Jarmo
| Year dem found am | 7090s BCE |
|---|---|
| Culture | Neolithic |
| Country | Iraq |
| Edey de administrative territorial entity insyd | Chamchamal |
| Coordinate location | 35°33′21″N 44°55′49″E |
| Significant event | archaeological excavation, archaeological excavation, archaeological excavation |
| Date dem dissolve, abolish anaa demolish | 4950 BCE |
| Director of archaeological fieldwork | Robert John Braidwood |

Jarmo (Kurdish: چەرمۆ, romanized: Çermo anaa Qelay Çermo, sanso be Qal'at Jarmo) be a prehistoric archeological site wey locate insyd modern Iraqi Kurdistan on de foothills of de Zagros Mountains. E dey lie at an altitude of 800 m above sea-level insyd a belt of oak den pistachio woodlands insyd de Adhaim River watershed. Excavations reveal say na Jarmo be an agricultural community wey dey date back to around 7090 BC. Na e be broadly contemporary plus oda important Neolithic sites such as Jericho insyd de Southern Levant den Çatalhöyük insyd Anatolia.
Discovery den excavation
[edit | edit source]De site be originally discovered by de Iraqi Directorate of Antiquities insyd 1940, wey e later cam be known to archaeologist Robert Braidwood from de University of Chicago Oriental Institute. At de time, na he dey look for suitable places to research de origins of de Neolithic Revolution.[1][2] Braidwood work as part of de Iraq-Jarmo programme for three seasons, those of 1948, 1950-1951 den 1954-1955; a fourth campaign, to be carried out insyd 1958-1959 no cam about secof de 14 July Revolution. During de excavations insyd Jarmo insyd 1954-1955, Braidwood use a multidisciplinary approach for de first time, insyd an attempt to refine de research methods den clarify de origin of de domestication of plants den animals. Among ein team be a geologist, Herbert Wright, a palaeo-botanist, Hans Helbaek, an expert insyd pottery den radio-carbon dating, Frederic Mason, den a zoologist, Charles Reed, as well as a number of archaeologists. Na dem subsequently use de interdisciplinary method insyd all serious field work insyd archaeology.
Jarmo, de village
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De excavations expose a small village, wey dey cover an area of 12,000 to 16,000 m2, den wich be dated (by carbon-14) to 7090 BC, for de oldest levels, to 4950 BC for de most recent. De entire site dey consist of twelve levels. Jarmo dey appear to be two older, permanent Neolithic settlements den, approximately, contemporary plus Jericho anaa de Neolithic stage of Shanidar. De high point be likely to be between 6200 den 5800 BC. Dis small village consist of sam twenty five houses, plus adobe walls den sun-dried mud roofs, wich rest on stone foundations, plus a simple floor plan dem dig from de earth. Dese dwellings frequently be repaired anaa rebuilt. Insyd all, about 150 people live insyd de village, wich na clearly be a permanent settlement. Insyd de earlier phases der be a preponderance of objects dem make from stone, silex—wey dey use older styles—den obsidian. De use of dis latter material, dem obtain from de area of Lake Van, 200 miles away, dey suggest say sam form of organized trade already exist, as does de presence of ornamental shells wey komot de Persian Gulf. Insyd de oldest level baskets be found, dem waterproof plus pitch, wich readily be available insyd de area.
Gallery
[edit | edit source]- Jarmo, March 2021. Remains of de 1948-1955 excavations wey de Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago conduct
- Jarmo, March 2021, recent excavations by a Japanese team be conducted on de previous excavations dem carry out by de Oriental Institute between 1948 den 1955
- Jarmo, March 2021. Remains of de 1948-1955 excavations wey de Oriental Institute conduct
- Fragments of alabaster jars, Jarmo circa 7500 BCE, before de 7000 BCE invention of pottery insyd de region. Louvre Museum
- Pottery bowl, 7100-5800 BCE, from Jarmo
References
[edit | edit source]- ↑ Braidwood, Linda S; University of Chicago; Oriental Institute; Iraq-Jarmo Prehistoric Project (1950-1955) (1983). Prehistoric archeology along the Zagros Flanks (PDF) (in English). Chicago, Ill.: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. OCLC 679889989.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ↑ Robert J. Braidwood, The Iraq-Jarmo Project of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Season 1954–1955, Verlag nicht ermittelbar, 1954
Read further
[edit | edit source]- Adovasio, James M. (1975). "The Textile and Basketry Impressions from Jarmo". Paléorient. 3 (1): 223–230. doi:10.3406/paleo.1975.4198.
- Braidwood, Robert J.; Braidwood, Linda (1950). "Jarmo: A Village Early Farmers in Iraq". Antiquity (in English). 24 (96): 189–195. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00023371. ISSN 0003-598X. S2CID 162520880.
- TSUNEKI, Akira, et al., "PRELIMINARY REPORT OF THE CHARMO (JARMO) PREHISTORIC INVESTIGATIONS", 2023." ラーフィダーン 45, pp. 1-47, 2024
External links
[edit | edit source]- Articles containing Kurdish-language text
- CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list
- CS1 English-language sources (en)
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Webarchive template wayback links
- 1940 archaeological discoveries
- Archaeological sites insyd Iraq
- Neolithic sites of Asia
- Neolithic settlements
- Former populated places insyd Iraq
- Sulaymaniyah Governorate
- Archaeological discoveries insyd Iraq
- Populated places dem establish insyd de 8th millennium BC
- Populated places dem disestablish insyd de 5th millennium BC
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