Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:44:58.940Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The origins of agricultural settlement in the al-Ḥajar region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

The earliest agricultural settlements in the al-Ḥajar region of southeastern Arabia were large, well-planned centres with a sophisticated and varied architecture. Because of their close environmental relationship with the al-Ḥajar mountain range and in order to distinguish them from the late 3rd millennium buildings and tombs of the type initially discovered and excavated on the island of Umm an-Nar, I have named these first settlements the al-Ḥajar oasis towns. To date, al-Ḥajar oasis towns have been identified at the sites of al-Khashbah, Firq, Bisyā, al-Ghubra, ʿAmlā, Bāt, Hili and Bidya, but there is every reason to believe that they also existed at Ṭawī Sim and Maysar, and at locations in Wadi Jizzi, Wadi Tayin, Wadi ʿAndām and Wadi Ḥalfayn (Fig. 1).

Associated with the ruins of the al-Ḥajar oasis towns are extensive cemeteries of Beehive tombs. These well-built funerary structures, usually circular or oval in plan, have a single, paved, corbelled chamber, encompassed by one or two contiguous walls of carefully selected, skilfully laid, flattish limestones. Their beehive shape is formed by spanning the gap at the top of the corbelling with large, flat stones and piling more flat stones on top of these to form a domed superstructure (Fig. 2ab). While generally similar in appearance as a class, the Beehive tombs may nevertheless vary in size, in the number of their walls, in the shape of the entrance (which may be triangular, wedge-shaped or rectangular) and in whether features such as external plinths or kerbstones are present. It remains to be determined whether these variations have any social, regional or chronological significance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1995 

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

al-Tikriti, , Yasin, W., 1981. Reconsideration of the Late Fourth and Third Millennium B.C. in the Arabian Gulf, with special reference to the United Arab Emirates. University of Cambridge Ph.D. Thesis (unpublished).Google Scholar
Badre, L., 1991. Le Sondage Stratigraphique de Shabwa 1976–1981. Syria 68: pp. 229271. (Reprinted in Breton, J.-Fr. et al. 1992. Fouilles de Shabwa 2. Geuthner, Paris).Google Scholar
Bibby, T. G., 1965. Arabian Gulf Archaeology. Kuml 1964: pp. 108109.Google Scholar
Birks, J. S. and Letts, S. E., 1976. The ʿAwāmr: Specialist Well- and Falaj- Diggers in Northern Interior Oman. The Journal of Oman Studies 2: pp. 93100.Google Scholar
Black, J. and Green, A., 1992. Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary. British Museum Press.Google Scholar
Bowen, R. L. Jr., 1958. Irrigation in Ancient Qataban (Beihan). In Albright, W.F. (ed.) Archaeological Discoveries in South Arabia. Baltimore: pp. 4388.Google Scholar
Brunner, U., 1983. Archäologische Berichte aus dem Yemen 2. (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Ṣanʿāʾ).Google Scholar
Cleuziou, S., 1978/1979. The Second and Third Seasons of Excavations at Hili 8. Archaeology in the United Arab Emirates II/III: pp. 1929 (French), 30–45 (English).Google Scholar
Cleuziou, S., 1989. Excavations at Hili 8: a preliminary report on the 4th to 7th campaigns. Archaeology in the United Arab Emirates V: pp. 6187.Google Scholar
Cleuziou, S., Inzan, M.L. and Robin, C., 1988. Premier rapport sur la prospection des vallées nord du Wadi al-Jawf. (CNRS: Preliminary Report for internai use). Paris.Google Scholar
Costantini, L., 1984. Plant Impressions in Bronze Age Pottery from Yemen Arab Republic. East and West 34/1–3: pp. 107115.Google Scholar
Costantini, L., 1990. Ecology and Farming of the Protohistorie Communities in the Central Yemeni Highlands. In de Maigret, A. et al. The Bronze Age Culture of Ḥawlān aṭ-Tiyāl and al-Ḥadā. (ISMEO: Reports and Memoirs xxiv). Rome.Google Scholar
de Cardi, B., Bell, R. D. and Starling, N. J., 1979. Excavations at Ṭawī Silaim and Ṭawī Saʿid in the Sharqīya, 1978. The Journal of Oman Studies 5: pp. 6194.Google Scholar
de Cardi, B., Collier, S. and Doe, D. B., 1976. Excavations and Survey in Oman 1974–1975. The Journal of Oman Studies 2: pp. 101187.Google Scholar
de Cardi, B., Doe, D. B. and Roskams, S. P., 1977. Excavation and Survey in the Sharqiyah, Oman, 1976. The Journal of Oman Studies 3/1: pp. 1733.Google Scholar
de Cardi, B., Kennet, D. and Stocks, R. L., 1994. Five Thousand Years of Settlement at Khatt, UAE. Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 24: pp. 3595.Google Scholar
Delougaz, P., 1952. Pottery from the Diyala Region. (The University of Chicago, Oriental Institute Publications 63). Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
De Maigret, A., 1984. A Bronze Age for Southern Arabia. East and West 34/1–3: pp. 75106.Google Scholar
De Maigret, A., et al., 1990. The Bronze Age Culture of Ḥawlān aṭ-Tiyāl and al-Ḥadā. (ISMEO: Reports and Memoirs xxiv). Rome.Google Scholar
Doe, D. B., 1977. Gazetteer of Sites in Oman, 1976. The Journal of Oman Studies 3/1: pp. 3557.Google Scholar
During Caspers, E. C. L., 1971. New Archaeological Evidence for Maritime Trade in the Persian Gulf during the Late Protoliterate Period. East and West 21: pp. 2144.Google Scholar
Edens, C., 1988. The Rub al-Khali ‘Neolithic’ Revisited: the view from Nadqan. In Potts, D. T. (ed.), Araby the Blest. (Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications 7). Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Field, H. and Martin, R. A., 1935. Painted Pottery from Jemdet Nasr, Iraq. American Journal of Archaeology 39: pp. 310320.Google Scholar
Finkbeiner, U. and Röllig, W., (eds), 1986. Ǧamdat Nasr: Period or Regional Style? (Tübinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients Supplement 62). Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Finster, B. and Schmidt, J., 1982. Antike Grabbauten im sabäischen Gebiet. Archäologische Berichte aus dem Yemen 1: (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Ṣanʿāʾ): pp. 171175.Google Scholar
Frifelt, K., 1975. A Possible Link between the Jemdet Nasr and the Umm an-Nar Graves of Oman. The Journal of Oman Studies 1: pp. 5780.Google Scholar
Frifelt, K., 1985. Further Evidence of the Third Millennium BC Town at Bat in Oman. The Journal of Oman Studies 7: pp. 89104.Google Scholar
Frifelt, K., 1995. The Island of Umm an-Nar. Volume 2. The Third Millennium Settlement. (Jutland Archaeological Society Publications XXVI:2). Jutland Archaeological Society and The Carlsberg Foundation, Moesgård.Google Scholar
Gentelle, P., 1991. Les Irrigations antiques à Shabwa. Syria 68: pp. 554. (Reprinted in Breton, J.-Fr. et al. 1992. Fouilles de Shabwa 2. Geuthner, Paris).Google Scholar
Goff, B. L., 1963. Symbols of Prehistoric Mesopotamia. Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Groom, N., 1981. Frankincense and Myrrh. Longman.Google Scholar
Hehmeyer, I., 1991. Archäologische Berichte aus dem Yemen 5. (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Ṣanʿāʾ).Google Scholar
Hötzl, H., Jado, A., Moser, H., Rauert, W. and Zötl, J., 1984. Climatic Fluctuations in the Holocene. In Jado, A. and Zötl, J. (eds), Quarternary Period in Saudi Arabia II. Vienna, Springer-Verlag: pp. 301314.Google Scholar
Lloyd, S. and Safar, F., 1943. Tell Uqair: excavations by the Iraq Government Directorate of Antiquities in 1940 and 1941. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 2: pp. 131158.Google Scholar
Mackay, E., 1931. Report on Excavations at Jemdet Nasr, Iraq. (Field Museum of Natural History, Anthropology Memoirs 1]3). Chicago.Google Scholar
Marcolongo, B. and Palmieri, A. M., 1990. Palaeoenvironment History of Western Al-ʿArūš. In de Maigret, A. et al. The Bronze Age Culture of Ḥawlān aṭ-Tiyāl and al-Ḥadā. (ISMEO: Reports and Memoirs xxiv). Rome.Google Scholar
Martin, H. P., 1988. Fara: a Reconstruction of the Ancient Mesopotamian City of Shuruppak. Chris Martin and Associates, Birmingham.Google Scholar
Matthews, R. J., 1992. Defining the Style of the Period: Jemdet Nasr 1926–28. Iraq 54: pp. 134.Google Scholar
Matthews, R. J., Matthews, W. and McDonald, H., 1994. Excavations at Tell Brak, 1994. Iraq 56: pp. 177194.Google Scholar
Oates, D. and Oates, J., 1993. Excavations at Tell Brak 1992–93. Iraq 55: pp. 155199.Google Scholar
Orchard, Jocelyn, 1982. Finding the Ancient Sites in Southern Yemen. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 41/1, 01: pp. 121.Google Scholar
Orchard, Jocelyn and Orchard, Jeffery, Forthcoming. Archaeological Survey in the Wadi Bahlā (Jawf ) and the Wadi Mlḥ (Sharqīyya). In Orchard, Jeffery and Orchard, Jocelyn (eds), The University of Birmingham Archaeological Expedition to the Sultanate of Oman: Report No. 1.Google Scholar
Orchard, Jocelyn and Stanger, Gordon, 1994. Third Millennium Oasis Towns and Environmental Constraints on Settlement in the al-Ḥajar Region. Iraq 56: pp. 63100.Google Scholar
Philby, H. St. J. B., 1939. Sheba's Daughters. Methuen, London.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., 1986. Eastern Arabia and the Oman Peninsula during the Late Fourth and Early Third Millennium B.C. In Finkbeiner, U. and Röllig, W., (eds), 1986: pp. 121170.Google Scholar
Potts, D. T., 1990. The Arabian Gulf in Antiquity. Volume 1. From Prehistory to the Fall of the Achaemenid Empire. Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Pullar, J., 1974. Harvard Archaeological Survey in Oman, 1973:I — Flint Sites in Oman. Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 4: pp. 3348.Google Scholar
Pullar, J., 1985. A Selection of Aceramic Sites in the Sultanate of Oman. The Journal of Oman Studies 7: pp. 4987.Google Scholar
Schmidt, J., 1987. Die sabäische Wasserwirtschaft von Mārib. In Daum, Werner (ed.). 3000 Jahre Kunst und Kultur des glücklichen Arabien. Pinguin-Verlag, Innsbruck: pp. 5773.Google Scholar
Uerpmann, M., 1992. Structuring the Late Stone Age of Southeastern Arabia. Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 3/2: pp. 65109.Google Scholar
Vogt, B., 1994. Asimah. (Department of Antiquities and Museums, Ras al-Khaimah). Shell Markets Middle East, Dubai, UAE.Google Scholar
Weisgerber, G., 1981. Mehr als Kupfer in Oman. Der Anschnitt 33/5–6.Google Scholar
Wilson, K. L., 1986. Nippur: The Definition of a Mesopotamian Ǧamdat Naṣr Assemblage. In Finkbeiner, U. and Röllig, W., (eds), 1986: pp. 5989.Google Scholar
SirWoolley, Leonard, 1955. The Early Periods. (Ur Excavations 4). British Museum, London.Google Scholar