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Godin Tepe

Coordinates: 34°31′N 48°04′E / 34.517°N 48.067°E / 34.517; 48.067
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(Redirected from Seh Gabi)
Godin Tepe
Godin Tepe is located in Iran
Godin Tepe
Godin Tepe
Location in Iran
Coordinates: 34°31′00″N 48°04′00″E / 34.51667°N 48.06667°E / 34.51667; 48.06667

Godin Tepe is an archaeological site in western Iran, located in the valley of Kangavar in Kermanshah province. The importance of the site may have been due to its role as a trading outpost in the early Mesopotamian trade networks.

History

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The earliest evidence for occupation at Godin comes from Periods XI through VII, spanning the Early and Middle Chalcolithic. The site was already inhabited as early as c. 5200 BC.

Seh Gabi

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Important sites in the Near East during the Ubaid period. Seh Gabi on the right also marks the location of Godin Tepe.

Because Godin has such a deep stratigraphy, it was decided that a related site of Seh Gabi nearby should also be studied. Seh Gabi is located 6 km northeast of Godin Tepe in the Kangavar valley. The deeper levels were easier to reach there.

Originally, the excavations at Godin concentrated on levels II (ended c. 500 BC?) to V (c. 3200 BC–3000 BC), but the transition from the Neolithic to Chalcolithic was studied primarily at Seh Gabi.[1]

The earliest pottery found was of the painted pottery traditions, including J ware (Godin pre-XI) related to Halaf culture pottery.[2] The impressed Dalma ware (Dalma Tepe) (Godin XI/X) is very similar to the pottery traditions from the highlands north of Godin, especially from the area of Lake Urmia.[3]

Nadali Beig (Nad Ali Beig) is another prehistoric site located to the northwest of Godin in this Kangavar area. It also features Dalma pottery.[4][5]

Level VIII

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Ubaid pottery (Ubaid 0-1 levels) at the Oriental Institute Museum, Chicago

Level VIII is dated 4200–4000 BC, contemporary with Terminal Ubaid period. According to Mitchell Rothman, at this time, during the Late Chalcolithic 1 period (LC 1), some substantial trading networks emerged in the area for trade in metals, and in precious or semi-precious stones,

"During the time of Godin VIII, the LC 1, a real increase in the movement of these goods is evident across the region. For example, lapis lazuli, a semi-precious blue stone known to occur naturally only in the Badakshan area of northeastern Afghanistan, began to appear in LC1 sites in significant amounts (Herman 1968)."[6]

Thus, the importance of Godin Tepe may have been due to its position serving the early trade from the east, from as far as Afghanistan, and to the Mesopotamian flood plain. For example, lapis-lazuli was brought from Badakhshan in Afghanistan to Mesopotamia.

Level VI/V

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Goblet and cup, Iran, from Susa, 4th millennium BC - Ubaid period; goblet height c. 12 cm; Sèvres – Cité de la céramique, France
Archaeological plan of Godin Tepe V settlement

During the 1973 campaign, level V was excavated through a deep cut from the citadel. It was occupied during the period 3200–3000 BC. At the end of level V there was a clear gap in the settlement sequence. There were signs of fire, such as room 22 whose roof was burned. The houses were in general well-preserved and contained many artefacts, but objects made of the precious metal were lacking. The archaeological evidence support the idea the settlement was abandoned quickly, but in an orderly manner. Just prior to that, in the final phases of Level VI a large architectural feature dubbed the "Oval Enclosure" was uncovered.[7]

The pottery of level V show influences from the Uruk culture, with parallels at Susa, Uruk (IV) and Nippur[8] The typical Jemdet Nasr tall storage jars, known from Nippur, and the bevelled rim bowls of Uruk are missing however.[9]

Cuyler-Young suggested the existence of Elamite trading posts at the site during this period, established by merchants from Susa.[10]

Thirteen seal impressions and two cylinder seals were found at level V. They were obviously produced locally, as shown by the discovery of an uncarved cylinder. The seal impressions show a parallel with Uruk, Susa and other sites in Khuzestan. They were partly decorated with drill holes. Steatite served as raw material for these, sometimes treated with tempering.

At level V 38 clay tablets of the "numerical tablets" or "impressed tablets" type from the Uruk V period (c. 3500-3350 BC) were found of which 27 were preserved in one piece. They contained primarily accounts, like those discovered at contemporary Uruk period sites in western Iran, Syria, and Mesopotamia.[11]

Early wine-making

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Traces of wine and beer found in ceramics dated to c. 3100–2900 BC[12] and along with the findings at Hajji Firuz Tepe, provide evidence of the early production of those beverages in the Zagros Mountains.[13] Some Kura–Araxes culture potsherds also seem to appear in association with wine making.[14]

Level IV

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Level IV (3000–2650 BC) represents the "invasion" of the northern Yanik-culture (or "Transcaucasian Early Bronze I culture", also known as Kura–Araxes culture), well known from Yanik Tepe, Iran, near Lake Urmia. (Nevertheless, some other Kura-Araxes potsherds were found in yet deeper layers going back to late fourth millennium BC.)[15]

The only notable architectural remains of this period consist of a number of plastered hearths. T. Cuyler Young Jr. defined three main groups of pottery for Level IV. Two of these groups belong to Transcaucasian Early Bronze Age Culture. One of these groups bears two types of coarse ware tempered with coarse grit. One of these types is characterized by a grey-black burnished surface mostly with contrasting colours in the interior and exterior of the vessels. This type of coarse ware was used for producing bowls entirely. Conical bowls decorated with incised and excised designs are common; the incised designs are occasionally filled with a whitish paste. The second type of coarse ware is lighter in colour, often tan or pinkish buff. The surface of the vessels is either burnished or plain. Besides bowls there are jars with protruding rims and concave or recessed necks.[16]

The second group of Transcaucasian Pottery found at Godin Tepe was classified as Common Ware. The fabric of this group was tempered by medium-fine grit and was not well-fired. This group of pottery has the same colour range like the coarse ware. The surfaces are highly burnished though the vessels with a light interior and dark exterior are predominant. The forms consist entirely of cups, including the recessed neck types. The decoration is similar in style and technique to the previous coarse wares, but the excised designs are less common.[17]

Level III

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Vessel with painted decoration from Godin Tepe, Iran. Ca. 1450–1150 BC
Ceramic bowl with painted decoration from Godin Tepe, Iran; 1450–1150 BC

Level III (c. 2600–1500/1400 BC) shows connections with Susa and most of Luristan, and it has been suggested that it belonged to the Elamite confederacy. [18] [19] A pottery link to Lagash has been established which may affect the chronology of this layer.[20] Near 1400 BC, Godin Tepe was abandoned and was not re-occupied until c. 750 BC.

Level II

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Level II is represented by a single structure, a fortified, mud brick walled architectural complex (133 m x 55 m) occupied by a Mede chief. The columned halls are in the same architectural tradition of the later Persian halls (Pasargadae, Susa, Persepolis), first documented at Hasanlu (V). The Level II pottery (only wheel-made micaceous buff ware) have strong parallels with Iron Age sites as Bābā Jān Tepe(I), Jameh Shuran (IIa), Tepe Nush-i Jan and Pasargadae.

Godin was again abandoned during the 6th century BC, perhaps as a result or in anticipation of the expansion of Cyrus the Great (c. 550 BC) (Brown 1990) or due to the interruption of a social stratification and secondary State formation process after the fall of Assyria. [21]

Level I

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A late, Islamic shrine (c. 15th century).

Excavations

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Discovered in 1961, the site was excavated from 1965 to 1973 by a Canadian expedition headed by T. Cuyler Young Jr. and sponsored by the Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Canada).[22][23][24][25][26]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Rothman, Mitchell S.; Badler, Virginia (2011). On the High Road: The History of Godin Tepe, Iran (Chapter 2) (PDF). Mazda Publishers. p. 2. ISBN 978-1568591650. Because Godin was such a deep site and it was clear it was difficult to reach these early levels in 1971 and 1973 the Godin Project conducted excavations at Seh Gabi, a Neolithic to Chalcolithic site some six kilometers northeast of Godin in the Kangavar valley.
  2. ^ Mitchell S. Rothman and Virginia Badler, On the High Road: The History of Godin Tepe, Iran. Chapter 4. Contact and Development in Godin Period VI. Mazda Publishers, 2011 ISBN 1568591659
  3. ^ Henrickson, Elizabeth, 1989, Ceramic Evidence for Cultural Interaction between the ‘Ubaid Tradition and the Central Zagros Highlands, Western Iran. In: Upon This Foundation: the ‘Ubaid Reconsidered. Edited by E. Henrickson and I. Thuesen. 368–403. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press
  4. ^ Hanan Bahranipoor 2023, NEW RADIOCARBON DATES FOR THE MIDDLE CHALCOLITHIC PERIOD OF THE CENTRAL ZAGROS, IRAN. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2023.41
  5. ^ Regional map of archaeological sites. in Steve Renette 2022, Defining Dalma: an Incipient Mountain Identity? https://doi.org/10.4000/paleorient.1699
  6. ^ Mitchell S. Rothman and Virginia Badler, On the High Road: The History of Godin Tepe, Iran. Chapter 4. Contact and Development in Godin Period VI. Mazda Publishers, 2011 ISBN 1568591659
  7. ^ Desset, F. “AN ARCHITECTURAL PATTERN IN LATE FOURTH-MILLENNIUM BC WESTERN IRAN: A NEW LINK BETWEEN SUSA, TAL-I MALYAN, AND GODIN TEPE.” Iran, vol. 52, 2014, pp. 1–18
  8. ^ HilaryGopnik, A view from the east: The Godin VI Oval and the Uruk Sphere, Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, vol. 7, pp. 835-848, June 2016
  9. ^ V. R. Badler, A Chronology of Uruk Artifacts from Godin Tepe in Central Western Iran and Implications for the Interrelationships between the Local and Foreign Cultures." In Artefacts of Complexity: Tracking the Uruk in the Near East, edited by J. N. Postgate, pp. 79-109. Iraq Archaeological Reports 5, British School of Archaeology in Iraq, 2002
  10. ^ Philip D. Curtin, Cross-Cultural Trade in World History: Studies in Comparative World History. Cambridge University Press, 1984 ISBN 0521269318 p65
  11. ^ [1]Hallo, William W., "Godin Tepe: The Inscriptions", Yale University, 2011
  12. ^ Gately, Iain (2009). Drink: A Cultural History of Alcohol. New York: Gotham Books. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-592-40464-3.
  13. ^ R. Phillips A Short History of Wine pg 2-3 Harper Collins 2000 ISBN 0-06-621282-0
  14. ^ Rothman, Mitchell S. (2015). "Early Bronze Age migrants and ethnicity in the Middle Eastern mountain zone". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (30): 9190–9195. Bibcode:2015PNAS..112.9190R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1502220112. PMC 4522795. PMID 26080417.
  15. ^ Rothman, Mitchell S. (2015). "Early Bronze Age migrants and ethnicity in the Middle Eastern mountain zone". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (30): 9190–9195. Bibcode:2015PNAS..112.9190R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1502220112. PMC 4522795. PMID 26080417.
  16. ^ T. Cuyler Young Jr., "The Chronology of the Late Third and Second Millennia in Central Western Iran as Seen from Godin Tepe", American Journal of Archaeology vol. 73, no. 3, pp. 287–291, 1969
  17. ^ Sagona, A.G.; The Caucasian Region in the Early Bronze Age Part I–III, BAR International Series 214(i), Oxford, 1984. ISBN 0-86054-277-7
  18. ^ Robert Carl Henrickson, Godin Tepe, Godin III, and Central Western Iran: C. 2600–1500 BC, University of Toronto dissertation, 1984 (PDF available at [2] Tspace.library.utoronto.ca)
  19. ^ Robert C. Henrickson, A Regional Perspective on Godin III Cultural Development in Central Western Iran, Iran, vol. 24, pp. 1-55, 1986
  20. ^ Steve Renette, Painted Pottery from Al-Hiba: Godin Tepe III Chronology and Interactions between Ancient Lagash and Elam, Iran, vol. 53, iss. 1, pp. 49–63, 2015
  21. ^ Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg, Was There Ever a Median Empire?, pp. 197–212 in Method and Theory. Proceedings of the London 1985 Achaemenid History Workshop. (Achaemenid History III) A. Kuhrt, H. Sancisi-Weerdenburg (eds.), Leiden (1988, ISBN 978-90-6258-403-1
  22. ^ Hilary Gopnik and Mitchell S. Rothman, "On the High Road: The History of Godin Tepe", Iran, Mazda Pub, 2011, ISBN 978-1568591650
  23. ^ [3] H.Gopnik Godin Tepe TSpace Web Archive
  24. ^ T. Cuyler Young Jr, "Excavations at Godin Tepe. First Progress Report", Royal Ontario Museum Occasional Paper 17, 1969
  25. ^ T. Cuyler Young Jr and Louis D. Levine, "Excavations at Godin Tepe. Second Progress Report", Royal Ontario Museum Occasional Paper 26, 1974, ISBN 0-88854-019-1
  26. ^ [4] Archived 2010-07-21 at the Wayback Machine Harvey Weiss and T. Cuyler Young Jr, "Merchants of Susa: Godin V and plateau-lowland relations in the late Fourth Millennium BC", Iran, vol. 13, pp. 1–17, 1975

References

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  • Stuart Brown: "Media in the Achaemenid Period: The Late Iron Age in Central West Iran", in Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg & Amelie Kuhrt, Achaemenid History IV: Centre and Periphery (1990), Leinden.
  • T. Cuyler Young Jr.: "Godin Tepe", in Encyclopædia Iranica.
  • Hilary Gopnik and Mitchell S. Rothman, On the High Road: The History of Godin Tepe, Iran, Mazda Pub, 2011, ISBN 1-56859-165-9
  • Robert B. Mason and Lisa Cooper, Grog, "Petrology, and Early Transcaucasians at Godin Tepe", Iran, vol. 37, pp. 25–31, 1999
  • Matthews, R. 2013. "The power of writing: an administrative activity at Godin Tepe, Central Zagros, in the late fourth millennium BC", in C. Petrie (ed.), Ancient Iran and its Neighbours: Local Developments and Long-Range Interactions in the 4th Millennium BC, British Institute of Persian Studies, Archaeological Monographs Series, Oxbow Books, Oxford: 337–351
  • Lesley Frame, Metallurgical investigations at Godin Tepe, Iran, Part I: the metal finds, Journal of Archaeological Science, vol. 37, Iss. 7, Pages 1700–1715, 2010
  • V. R. Badler, "The Dregs of Civilization: 5000 Year-Old Wine and Beer: Residues from Godin Tepe, Iran", Bulletin of the Canadian Society for Mesopotamian, vol 35, pp. 48–56, 2000
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34°31′N 48°04′E / 34.517°N 48.067°E / 34.517; 48.067