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7 - New Identities, New Communities

The Early Phrygian Period YHSS 6 900–800 BCE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2022

Lisa Kealhofer
Affiliation:
Santa Clara University, California
Peter Grave
Affiliation:
University of New England, Australia
Mary M. Voigt
Affiliation:
College of William and Mary, Virginia
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Summary

Over the course of the ninth century BCE Phrygia emerged as an influential power in central Anatolia (Fig. 7.1). At the Phrygian capital of Gordion, groups created entirely new social and political configurations, elaborating and displaying status in ways that contrasted sharply with their Bronze Age and EIA predecessors. The territorial extent of Phrygia has been defined using multiple lines of evidence. Material evidence for the range of Phrygian influence includes strong ceramic parallels with pottery at sites to the southeast (Bahar 1999; Osborne 2020), as well as the distribution of monuments and inscriptions at least as far west as Daskyleion (DeVries 2000). Historical data for the Halys River (modern Kızılırmak) area in the east suggest the presence of a complex political palimpsest of multiple competing polities (Sams 2011a). By the late seventh century BCE both ceramics and Phrygian inscriptions at the fortified hilltop site of Kerkenes indicate Phrygian influence extended at least this far east (Summers 2018), but we know little about the ninth and eighth centuries BCE in this area. However, geographic delineation of Phrygia has not advanced understanding of the organization and practices of Phrygian power, arguably major drivers of political expansion at this time. In this chapter, we consider the Phrygian capital Gordion and the daily practices of local groups as a foundation for addressing Phrygian practices of power.

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Ancient Gordion , pp. 171 - 226
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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