and the lower extension were re-occupied during the Middle Bronze Age (early second millennium BCE). Layers 8–4 on the main mound can be assigned to this period.[3] The excavations found a number of graves with bronze weapons on the main mound, as well as a mudbrick platform. In the lower town, a small part of a palace was excavated, and in three of its rooms a small archive of clay tablets was found. The palace was destroyed by fire, and through analysis of the archive it has been proposed that this happened in year 30 of the reign of Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria in the first quarter of the 18th century BCE.[1]
The archive consisted of 146 clay tablets or fragments thereof, of which a small part dealt with the administration of the town, whereas the majority consisted of letters written to a certain Kuwari. Some fragments were part of the clay envelopes in which these letters were sent.[16] The texts were written in Akkadian. These texts revealed that during this period the site was called Shusharra, that it was the capital of a polity called māt Utêm or "land of the gatekeeper" and that it was ruled by a man named Kuwari.[17] Chronologically, the archive can be divided in two parts, one covering the period during which Shemshara was the capital of a small semi-independent kingdom, and one covering the period after Kuwari became a vassal of Shamshi-Adad, who at that time had already conquered Mari and Shubat-Enlil and was now campaigning in the Zagros Mountains. Together, these two periods do not last longer than 3 years.[18] The letters in the Shemshara archive show that during this period, Kuwari had to deal with Turukkean refugees coming from the east and fleeing a war with Guteans; events which are also mentioned in the much larger archives found in Mari on the Syrian Euphrates.[19]
See also
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Eidem 1992, pp. 11–13
- ↑ Mortensen 1970, p. 9
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Mortensen 1970, pp. 11–14
- ↑ Mortensen 1970
- ↑ Eidem 1992
- ↑ Eidem & Læssøe 2001
- ↑ Eidem 2012
- ↑ Shimshara n.d.
- ↑ Mortensen 1970, pp. 17–23
- ↑ Mortensen 1970, p. 62
- ↑ Mortensen 1970, p. 27
- ↑ Mortensen 1970, pp. 33–35
- ↑ Mortensen 1970, pp. 47ff., 58ff.
- ↑ Al-Soof 1964
- ↑ Al-Soof 1968, p. 82
- ↑ Eidem & Læssøe 2001, p. 14
- ↑ Eidem 1992, p. 17
- ↑ Eidem 1992, p. 16
- ↑ Eidem 1992, p. 18
References
- Al-Soof, Abu (1964), "Uruk pottery from the Dokan and Shahrazur districts", Sumer 20: 37–44, ISSN 0081-9271
- Al-Soof, Abu (1968), "Distribution of Uruk, Jamdat Nasr and Ninevite V Pottery as Revealed by Field Survey Work in Iraq", Iraq 30 (1): 74–86, JSTOR 4199840
- Eidem, Jesper (1992), The Shemshāra archives 2. The administrative texts, Historisk-Filosofiske Skrifter 15, Copenhagen: Kongelige Danske videnskabernes selskab, ISBN 87-7304-227-7
- Eidem, Jesper (2012), "The NINO archeological project on the Rania Plain", http://mar-shiprim.org/'' (International Association for Assyriology), retrieved 11 December 2013
- Eidem, Jesper; Læssøe, Jørgen (2001), The Shemshara archives 1. The letters, Historisk-Filosofiske Skrifter 23, Copenhagen: Kongelige Danske videnskabernes selskab, ISBN 87-7876-245-6
- Mortensen, Peder (1970), Tell Shimshara. The Hassuna period, Historisk-Filosofiske Skrifter 5, 2, Copenhagen: Kongelige Danske videnskabernes selskab, OCLC 562453801
- "Shimshara", Central Zagros Archaeological Project, n.d., retrieved 15 December 2013