Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T20:56:45.780Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ritual Burial of Cultic Objects: The Earliest Evidence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2008

Yosef Garfinkel
Affiliation:
Institute of ArchaeologyHebrew University of JerusalemJerusalem 91905Israel

Extract

This article deals with the ritual burial of cultic objects in the Near East during the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods. These items are not grave goods associated with human burials but objects buried on their own because of their ritual significance. A systematic survey of the depositional context of anthropomorphic statues, plastered skulls and other cultic objects from a large number of sites indicates clearly that the earliest evidence for this concept can be traced to the early agricultural communities of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period of the seventh millennium bc. The custom was a ritual institution for the disposal of worn-out and unwanted cultic items. A further analysis of twelve other symbols and artistic components emphasizes the importance of the seventh millennium bc as a formative era for the cult and mythology of the ancient Near East.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agur, B., Arobes, B. & Patrich, Y., 1988/1989. Judean desert cave survey, 1986/1987. Excavations and Surveys in Israel 1988/89, 7–8, 92–4.Google Scholar
Aharoni, Y., 1962. Expedition B: the cave of horror. Israel Exploration journal 12, 186–99.Google Scholar
Akkermans, P.M.M.G., 1989. Excavations at Tell SabiAbyad. (BAR International Series 468.) Oxford: BAR.Google Scholar
Aldenderfer, M., 1993. Ritual, hierarchy, and change in foraging societies. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 12, 140.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alon, D. & Levy, T.E., 1990. The archaeology of cult and the Chalcolithic sanctuary at Gilat. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 2, 163221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amiet, P., 1980. Art of the Ancient Near East. New York (NY): H.N. Abrams.Google Scholar
Amiran, R., 1962. Myths of the creation of Man and the Jericho statues. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 167, 23–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amiran, R., 1985. A suggestion to see the copper ‘crowns’ of the Judean desert treasure as drums of stand-like altars, in Palestine in the Bronze and Iron Ages: Papers in Honor of Olga Tufnell, ed. Tubb, J.N.. London: Institute of Archaeology, 1014.Google Scholar
Amiran, R., 1986. A new type of ritual vessel and some implications for the Nahal Mishmar hoard. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 262, 83–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arensburg, B. & Hershkovitz, I., 1988. Neolithic human remains, in Nahal Hemar Cave, eds. Bar-Yosef, O. & Alon, D.. (‘Atiqot 18.) Jerusalem: Israel Department of Antiquities and Museums, 5058.Google Scholar
Avner, U., 1984. Ancient cult sites in the Negev and Sinai deserts. Tel Aviv 11, 115–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Backofen, U.W., 1987. Anthropological study of the skeletal material from Lidar. Arastirma Sonuclari Toplantisi 5(2), 191202.Google Scholar
Baird, D., Garrard, A., Martin, L. & Wright, K., 1992. Prehistoric environment and settlement in the Azraq Basin: an interim report on the 1989 excavation season. Levant 24, 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Adon, P., 1980. The Cave of the Treasure. The Finds from the Caves in Nahal Mishmar. Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O., 1981. The ‘Pre-Pottery Neolithic’ Period in the southern Levant, in Prehistoire du Levant, eds. Sanlaville, P. & Cauvin, J.. Paris: CNRS, 555–69.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O., 1982. Pre-Pottery Neolithic sites in southern Sinai. Biblical Archaeologist 41(1), 912.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O., 1984. Seasonality among Neolithic hunter-gatherers in southern Sinai, in Animals and Archaeology vol. 3: Early Herders and their Flocks, eds. Clutton-Brock, J. & Grigson, C.. (BAR International Series 202.) Oxford: BAR, 145–60.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Alon, D., 1988. Nahal Hemar Cave. (‘Atiqot 18.) Jerusalem: Israel Department of Antiquities and Museums.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Belfer-Cohen, A., 1989. The Levantine ‘PPNB’ interaction sphere, in People and Culture in Change: Proceedings of the Second Symposium on Upper Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic Populations of Europe and the Mediterranean Basin, ed. Hershkovitz, I.. (BAR International Series 508.) Oxford: BAR, 5972.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Schick, T., 1989. Early Neolithic organic remains from Nahal Hemar Cave. National Geographic Research 5(2), 176–90.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O., Gopher, A., Tchernov, E. & Kislev, M.E., 1991. Netiv Hagdud: an early Neolithic village site in the Jordan Valley. Journal of Field Archaeology 18, 405–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-Tor, A., 1978. Cylinder Seals of Third Millennium Palestine. (Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research suppl. series 22.) Cambridge: American Schools of Oriental Research.Google Scholar
Betts, A.V.G., 1987. The hunter's perspective: 7th millennium BC rock carvings from eastern Jordan. World Archaeology 19, 214–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bienert, H.D., 1991. Skull cult in the prehistoric Near East. Journal of Prehistoric Religion 5, 923.Google Scholar
Bienert, H.D. & Fritz, U., 1989. Die älteste Schildkröten Darstellung: 9000 Jahre alt. Salamandra 25(2), 112–14.Google Scholar
Bienkowski, P., 1991. Treasures from an Ancient Land: The Art of Jordan. Merseyside: Alan Sutton.Google Scholar
Bloch, M., 1991. Ritual, History and Power. (Monographs on Social Anthropology 58.) London: London School of Economics.Google Scholar
Bolger, D. & Peltenburg, E., 1991. The building model, in Lemba Archaeological Project II.2: A Ceremonial Area at Kissonerga, ed. Peltenburg, E.. (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 70:3.) Gothenburg: Paul Åströms, 1227.Google Scholar
Bonanno, A., 1985. Archaeology and Fertility Cult in the Ancient Mediterranean. Papers Presented at the First International Conference on Archaeology of the Ancient Mediterranean. Amsterdam: B.R. Gruner.Google Scholar
Börker-Klähn, J., 1982. Altvorderasiatische Bildstelen und vergleichbare Felsreliefs. (Baghdader Forschungen 4.) Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Bradley, R., 1990. The Passage of Arms: An Archaeological Analysis of Prehistoric Hoards and Votive Deposits. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Breniquet, C, 1992. A propos du vase halafien de la Tombe G2 de Tell Arpachiyah. Iraq 54, 6978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bretschneider, J., 1991. Architekturmodelle in Vorderasien und der östlichen Ägäis vom Neolithikum bis in das 1. Jahrtausend. (Alter Orient und Altes Testament 229.) Kevelaer: Butzon & Bercker and Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag.Google Scholar
Broman Morales, V., 1983. Jarmo figurines and other clay objects, in Prehistoric Archaeology Along the Zagros Flanks, eds. Braidwood, L.S., Braidwood, R.J., Howe, B., Reed, C.A. & Watson, P.J.. (Oriental Institute Publications 105.) Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press, 369423.Google Scholar
Broman Morales, V., 1990. Figurines and Other Clay Objects from Sarab and Cayonu. (Oriental Institute Communications 25.) Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Butler, C, 1989. The plastered skulls of ‘Ain Ghazal: preliminary findings, in People and Culture in Change: Proceedings of the Second Symposium on Upper Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic Populations of Europe and the Mediterranean Basin, ed. Hershkovitz, I.. (BAR International Series 508.) Oxford: BAR, 141–5.Google Scholar
Cauvin, J., 1972. Religions néolithiques de Syro-Palestine. Paris: Maisonneuve.Google Scholar
Cornwall, I.W., 1981. The Pre-Pottery Neolithic burials, in Excavations at Jericho, vol. III, ed. Kenyon, K.M.. London: The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, 395406.Google Scholar
Crowfoot-Payne, J., 1983. The flint industries of Jericho, in Excavations at Jericho, vol. V, eds. Kenyon, K.M. & Holland, T.A.. London: The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, 622759.Google Scholar
de Contenson, H., 1967. Troisième campagne à Tell Ramad, 1966. Rapport Préliminaire. Annales archéologiques arabes syriennes 17; 1724.Google Scholar
de Contenson, H., 1969. Quatrième et cinquième campagnes à Tell Ramad, 1967–1968. Rapport Prèliminaire. Annales archéologiques arabes syriennes 19, 2530.Google Scholar
de Contenson, H., 1971. Tell Ramad: a village site of Syria of the 7th and 6th millennia BC. Archaeology 24, 278–85.Google Scholar
de Contenson, H., 1985. La région de Damas au néolithique. Annales archéologiques arabes syriennes 35, 929.Google Scholar
de Contenson, H. & Van Liere, W.J., 1966. Seconde campagne à Tell Ramad, 1965. Rapport préliminaire. Annales archéologiques arabes syriennes 16(2), 167–74.Google Scholar
Dikaios, P., 1969. Enkomi Excavations 1948–1958. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Dollfus, G., 1971. Les fouilles à Djaffarabad de 1969 á 1971. Cahiers de la Délégation Archéologique Française en Iran 1, 17161.Google Scholar
Ellis, R.S., 1968. Foundation Deposits in Ancient Mesopotamia. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Esin, U., 1976. Tülintepe excavations 1972. Keban Project 1972 Activities. (Keban Project Publications, Series 1, No. 5.). Ankara: Middle East Technical University, 147–72.Google Scholar
Ferembach, D., 1969. Etude anthropologique des ossements humains néolithiques de Tell Ramad (Syrie). Annales archéologiques arabes syriennes 19, 4770.Google Scholar
Ferembach, D. & Lechevallier, M., 1973. Découverte de crânes surmodelés dans une habitation du VII millénaire à Beisamoun, Israël. Paleorient 1, 223–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flannery, K.V., 1972. The origins of the village as a settlement type in Mesoamerica and the Near East, in Man, Settlement and Urbanism, eds. Ucko, P.J., Tringham, R. & Dimbleby, G.W.. London: Duckworth, 2353.Google Scholar
Frankfort, H., 1939. Sculpture of the Third Millennium BC from Tell Asmar and Khafajah. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Frankfort, H., 1955. The Art and Architecture of the Ancient Orient. Baltimore (MD): Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Freedman, H., 1972. Shabbath. Hebrew-English edition of the Babylonian Talmud. London: Soncino Press.Google Scholar
Galili, E. & Schick, T., 1990. Basketry and a wooden bowl from the pottery Neolithic submerged site of Kefar Samir. Mitekufat Haeven (Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society) 23, 142–51.Google Scholar
Gallis, K.J., 1985. A late Neolithic foundation offering from Thessaly. Antiquity 49, 2024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garfinkel, Y., 1992. The Material Culture in the Central Jordan Valley in the Pottery Neolithic and Early Chalcolithic Periods. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation, The Hebrew University (Hebrew), Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Garrard, A.D. & Gebel, H.G., 1988. The Prehistory of Jordan: The State of Research in 1986. (BAR International Series 396.) Oxford: BAR.Google Scholar
Garstang, J., Droop, J.P. & Crowfoot, J., 1935. Jericho: city and necropolis (Fifth report). Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 22, 143–73.Google Scholar
Garstang, J., Ben-Dor, I. & Fitzgerald, G.M., 1936. Jericho: city and necropolis (Report for the sixth and concluding season, 1936). Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 23, 67100.Google Scholar
Gates, M.H., 1992. Nomadic pastoralists and the Chalcolithic hoard from Nahal Mishmar. Levant 24, 131–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Getz-Preziosi, P., 1983. The ‘Keros Hoard’: introduction to an early Cycladic enigma, in Antidoron: Festschrift für Jülrgen Thimme, eds. Metzler, D., Otto, B. & Muller-Wirth, C.. Karlsruhe: C.F. Muller, 3744.Google Scholar
Ghirshman, R., 1938. Fouilles de Sialk, vol. I. (Musee du Louvre — Département des antiquités orientales, Série archéologique IV.) Paris: Librairie orientaliste Paul Geuthner.Google Scholar
Gimbutas, M.A., 1982. The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe, 6500–3500 BC, Myths and Cult Images. Berkeley (CA): University of California.Google Scholar
Good, E.M., 1958. Two notes on Aqhat. Journal of Biblical Literature 77, 72–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goren, Y., Segal, I. & Bar-Yosef, O., 1993. Plaster artifacts and the interpretations of the Nahal Hemar Cave. Mitekufat Haeven (Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society) 25, 120–31.Google Scholar
Goring, E., 1991. The anthropomorphic figurines, in Lemba Archaeological Project II.2: A Ceremonial Area at Kissonerga, ed. Peltenburg, E.. (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 70:3.) Gothenburg: Paul Åströms, 3960.Google Scholar
Goring-Morris, A.N., 1991. A PPNB settlement at Kfar Hahoresh in Lower Galilee: a preliminary report of the 1991 season. Mitekufat Haeven (Journal of the Israel Prehistoric Society) 24, 77101.Google Scholar
Goring-Morris, A.N. & Gopher, A., 1983. Nahal Issaron: a Neolithic settlement in the southern Negev. Israel Exploration Journal 33, 149–62.Google Scholar
Graesser, C.F., 1972. Standing stones in ancient Palestine. The Biblical Archaeologist 35, 3463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregory, C.A., 1982. Gifts and Commodities: Studies in Political Economy. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Habermann, A.M., 1972. Genizah. Encyclopedia Judaica, vol. 7. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House, 404–7.Google Scholar
Harrison, S., 1992. Ritual as intellectual property. Man 27, 225–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hauptmann, H., 1991–92. Nevali Çori — Eine Siedlung des akeramischen Neolithikums am mittleren Euphrat. Nürnberger Bläatter zur Archäologie 8, 1533.Google Scholar
Hauptmann, H., 1993. Ein kultgebaude in Nevali Çori, in Between the Rivers and Over the Mountains, eds. Frangipane, M., Hauptmann, H., Liverani, M., Matthiae, P. & Mellink, M.. Rome: Universita di Roma ‘La Sapienza’, 3769.Google Scholar
Herzfeld, E., 1930. Die vorgeschichtlichen Töpfereien von Samarra. (Die Ausgrabungen von Samarra 5.) Berlin: Verlag von Dietrich Reimer & Ernst Vohsen.Google Scholar
Hijara, I., 1978. Three new graves at Arpachiyah. World Archaeology 10, 125–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hines, J., 1989. Ritual hoarding in migration-period Scandinavia: a review of recent interpretations. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 55, 193205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hole, F., 1977. Studies in the Archaeological History of the Deh Luran Plain: The Excavations ofChoga Sefid. (Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology 9.) Ann Arbor (MI): University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Hole, F. & Johnson, G.A., 1989–1990. Tall Umm Qseir. Archiv für Orientforschung 36–7, 339–44.Google Scholar
Holland, T.A., 1982. Figurines and miscellaneous objects, in Excavations at Jericho, vol. IV, eds. Kenyon, K.M. & Holland, T.A.. London: The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, 551–63.Google Scholar
Ippolitoni-Strika, F., 1983. Prehistoric roots: continuity in the image and rituals of the Great Goddess Cult in the Near East. Rivista degli Studi Orientali 57, 141.Google Scholar
Ippolitoni-Strika, F., 1990. A bowl from Arpachiyah and the tradition of portable shrines. Mesopotamia 25, 147–74.Google Scholar
Jacobsen, T., 1976. The Treasures of Darkness: A History of Mesopotamian Religion. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V., 1971. Notes on some Cypriote priests wearing bull masks. Harvard Theological Review 64, 261–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kempinski, A., 1989. Megiddo, A City-State and Royal Center in North Israel. (Materialien zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archaologie Band 40.) Munich: Verlag C.H. Beck.Google Scholar
Kenyon, K.M., 1953. Excavations at Jericho, 1953. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 85, 8195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenyon, K.M., 1956. Excavations at Jericho, 1956. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 88, 6782.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenyon, K.M., 1957. Digging Up Jericho. London: E. Benn.Google Scholar
Kenyon, K.M., 1974. Observations on the article ‘Five plastered skulls from Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Jericho’. Paleorient 2(1), 211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenyon, K.M., 1981. Excavations at Jericho, vol. III. London: The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Kingery, W.D., Vandiver, P.B. & Prickett, M., 1988. Beginnings of pyrotechnology. Part II: Production and use of lime and gypsum plaster in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic Near East. Journal of Field Archaeology 15, 219–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirkbride, D., 1966. Five seasons at the Pre-Pottery Neolithic village of Beidha in Jordan. Palestine Exploration Quarterly 98, 872.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knapp, A.B., 1986. Copper Production and Divine Protection: Archaeology, Ideology and Social Complexity on Bronze Age Cyprus. (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology, Pocket-Book 42.) Göteborg: Paul Åströms Förlag.Google Scholar
Kramer, S.N., 1963. The Sumerians. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Kurth, G. & Rohrer-Ertl, O., 1981. On the anthropology of the Mesolithic to Chalcolithic human remains from the Tell es-Sultan in Jericho, Jordan, in Excavations at Jericho, vol. Ill, eds. Kenyon, K.M.. London: The British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, 407–99.Google Scholar
Lamberg-Karlovsky, C.C, 1972. Tepe Yahya 1971. Mesopotamia and the Indo-Iranian borderlands. Iran 10, 89100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamberg-Karlovsky, C.C, 1980. Excavations at Tepe Yahya and the Proto-Elamite Culture. Qadmoniot 13, 4756 (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Lamberg-Karlovsky, C.C. & Beale, T.W., 1986. Excavations at Tepe Yahya, Iran, 1967–1975. The Early Periods. (American School of Prehistoric Research Bulletin 38.) Cambridge (MA): Peabody Museum, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Lebeau, M., 1983. Les objets du niveau Obeid 4 de Tell el ‘Oueili, rapport préliminaire, in Larsa et ‘Oueili. Travaux de 1978–1981, ed. Huot, J.L.. (Recherche sur les civilisations, Mémoire No. 26.) Paris, 133–40.Google Scholar
Lechevallier, M., 1978. Abou Gosh et Beisamoun, deux gisements du VIIe millénaire avant l‘ère chretienne en Israël. (Mémoires et travaux du centre de recherches préhistoriques français de Jérusalem 2.) Paris: Association Paléorient.Google Scholar
Lenzen, H. von, 1940. Die Grabungsergebnisse. Abhandlungen der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosophisch Historische Klasse 1940, 635.Google Scholar
Levy, J.E., 1982. Social and Religious Organization in Bronze Age Denmark: An Analysis of Ritual Hoard Finds. (BAR International Series 124.) Oxford: BAR.Google Scholar
Loulloupis, M., 1979. The position of the bull in prehistoric religions in Crete and Cyprus, in Acts of the International Archaeological Symposium ‘The Relations between Cyprus and Crete, c. 2000–500 BC’. Nicosia: Cyprus Department of Antiquities, 215–22.Google Scholar
Makkay, J., 1983a. Foundation sacrifices in Neolithic houses of the Carpathian Basin, in The Intellectual Expressions of Prehistoric Man: Art and Religion. Acts of the Valcamonica Symposium 1979, eds. Anati, E. et al. Capo di Ponte (Brescia): Edizioni del Centro & Milan: Jaca Book Spa, 157–67.Google Scholar
Makkay, J., 1983b. The origins of the ‘temple-economy’ as seen in the light of prehistoric evidence. Iraq 45, 16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marechal, C, 1982b. Vaisselles blanches du Proche-Orient: El Kowm (Syrie) et l‘usage du platre au néolithique. Cahiers de l‘Euphrates 3, 217–51.Google Scholar
Margalit, B., 1983. The ‘Neolithic Connexion’ of the Ugarit Poem of Aqht. Paleorient 9(2), 93–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mazar, A., 1980. Excavations at Tell Qasile. Part I: The Philistine Sanctuary: Architecture and Cult Objects. (Qedem 12, Monographs of the Institute of Archaeology.) Jerusalem: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Mazar, A., 1982. The ‘Bull Site’ — An Iron Age I open cult place. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 247, 2742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mazar, A., 1992. Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10,000‘586 BCE. (The Anchor Bible Reference Library.) New York (NY): Doubleday.Google Scholar
Mellaart, J., 1967. Çatal Hüyük, A Neolithic Town in Anatolia. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Mellaart, J., 1975. The Neolithic of the Near East. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Merpert, N.Y. & Munchaev, R.M., 1987. Earliest levels at Yarim Tepe I and Yarim Tepe II in northern Iraq. Iraq 49, 136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merpert, N.Y., Munchaev, R.M. & Bader, N.O., 1981. Investigations of the Soviet expedition in Northern Iraq 1976. Sumer 37, 2254.Google Scholar
Mesnil du Buisson, R. de, 1948. Baghouz, I'ancienne Corsote. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Molleson, T., Comerford, G. & Moore, A., 1992. A neolithic painted skull from Tell Abu Hureyra, Northern Syria. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 2(2), 230–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, A.M.T., 1985. The development of Neolithic societies in the Near East. Advances in World Archaeology 4, 169.Google Scholar
Moorey, P.R.S., 1988. The Chalcolithic hoard from Nahal Mishmar, in context. World Archaeology 20, 171–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moorey, P.R.S. & Fleming, S., 1984. Problems in the study of the anthropomorphic metal statuary from Syro–Palestine before 330 BC. Levant 16, 6790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mortensen, P., 1970. A preliminary study of the chipped stone industry from Beidha. Ada Archaeologica 41, 154.Google Scholar
Narr, K.J., 1982. Porträt oder Ahnenschädel? Boreas, Munstersche Beitrage zur Archäologie 5, 1626.Google Scholar
Negbi, O., 1970. The Hoards of Goldwork from Tell El–'Ajjul. (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 25.) Gothenburg: Paul Âströms.Google Scholar
Negbi, O., 1976. Canaanite Gods in Metal: An Archaeological Study of Ancient Syro–Palestinian Figurines. (Monograph Series 5.) Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Nissen, H.J., 1988. The Early History of the Ancient Near East 9000–2000 BC. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nissen, H.J., Muheisen, M. & Moore, H.G., 1987. Report on the first two seasons of excavations at Basta (1986–1987). Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 31, 79119.Google Scholar
Nissen, H.J., Muheisen, M. & Moore, H.G., 1991. Report on the excavations at Basta 1988. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 35, 1340.Google Scholar
Oates, J., 1966. The baked clay figurines from Tell es–Sawwan. Iraq 28, 146–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oates, J., 1978. Religion and ritual in sixth–millennium BC Mesopotamia. World Archaeology 10, 117–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oppenheim, M.F. von, 1943. Tell Halafl: Die prähistorischen Funde. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Ozbek, M., 1988. Cults des cranes humains à Çayönü. Anatolica 15, 127–37.Google Scholar
Ozbek, M., 1992. The human remains at Çayönü. American Journal of Archaeology 96, 374.Google Scholar
Pasquier, A., 1985. La Vénus de Milo et les Aphrodites du Louvre. Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux.Google Scholar
Peltenburg, E., 1989. The beginnings of religion in Cyprus, in Early Society in Cyprus, ed. Peltenburg, E.. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 108–26.Google Scholar
Peltenburg, E., 1991. Lemba Archaeological Project 11.2: A Ceremonial Area at Kissonerga. (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 70:3.) Gothenburg: Paul Âstroms.Google Scholar
Peltenburg, E., et al., 1987. Excavations at Kissonerga–Mosphilia 1986. Report of the Department of Antiquities ofCyprus 1987, 118.Google Scholar
Peltenburg, E., et al., 1988. Kissonerga–Mosphilia 1987: Ritual Deposit, Unit 1015. Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus 1988, 4352.Google Scholar
Peltenburg, E., et al., 1989. Excavations at Kissonerga–Mosphilia 1988. Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus 1989, 2940.Google Scholar
Perrot, J., 1964. Les deux premiéres campagnes de fouilles á Munhata. Syria 41, 323–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrot, J., 1966. La troisième campagne de fouilles á Munhata (1964). Syria 43, 5163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrot, J. & Ladiray, D., 1988. Les hommes de Mallaha (Eynan) Israël. (Mëmoires et travaux du centre de recherche français de Jérusalem No. 7.) Paris: Association Paléorient.Google Scholar
Philip, G., 1988. Hoards of the early and middle Bronze Ages in the Levant. World Archaeology 20, 190208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porada, E., 1965. The Art of Ancient Iran, Pre–Islamic Cultures. New York (NY): Crown Publishers.Google Scholar
Rashid, S.A., 1983. Grundungsfiguren im Iraq. (Prähistorische Bronzefunde 1/2.) Munich: C.H. Beck.Google Scholar
Redman, C.L., 1978. The Rise of Civilization. From Early Farmers to Urban Society in the Ancient Near East. San Francisco (CA): W.H. Freeman.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C., 1984. Speculations on the use of early Cycladic sculpture, in Cycladica: Studies in Memory of N.P. Goulandris, ed. Fitton, J.L.. London: The British Museum, 2430.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C., 1985. The Archaeology of Cult. The Sanctuary at Phylakopi. London: The British School of Archaeology at Athens.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. & Bahn, P., 1991. Archaeology: Theories, Methods and Practice. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Rollefson, G.O., 1983. Ritual and ceremony at Neolithic 'Ain Ghazal (Jordan). Paléorient 9(2), 2938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rollefson, G.O., 1986. Neolithic 'Ain Ghazal (Jordan): ritual and ceremony, II. Paléorient 12(1), 4552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rollefson, G.O., 1992. A Neolithic game board from 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 286, 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rollefson, G.O. & Moore, A.H., 1985. The early Neolithic village of 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan: preliminary report of the 1983 season. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research suppl. 23, 3552.Google Scholar
Rollefson, G.O. & Moore, A.H., 1986. The Neolithic village of 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan: preliminary report on the 1984 season. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research suppl. 24, 147–64.Google Scholar
Rollefson, G.O. & Moore, A.H., 1988. The Neolithic village of 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan: preliminary report on the 1985 season. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research suppl. 25, 93106.Google Scholar
Rollefson, C.O., Kafafi, Z.A. & Moore, A.H., 1991. The Neolithic village of 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan: preliminary report on the 1988 season. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research suppl. 27, 95116.Google Scholar
Samzun, A. & Bahn, P., 1983. Découverte d'une nécropole chalcolithique à Mehrgarh, Pakistan. Paléorient 9(2), 6979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scarre, C., 1991. The Cambridge Archaeological Journal. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 1(1), 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schick, T., 1988. A Neolithic cult headdress from the Nahal Hemar Cave. The Israel Museum Journal 7, 2533.Google Scholar
Schmandt–Besserat, D., 1992. Before Writing. Austin (TX): University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Sebbane, M., 1990. Early Bronze and middle Bronze I board games in Canaan and the origin of the Egyptian senet game. Eretz Israel 21, 233–8 (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Seeden, H., 1980. The Standing Armed Figurines in the Levant. (Prähistorische Bronzefunde 1(1).) Munich: C.H. Beck.Google Scholar
Silistreli, U., 1989a. Köşk Höyük'te Bulunan Kabartma Insan ve Hayvan Figürleriyle Bezeli Vazolar. Türk Tarih Kurumu Belleten 206, 361–74.Google Scholar
Silistreli, U. 1989b. Köşk Höyük Figurin ve Heykelcikleri. Turk Tarih Kurumu Belleten 207–8, 497–504.Google Scholar
Simmons, A., Boulton, A., Butler, C.R., Kafafi, Z. & Moore, G., 1990. A plaster skull from Neolithic 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan. Journal of Field Archaeology 17, 107–10.Google Scholar
Stern, E., 1982. Material Culture of the Land of the Bible in the Persian Period, 538–332 BC. Warminster: Aris & Phillips/Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society.Google Scholar
Strommenger, E., 1985. Catalogue numbers 1–19, in Ebla to Damascus. Art and Archaeology of Ancient Syria, ed. Weiss, H.. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution, 6574.Google Scholar
Strouhal, E., 1973. Five plastered skulls from Pre–Pottery Neolithic B Jericho. Anthropological study. Paléorient 1, 231–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tadmor, M., 1989. The Judean desert treasure from Nahal Mishmar: a Chalcolithic traders' hoard?, in Essays in Ancient Civilization Presented to Helen J. Kantor, eds. Leonard, A. Jr. & Williams, B.B.. (Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 47.) Chicago (IL): The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, 249–61.Google Scholar
Thimme, J., 1977. Art and Culture of the Cyclades in the Third Millennium BC. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Tubb, K.W., 1985. Preliminary report on the 'Ain Ghazal statues. Mitteilingen der Deutschen Orient–Gesellschaft zu Berlin 117, 117–34.Google Scholar
Ussishkin, D., 1970. The Syro–Hittite ritual burial of monuments. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 29, 124–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ussishkin, D., 1971. The ‘Ghassulian’ temple in Ein Gedi and the origin of the hoard from Nahal Mishmar. The Biblical Archaeologist 34, 2339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ussishkin, D., 1980. The Ghassulian shrine in Ein Gedi. Tel Aviv 7, 144.Google Scholar
Voigt, M.M., 1983. Hajji Firuz Tepe, Iran: The Neolithic Settlement. Philadelphia (PA): The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Voigt, M.M., 1991. The Goddess from Anatolia: an archaeological perspective. Oriental Rug Review 11(2), 33–9.Google Scholar
Waterbolk, H.T., 1987. Working with radiocarbon dates in Southwestern Asia, in Chronologies in the Near East: Relative Chronologies and Absolute Chronology 16,000–4000 BP, eds. Aurenche, O., Evin, J. & Hours, F.. (BAR International Series 379.) Oxford: BAR, 3959.Google Scholar
Watkins, T., 1990. The origins of house and home? World Archaeology 21, 336–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watkins, T., Baird, D. & Betts, A., 1989. Qermez Dere and the early aceramic Neolithic of N. Iraq. Paleorient 15(1), 1924.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weinstein, J.M., 1973. Foundation Deposits in Ancient Egypt. Ph.D dissertation. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Ann Arbor (MI): University Microfilms International.Google Scholar
Wickede, A. von, 1990. Prähistorische Stempelglyptik in Vorderasien. (Münchener vorderasiatische Studien 6.) Münich: Profil Verlag.Google Scholar
Woolley, L., 1955. Ur Excavations: The Early Periods, vol. IV. Philadelphia (PA): The Joint Expedition of the British Museum & the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Wright, G.R.H., 1988. The severed head in earliest Neolithic time. Journal of Prehistoric Religion 2, 51–6.Google Scholar
Yadin, Y., 1959. Excavations at Hazor 1958. Preliminary communique. Israel Exploration Journal 9, 7488.Google Scholar
Yadin, Y., 1966. Masada, Herod's Fortress and the Zealots' Last Stand. New York (NY): Random House.Google Scholar
Yakar, J., 1991. Prehistoric Anatolia. The Neolithic Transformation and The Early Chalcolithic Period. (Monograph Series No. 9.) Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Yakar, R. & Bahn, I., 1988. The modelled skulls, in Nahal Hemar Cave, eds. Bar–Yosef, O. & Alon, D.. ('Atiqot 18.) Jerusalem: Israel Department of Antiquities and Museums, 5963.Google Scholar
Yeivin, E. & Bahn, I., 1977. A fossil directeur figurine of the pottery Neolithic A. Tel Aviv 4, 194200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yogev, O., 1983. A fifth millennium BCE sanctuary in the 'Uvda Valley. Qadmoniot 16, 118–22. (Hebrew)Google Scholar
Zayadine, F., 1991. Sculpture in ancient Jordan, in Treasures from an Ancient Land: The Art of Jordan, ed. Bienkowski, P.. Merseyside: Alan Sutton, 3161.Google Scholar