SOFO Notes
SOFO Notes
SOFO Notes
EVOLUTION TIMELINE
DIVIDED INTO 3 PARTS
TIME LINE 1
BIG BANG to 65,000,000 Years Ago
TIME LINE 2
CENOZOIC ERA BEGINS as Age of Mammals and Birds
PALEOCENE – 65 – 57 mya
EOCENE -- 57 – 34 mya
OLIGOCENE – 34 –23 mya
MIOCENE -- 23 – 5 mya
PLIOCENE -- 5 – 2 mya
PLEISTOCENE – 2 mya to 13,000 yrs ago
HOLOCENE -- 12,000 yrs. Ago to the present
TIME LINE 3
12,000 yrs ago to the Present
Paleocene
Eocene
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Oligocene
Miocene
Pliocene
Even though HUMANS originated in the Pleistocene, they did not become a
dominant force on the Earth until the Holocene
HOMO species –
Homo Habilis
Homo Erectus – human migration out of Africa
Cultures – (primary and representative)
Oldowan
Acheulean (variants – Clactonian and Levallois)
UPPER PALEOLITHY
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HUMAN EVOLUTION
ANTHROPOIDEA –
Means resembling humans or Man like, but also includes Anthropoid Apes –
so called because they resemble humans more closely
For common understanding it is further divided into
Old World Monkeys
New World Monkeys
Hominoidea – both apes and humans and their ancestors
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HOMINOIDEA ----
the biological family of which humans are a member -- Informally known as
the Great Apes
Include 4 genera – human, chimpanzee, gorillas, orangutan
There is difference in usage for example sometimes we say –
“humans and the great apes”
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HOMINOIDEA (have lot of species) -- is further divided into –
Pongidea – (Great Apes) --Chimpanzees / Gorillas /
Orangutan
Hominidea -- (All Humans) – Commonly called Hominids
The superfamily originated in Africa
Pongids split from Hominids around 7 mya i.e. Pongidea gave rise to Hominin
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PRIMATES
HOMINID –
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The current 21st century meaning of HOMINIDS includes all the GREAT APES
including HUMANS
Only ONE Human Species exists today -- HOMO SAPIENS or Human Beings
Some of these are quite well known from their fossils – Australopithecus,
Homo Habilis, Homo Erectus, Archaic Homo Sapiens, Homo Heidelbergensis,
Neanderthals, Homo sapiens Sapiens
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CONTEMPORARIES OF DRYOPITHECUS –
OURANOPITHECUS ---- Greece and Turkey
SHIVAPITHECUS--------- radiated throughout Eurasia and Africa
RAMAPITHECUS--------- do
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BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION
GENUS AUSTRALOPITHECUS
Begin –
ARDIPITHECUS RAMIDUS ---- 4.4 mya – 4.2 mya
Remains found in AFAR RIFT, MIDDLE AWASH VALLEY, ETHIOPIA, AFRICA
Site – Aramis
Said to be last common ancestor shared by humans and chimpanzees
Lineage between Apes and Humans may have diverged from Ardipithecus
Ramidus in Africa
Its traits are closer to humans
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FURTHER DIVISION–
Genus AUSTRALOPITHECUS AND Genus HOMO
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AUSTRALOPITHECUS FIRST EVOLVED –
Eastern, North – Central & South Africa --
Australopithecus Amanensis -- 4.2 – 3.8 mya (Lake Turkana, Kenya/
Ethiopia) --
Australopithecus Afrensis -- 3.7 – 3 mya ( Laetoli, Tanzania and Hadar,
Ethiopia)
Australopithecus Africanus -- 3.6 – 2 mya (Taung, South Africa)
Australopithecus Robustus -- 2.3 – 1.2 mya ( Swartkrans, South Africa)
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Lived in CAVES / CAVE SHELTERS near to water bodies and predictable food
supply
Lived – in small group formations – reflective from fossil findings
TOOL MAKING – First Handyman of Pre - history – the tool maker
Primitive stone tools found alongside fossils in Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania) and
Lake Turkana (Kenya)
Caves / Cave Shelters -- used as “Living Floors” concentrated with Oldowan
tools and butchered bones -- found at Lake Turkana, (Kenya) Olduvai Gorge
(Tanzania)
TOOLS -- Made from Pebbles – used as raw material available as Quartz /
Quartzite / Basalt – all tough stones – heavy tools – sites Lake Turkana
(Kenya) and Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania)
These had a centre i.e. CORE of the tool – chipped in two directions
Tool Types – simple and utilitarian -- Multipurpose Tools – Choppers / Crude
Scrapers / Sharp Edged Flakes / Cutting Tools
multipurpose tool used for digging up plant roots, scraping animal skin,
carcasses, butchering bones, cutting wood – could be used as core tool,
chopper or as a primitive disc -- commonly found form ----- – other tools
choppers / flake tools / retouched flakes / crude points / scrapers
TRANSITION
SUCCESSORS TO HOMO ERECTUS – BETWEEN 300,000 to 250,000 yrs ago
SWANSCOMBE IN ENGLAND
AND
STEINHEIM IN GERMANY
ARCHAIC HOMO SAPIENS IN AFRICA
PRE – DATES – NEANDERTHALS
STEINHEIM
Another finding of a skull in 1933 at Steinheim, Germany, has helped to
clarify the position of Swanscombe findings – Steinheim finding is of a
complete skull probably of a woman whose brain size place her between
Homo Erectus and Homo Sapiens
The cranial capacity is between 1150 and 1175 cc but its teeth and other
parts are similar to modern man – for example all of the molar teeth are
small -- because of these two features Steinheim woman is termed as a sub –
species of Home Sapiens – Homo Sapiens Steinheimensis – transition from
Homo Erectus to Homo Erectus had begun somewhere between 300,000 to
250,000 yrs ago
Refers to recent African origins of modern humans --- the dominant view
today is that Archaic Humans usually thought to have been contemporary to
Homo Heidelbergensis – the lineage leads to Homo Sapiens in Africa and to
Neanderthals in Europe – Sometimes Heidelbergensis is seen as exclusively
European lineage giving rise to Neanderthals -- but developed from Homo
Erectus
In Africa Archaic Homo Sapiens / Heidelbergensis are seen as part of a
gradual evolutionary mosaic – like transition into earliest Homo Sapiens
around 200,000 yrs ago
In Africa fossil discovered at the OMO Kibish (Ethiopia) / Irhoud in Morocco /
Herto at Middle Awash region depict the transition / Fossil find show that
Archaic Homo Sapiens skull had a high round skull similar to Homo Sapiens –
and is dated to about 195,000 yrs ago
TOOL FINDINGS – Flint Bifaces – Wooden Spears
The fossil remains indicate that Archaic Homo Sapiens is biologically similar
to Homo Heidelbergensis whose lineage in Europe leads to Neanderthals
Defined mainly as Hunter – Gatherers BUT also caught Birds and Fish
BURIALS – In the absence of written records pre – history provides other
means of documentation – Burials are a material record, but, it’s a record of
a behaviour that is deeply meaningful – Burials allow experts / scholars to
trace the emergence of beliefs / values and other complex ideas – that
appear to be uniquely human
Neanderthal Burials are characterised by much greater diversity of mortuary
behaviour – they buried both humans and animals – Some Excavated Sites
include LA CHAPELLE / LA FERRASSIE (France) – Patterns -- Depicting
ritualistic behaviour – Deposited material in graves ---
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UPPER PALEOLITHIC
HOMO SAPIENS SAPIENS – 45,000 onwards
THE ONLY LIVING MEMBERS OF GENUS HOMO
WHERE and WHEN DID THEY ORIGINATE – Great Debate and the question
remains one of the great controversies of world pre – history.
VITAL TRANSITION – Most people believe that Homo Erectus evolved into
Homo Sapiens – Few fossil remains to document this
Traditionally Debate on the origins of Homo Sapiens Sapien – two primary
models exist over which other modern theories emerged
1) Candelabra Model – that Homo Erectus populations evolved
independently – first to archaic Homo Sapiens and then to fully
modern humans in Africa --- but have also absorbed, geographically
variable Homo Sapiens from other regions -- Sometimes also called the
Neanderthal Phase – Argues for multiregional origins of Homo Sapiens
Sapien and logically no migration out of Africa – that H.S. evolved
separately in Africa / Europe / Asia without gene flow among regions
2) Noah’s Ark Model – that Homo Sapiens Sapien evolved evolved in
Africa – then spread out of Africa to other parts of the world
Modern Models of the 2 extremes --
1) Assimilation Model – Multiregional model – put parallel lines of
evolution in each inhabited region of Africa / Europe / Asia – by
interbreeding across the globe – resulting in the assimilation of genes
that persist in modern humans
2) Replacement Model – asserts that there was a single origin of Homo
Sapiens in Africa and that these anatomically modern humans
migrated out of Africa and replaced all other lesser evolved humans
throughout Europe / Asia – a slow and continuous process
Recent Fossil Remains testify to Africa as the cradle of human evolution –
that Modern Humans evolved from Archaic Humans primarily in Africa --
Middle Awash Valley, Ethiopia / Omo I site fossil from Ethiopia, 195,000 yrs
ago show beginnings of skull changes including rounded skull and possibly a
projecting chin / Herto site in Middle Awash region, Ethiopia, 160,000 yrs ago
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Other survival strategies – Storage of food – Gordon Childe cites the example
of dried Fish – information on this is scanty
TOOL TECHNOLOGIES -- H.S.S. – Adapted and Modified tool making
techniques – adapted to both Acheulean and Clactonian / Levallois
techniques of stone working -- H.S.S. – pre - shaped Core of the stone in
Acheulean form --- In Levallois / Clactonian technique – H.S.S. produced
Broad Flat Flakes / Large Blades / Triangular Points – Also discovered
Mousterian Flakes / Points / Scrapers / Spears in the H.S.S. sites – But they
also experimented with more economical flaking methods
Many Evolutionary Paths to Upper Paleolithic technology – Far more
advanced than anything made by their predecessors -- H.S.S. Developed
Distinct Tool Making Techniques – Sharpness of tools achieved through
developing TRIMMING TECHNIQUE – Trimmed Flakes were also POLISHED i.e.
sharpened with wood – Use of PUNCHES AND HAMMER to produce finer
blades – Also PERCUSSION TECHNIQUE used to produce Blades – Sites in Et –
Tabun and Megharat – El – Wad (Israel) / Shanidar Caves (Iraq) are termed as
sites that document tool making from Percussion technique – In Later years
of Upper Paleolithic, Such tools were mounted on Wooden Handles –
Some of the tools were COMPOSITE TOOLS – tools made of more than one
component – Best example is H.S.S. Spear – It was made of a Point, Shaft and
a Binding that tightened the head of the Spear – then DISC appears as a
distinct tool – Earlier man used Core Tools as Disc – H.S.S. produced Disc by
removing flakes of many sizes and the Core was given a Round shape – Tools
also became Specialised i.e. used for special tasks such as wood working or in
hunting or in the skinning of the Hides –
Alongside Coarser tools continue to exist --- i.e. Crude Tools with untrimmed
edges – these have survived – used for cutting or scraping
Emphasis on the working of Bones and Antlers – More significantly in the
creation of ornamentation – show skilful working of antler / bone / stones /
even seeds
OTHER SOCIO - CULTURAL NORMS – As Complexities begin to take shape
BURIALS – excavated from caves and rock shelters even camp sites – Patterns
-– Ceremonial Burials – Burial Rituals can be traced continuously
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CAVE PAINTINGS – Nearly 200 caves bearing wall paintings and engravings
have been found in South – West Europe – ALTAMIRA CAVES, Spain and
LASCAUX CAVES, France – ENGRAVED ART OBJECTS have also been found –
TYPES OF PAINTINGS – Naturalistic images of animals – Famous Great Hall of
the Bulls / sometimes human like forms / Tent like Symbols / Spaghetti like
Patterns / Images as Dots and Signs -- Not merely ART FOR ARTS SAKE –
meanings attached
COMPLEX CULTURES – Chatelperronians , France / Aurignacians, Central
Europe, Crimea, the Balkans / Gravettians, France, England and Spain /
Solutrians, Megdalanians in Western Europe /
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MESOLITHIC
A Period of TRANSITION between Paleolithic and Neolithic
Mesolithic people continued with Paleolithic tools and also created their own
which were then found to be in use by the Neolithic people
Survival ensured through a MIX of Hunting and Gathering Economy but the
Mesolithic people had learnt to separate edible plants by pulling out weeds
and through the performance of a process which is termed as ‘Artificial
Selection’…This is considered an anti – thesis of the ‘Natural Selection’ that we
studied throughout much of Paleolithic.
Artificial Selection is a technical term / expression which describes breeding of
plants and animals in the words of Mareck Zvelibil.
Mesolithic – the term first introduced by John Lubbock in Pre – Historic Times
(1865) – the term was used by Gordon Childe in his Dawn of Europe and more
recently the term/expression/phenomenon has been popularised by Graham
Clark in World Prehistory in New Perspective
The Beginning of Mesolithic and its end vary by geographical regions – the
term is generally applied to the developments in Northern Europe – however,
it is also used for the Levant region where the term is referred to as
Epipaleolithic – i.e. Final Paleolithic Period – Levant includes – Lebanon, Israel,
Palestine, Syria, Jordon, Parts of Iraq/Iran – the regions of Northern Nile Delta
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18000 to 10,000 B.C. --- The Kebarran people are said to have been a highly
mobile nomadic people who were Hunters and Gatherers but they are said to
have made use of MICROLITHIC TOOLs – like the Geometric Trapeze /
Rectangular Points / and Projectile Weapons like Bows are found in the
excavated sites of these caves but NO specialised Grinders or Pounders of the
later Neolithic are found – Kebarran People are thought to have been ancestral
to the later Natufian Culture of the Levant Region.
The Mesolithic II period is also called Natufian Culture first studied at Wady –
en – Natuf ( the Natufian developed in the same region as the earlier Kebarran
culture / earliest evidence of Natufian culture emerged from Shuqba Caves
West Jordon/ Palestine) – the earliest date for Natufian Culture is stipulated to
be 11, 140 to 8ooo B.C.—This period is characterised by early rise of
agriculture that would later merge into Neolithic period – This culture is
represented by scores of sites in a wide strip of land running from Turkey to
the Nile Delta – the flora of the Levant during this period was parkland and
woodland, it was not the dry – barren landscape of today.
The Natufian Culture is said to have been Unusual in that it was semi
sedentary or can also be classified as sedentary in some parts – before the
introduction of agriculture in the Neolithic period i.e. a sign of transition – For
at least part of the year the Natufian people lived in communities – Their
largest communities are called ‘Camps’ housing Mesolithic people found at the
early Ain – Mallaha and Wadi Hammeh 27 site.
The Natufian people lived in communities made up of what has been defined
as houses, built of material identified as stone, wood and perhaps of brush –
no traces of the use of mud bricks have been found as in the early pre –
pottery Neolithic period --made in shapes that are understood to be circular
semi – subterranean houses – with a diameter between 3 and 6 meters
excavated – built partially or completely below the ground surface – some of
these are said to be quite large in size. They are also said to have built an
earliest shrine identified from the site of Gobekli Tepe.
The Natufians buried their dead in special places that have been termed as
cemeteries -- An important point to note is that Burials are located in the
settlements, commonly in pits found in abandoned houses. We are told that
sometimes the graves are found covered with limestone slabs – There are
found both single and multiple burials –
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Burials are also found with grave goods including in the shape of stone bowls
and dentalium shell – the important point to note is that Natufian burials show
clear signs of social ranking in the manner in which corpses have been dug out
– from the cemeteries – for example one common and constantly recurring
burial good is the symbolic dentilium shell but it is confined to a few burials –
sometimes the skulls are decorated with shell beads -- At the same time
elaborate grave goods such as stone bowls are found in some burials – other
goods exist like beads / teeth of deer / bones / stones. There are also found
ornaments like pendants / necklaces / even bracelets -- These findings suggest
that some form of social differences must have been practiced by the Natufian
people – In some cases excavators have found that few burials in which long
bones and skulls were missing – This aspect of Natufian burials have parallels
with Neolithic culture --
Scholars attribute the development of a more complex hunter – gatherer way
of life in this area that must have helped the Natufian to pre – adapt to plant
crops. The people were hunting gazelle, deer, horse, cattle and wild boar. But
Natufian artifacts also include Grinding Stones used to process seeds, dried
meats and fish for food and red ochre for ritual practices.
Flint and Bone tools and Dentalium Shell ornaments are also part of Natufian
assemblage or middens.
Specific tools created for harvesting of various crops are termed as Stone
Sickles.
Large Middens are known as Natufian sites --
Natufian groups occupied a range of sites including caves, some larger
settlements with permanent structures, food storage facilities and cemeteries
which as argued show some degree of social differentiation.
SPECIFICITIES – It is said that Natufian people retained a mobile form of life
and along with establishing semi - sedentary and sedentary communities –
while some smaller Natufian settlements have been interpreted as camps –
Material Culture includes – geometric microliths, bone points, spear tips, fish
hooks along with -- sickle blades, grind - stones, mortars suggesting harvesting
of cereals particularly in the Levant region.
There is, however, no direct evidence of “deliberate” planting / cultivation of
crops nor of cereals – nor for domestication of livestock like cattle. Though
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some scholars say that there is some evidence for cultivation of Rye in the
Levant, and it is argued that some scarce evidence indicates that the Natufian
people may have cultivated wild cereal like barley and wheat, but this is not
directly evidenced.
According to many scholars the line between tending of wild crops and
agricultural crops is a very fuzzy one. However, most scholars do believe that
cultivation may have been a series of experiments rather than one time
decision.
Natufian people lived by hunting -- gazelle being the main prey as evidenced by
animal bones excavated, and, remains of wild cereals, almonds, pistachios
show signs of continuation of gathering form of subsistence as well.
Representative sites --
Wadi Hammeh 27 –
The human skeletal remains from this site represent a hunter – gatherer
community – in the Jordon Valley estimated to have existed approximately
some 12000 years ago – the site is said to have been distributed over 2000
square meters where Natufian people lived – It’s a settlement, according to
some scholars, with a layout of a village – i.e. it stood at the threshold of a
major transformation of human society –
Thousands of artifacts have been recovered that show Natufian activities --the
site contains debris of food remains i.e. middens – along with Bits of collapsed
structures -- found to show that the site consisted of curvilinear stone huts –
Also are found -- circular shaped hearths located within the structures and
showing charcoal fragments --
The site has yielded tools made of flint / basalt and limestone –
The house structures are underlain with burials – now termed as primary and
secondary burials – including multiple burials excavated in some cases --
containing at least 5 individuals –
Ain – Mallaha –
This is a Natufian Settlement built and settled approximately around 9000
years ago – the site is located in northern Israel and is an area surrounded by
hills and located by an ancient lake – lake Huleh – it is said that at the time of
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its earliest habitation the area was heavily forested in oak, almond and
pistachio trees – the inhabitants are known to have eaten gazelle, deer, wild
boar, tortoise and fish — A semi – sedentary way of life may have been
possible by abundant resource availability – i.e. nomadic way of life was
accompanied by some kind of settlement –
The Ain – Mallaha settlement is said to have been inhabited in 3 phases – the
first 2 phases had large stone - built structures with smaller ones in the 3rd
phase – Traces of Postholes have been identified covering an area over 1000
square mtrs –
The Ain Mallaha site is said to have housed an estimated 100 – 150 people –
settled in approximately 50 huts – most of them semi – circular in shape and
approximately 2.5 to 9 meters in diameter – these are generally termed as
Gobular huts -- Pits identified as storage facility were found in individual huts –
as well as in areas identified as common compounds – findings show an
increase need of containers -- it is conjectured that these may have been
shared --
The Ain – Mallaha Natufian people had a microlithic industry based on short
blades and bladelets – tools such as flint bladed sickles for harvesting and
mortars for grinding stones have been excavated – It is said that people made
tools with micro – burin technique – There also existed geometric microliths
like triangles, also backed blades – A typical arrowhead made from regular
blade was also common to the culture – Also found were heavy ground stone -
- bowl mortars –
Other findings show that there was a rich bone industry – including fish hooks
– Ostrich shell containers have also been found –
Stone and bone were worked into ornaments as well
This archaeological site contains one of the earliest evidences of dog
domestication – remains in a burial of an elderly human being with a 4 – 5
months old puppy have been excavated – perhaps one of the first animal to be
domesticated.
Burials -- humans were found buried in other caves – with complex burial
customs – and practices which some scholars term as vague and others as
inhuman – Burials show corpses with their heads sandwiched between two
stones – and the joints of their legs was covered with large stones – as if to
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ensure that the deceased won’t rise from the grave – but more logically, as
scholars assert, to make the corpse swallow into the ground with the weight of
stones – The process could have taken days or weeks -- also multiple burials
are excavated in some cases -- containing at least 5 individuals – these may be
termed as family burials as excavations have yielded burials with several
corpses very tightly packed together -- Also found are red and yellow ochre
pigments in the graves— sprinkled on top of the corpses.
Natufian was a culture living from hunting – gathering – fishing, including the
use of wild cereals –
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Northern Europe --
There were regional variants of the Mesolithic – in the post – glacial period as
Mesolithic people adapted to the warmer post – glacial times – there were
marked changes as Mesolithic people appeared on the European continent –
The Mesolithic people appeared to have adapted to the scheduling of seasonal
activities and accommodated surviving strategies – Food quest was intensified
and there was greater sedentism that made people to pre – adapt to later
Neolithic characteristics.
For our purposes European Mesolithic is divided into 3 broad representative
divisions – approximately between 9500 to 6600 yrs ago--
Maglemose Culture
Ertebolle Culture
Kongemose Culture
Maglemose Culture – A transitional Period having characteristics of both
Paleolithic and Neolithic.
In Europe this was the time of seasonal exploitation of Forests, lakes and water
streams – Their subsistence activity combined hunting with foraging (searching
for food provisions gathering nuts etc) and Fishing – During this period people
are said to have lived in large huts with bark and wooden floors --
Maglemose made extensive use of Microlithic Industry -- with raw materials
like Bones and Antlers for Tools – Making and using Fishing Hooks –Traps for
Birds – Their tools are also classified as asymmetrical and irregular Micro
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Burins – also continued the use of heavy stone tools and carpenter’s
assemblage –
Made use of Canoes – indicative of increased Navigation
Maglemose people trapped Birds and did Fishing –
In the Winters – they hunted more as in the cold season Fishing became less
important – Hunted such animals as red deer / wild Ox / Pigs
After the winters the subsistence cycle included – bands of people gathering
hazelnuts and other edible plant foods –
Ertebolle Culture –
Is said to have been a continuation of Maglemosian Culture BUT with an
emphasis on Coastal Settlements – all the year round – with people living off
very wide range of food resources – waterfowl, shellfish and sea mammals –
and both shallow and deep - water fish --
Inhabited areas where Deep water fishing was found –
Made use of Mesolithic Flints in Trapezoidal forms – Adzes were more popular
than Axes – used Crude Barbed Bone Points – But geometric tools generally
died out according to scholars –
The period is characterised by the use of new Hunting and Fishing Technique –
as both shallow and deep - water Sea Fish remains are found in their
assemblage – shell fish / sea mammals like seals -- and Hunting of Migratory
Birds is said to have been a common characteristic – along with Forest animals-
Also include dug – out canoes up - to 10 meters long
Ertebolle Burial cemeteries have been found – with bodies placed in various
positions, with dog remains along with human – Men and Women have been
found deposited with different grave goods – While red deer antlers are found
in the graves of older people we are also told that in few Ertebolle cemeteries
corpses have evidence of projectile points found in their ribs.
Kongemose Culture –
People lived near to Lakes and Bays – occupied whole the year round --
exploiting Marine and Terrestrial animals –
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SHANIDAR CAVES -- ZAVI CHEMI SHANIDAR – Earliest examples of sheep domestication comes from
these sites in North West Iraq.
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BELT CAVES -- Similar importance of animal domestication accorded. Here very primitive herdsmen
wandered with flocks of goat. No grain production was associated with them. They raised no crops,
but used Microlith tools.
It appears that once domestication of animals was well advanced, the raising of sheep and goat
spread rapidly.
JERICHO – I and II – is an earliest example of domesticated grain cultivation in the Levant / West asia
region. Founded near to a perennial spring, the settlement was surprisingly large and an attractive
place for settlement. It is said to have housed approximately 3000 people – Jericho properly term as
the oldest town of antiquity. People hunted gazelle, wild cattle and boar but there was emphasis on
their domestication, people were already growing emmer wheat and barley. However, their tool
technology differed from later villages. No hoes have been found but it is said that people used
digging sticks and perforated stones for harvesting purposes. Sickle blades and primitive querns have
been found which testify to the importance of agriculture.
Jericho I has oldest known houses, as wattle and daub round huts built from sun – dried bricks flat at
the bottom and curving at the higher edges and plastered together with mortar as gluing agent. At
Jericho II there is change in cultural tradition with rectangular houses with elaborate courtyard plans
with plastered floors, with impressions of mats made of reeds. Hearths were located within and
outside houses.
Jericho had a surrounding masonry wall built of stone boulders packed together, its ruins still
standing in the west direction. A unique feature is a round tower in the centre just inside the wall
having internal staircase with 20 steps. The tower was possibly a community centre or a flood
preventive. These structure is unique to Jericho, their construction must have required collective
community efforts.
JARMO – A cluster of 25 houses, built of tauf walls and sun – dried mud roofs built in rectangular
shape, with multi – rooms sometimes set on stone foundations. Jarmo houses had complex division
of rooms with hearths in one corner and chimneys and ovens in another corner. In one particular
house there were 7 chambers, may have served as community storage. Jarmo is one of the earliest
food production sites, with village people relying on the production of emmer and einkorn wheat,
barley, lentils reflecting that people practiced crop rotation. Remains of domesticated animals have
been dug out – ox, sheep, goat, pig and perhaps dog. Discovery of querns, flint sickle blades, cutters
and ground stone axes made from obsidian indicate advances in agricultural tool technology.
ABU HUREYRA - at the foothills of western Mesopotamia show signs of the beginning of agriculture
with the discovery of sickles, heavy grinding stones, remains of cereals along with wild rye and lentils
suggests that people practised crop rotation. Also discovered are remains of sheep and goats.
Domestic buildings excavated are rectilinear in shape made of mud bricks and plastered floors
showing entrance from doorway. Houses had narrow trains between them.
TELL HASSUNA – Numerous bones of domesticated animals and greater reliance on cereal
cultivation. Material remains include ovens, pits for grain storage, grinding stones to process wheat
and barley. Houses were made from coarse kneaded clay generally rectangular in shape, made of
tauf walls but lacking any layout plan, having several rooms adjoining courtyard reflective of its use
for harvesting or winnowing purposes. Storage was provided with sunken pit jars.
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SIALK – Like Jericho found near to a water stream attracting animals and providing water for
irrigating small plots of fields. Wheat, barley, lentil and flax were grown. People also spun some
undetermined fibre and hunted animals with slings and darts.
CATAL HAYUK – People were skilled in agriculture and domesticated cattle and sheep although
hunting animals like wild cattle, wolves and leopards. Comprised numerous small rectangular flat
roofed houses built of sun – dried bricks. Peculiar features – entrance to the houses was through
roof tops from holes made in the roofs. Houses were plastered from inside with murals showing
animal and human figures. Hearths and plastered ovens have been found inside the houses.
AIN GHAZAL – Cultivated wheat, barley and legumes and kept domesticated goat.
Cult – Ritualistic Objects – Material remains document cult objects like the Mother Godddess,
usually thought of a fertility cult – for agriculture and for women regenerative powers. Female
statuettes, sometimes shown as pregnant women and sometimes seated, made of unbaked clay
have been found at Jericho, Jarmo, Hassuna, Sialk, Catal Hayuk. Sometimes worship of male deity
also emerged, symbolised by Bull worship at Catal Hayuk where bull heads mounted on particular
house walls are identified. Such buildings are termed as shrines. Most remarkable cult objects found
are the embellished skulls found at Jericho site hinting that a human head cult must have been
established.
Burials have been excavated at most sites below the house floors, under the house foundations, and
in between walls. At Jericho the dead were carefully buried under the house floors. At Jarmo single
burials are quite uniform and simplistic. At Abu Hureyra, the dead are buried in shallow pits beneath
the floors of the houses, some of them in crouched position and sometimes with the skull removed
and, in some cases, red colour plastered on the corpses. At Catal Hayuk the dead were buried inside
the houses, under the rooms, in a foetal position.
Pottery was another achievement of the Neolithic people in West Asia, but it was not same
everywhere. The pottery was of simple design and was treated with vegetable solvent. Both Jericho
and Jarmo were pre – pottery settlements, though people at these sites had carved out stone bowls
and dishes. But the craft was progressed beyond the experimental stage in the distinctive pottery
cultures of Hassuna, Sialk, Catal Hayuk in West Asia. Hassunian pottery was characterised by the use
of reed on cream coloured clay, which had seals stamped on them, indicating perhaps ownership. At
Sialk, pottery was painted with linear design in dark colour on a background that turned pale pink
after firing. Catal hayuk pottery is known for unpainted, unglazed and very simple bag – shaped
form, possibly made in Kilns.
Yet another thrust of Neolithic in West Asia was rooted in the exchange of goods, what might be
called as a trading activity. Villages were generally self - sufficient, growing their own food and
making essential tools and implements, from locally available materials. But people did acquire
resources that did not exist or were not found in immediate vicinity – obsidian stone for example. It
had to be obtained from far. Obsidian trade was carried on in many Neolithic sites, situated between
Anatolia and Mesopotamia. Jericho people occasionally used obsidian, Abu Hureyra farmers were
using it on a regular basis. Catal Hayuk was situated in the thick of obsidian resources. Obsidian was
also carried westward. Exchange was in other goods as well. At Catal Hayuk marine shells were
brought in from the Mediterranean shores. Precious stones like jade, turquoise and other exotic
items moved from village to village. At Sialk, small ornaments and amulets made from semi -
precious stones were transported for almost 100 miles. At Jericho sea – shells obtained from the
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Mediterranean have been found. Jarmo records ornamental shells brought in from the Persian Gulf.
Neolithic people must have frequented with each other.
Neolithic art existed. Mother Goddess statues existed so also animal statues which have been found
scattered over different sites. In Catal Hayuk, one of the houses a mural is themed as a ‘deer hunt’.
________________________________________________________________________________
EUROPE –
________________________________________________________________
Sense of UNITY
Egypt – Essentially ONE nation
Centralised Rule/ Pharaoh and the Tiara – the Throne --Uniting the Two
lands— Sense of Stability through River NILE –
6 Periods – The Archaic Period (early dynastic period)/ The Old Kingdom/ The
1st intermediate Period/ the Middle kingdom/ the 2nd intermediate period/ the
New Empire
Course covers only 1st TWO PERIODS till the OLD KINGDOM – beginnings to be
made from Pre – dynastic period when WRITING first emerged
PRE-DYNASTIC PERIOD – 4 Separate Phases—Known through ART and
ARCHITECTURE
1. TASIANS --
2. The BADARIAN phase apprx. 5500-4000 BCE—site – El Badri and
Hammamia site/ also Fayum
3. The AMRATIAN or NAQADA I Phase – 4500 – 3500 BCE – Naqada site –
Hierakonpolis cemetery/ Merimde/ El Omari
4. The GERZEAN phase – 3500 – 3100 BCE -- Known from Darb El Gerza –
NAQADA II – temple at Hierakonpolis – Initiation of artificial irrigation –
made copper objects – Kilns – Evidence of increasing craft specialisation
as vessels began to be made of clay processed in calcium carbonate
which was found in abundance in the limestone hills bordering river Nile
– Also ledge handled Jars and several Pots decorated in red paint and
various patterns such as Sacred Boats/ Trees/ Birds/ Animals were made
of the same clay type.
5. In the Gerzean Period --these forms became standardised and are
symbols not only of cultural uniformity but also mass production done at
Abydos/ Heirakonpolis – indicators of wider market for these products---
Alongside fancy pottery, Copper Artifacts became much more common -
-- From this metal many items were now cast –
Daggers/knives/adzes/axes/spearheads/ harpoons/ fish hooks/
needles/finger rings/small tools/ ornaments
Gold was also worked during this period—decorations were now more
fine and designs more formally arranged –
Certain highly skilled craftsmen now produced very sharp knives/ slate
palettes in the shape of birds/fish/animals
34
All this suggests rapid artistic and technological advancement and also
that there was a section of society that was interested in possessing
such goods – Evolution of Elites is dated from Gerzean period—
Luxury goods may have been manufactured especially for Funerary
Purposes – highly developed cults emphasisng Funerary offereings may
have emphasised and stimulated Specialised Craft Production –
Excavations of cemeteries show Naqada II as an important centre of
Population -- Hierakonpolis had Sattelite Villages – Naqada and
Hierakonpolis were centres of Gods – SET and HORUS --
Farming became the mainstay of the peasant masses – Increased food
production – adoption of more sedentary way of life – expansion of
Trade – Trade Goods – metal tools and weapons especially knives and
daggers mounted on wooden handles – creation of artificial substance
like the Gesso and Fayence moulded into beads and pendants –
Regular use of copper meant contact with regions outside the Nile Valley
proper – Emergence of Cross- Desert Trade Routes – Also between
Palestine and Egypt – with South-Western Asia -- Commodities in
demand – Gold/ Chianti Flasks/ Ginger Jars/ Wavy Handled Jars/
Wealth creation – distributed unevenly –
Efforts to control trade may have led to CENTRALISED control and led to
the creation of small STATES – by about 5000 yrs ago the whole Egypt
had been unified --
Nomes –
Fortified Urban Centres—
Stratified Society— notion of hierarchy developed through a study of tombs/
Graves/ Burials— Mortuary Architecture—Hierakonpolis/ Naqada/ Abydos
Bureaucracy – officialdom – Adj Mer
Agricultural season – Floods/ Germination/ Harvest
New economic Organisation—emergence
Urban Cult Centres – Goddess Udjo with Bubastis and Goddess Nekhbet with
Sais
Increase in Trade – carried in the name of the King
Horus –
Pharaoh – the Sole Force –
Kings -- Scorpion – Ka and Aha
Central Government – Tribute and Taxation – Hereditary officials –
Dispersed villages – peasant farmers producing surplus
OLD KINGDOM -- 3rd to 6th dynasty 2649 – 2150 BCE
Politically stable period – centralised Govt.
3rd Dynasty -- Begins with King (Pharaoh) Djoser -- although some scholars
name Sanakht but for this evidence if lacking
Had large size Mastabas at Memphis but Djoser had a second mightier
monument built at Saqqaraha – the Step Pyramid, the first pyramid,
surrounded by a complex of temples – meant for funerary services
Nature of State – Royal Absolutism with King at the centre of rule – the Power
of the king was unlimited
No separation of Religious and Political life – with the Pharaoh being the chief
Priest – gave donations to the temples – Royal State played a role in
maintenance of temples
37
north of the present day Cairo, on the west bank of river Nile. He also built his
pyramid at Saqqarah which is smaller than the pyramids of the 4 th dynasty
perhaps indicating that the worship of RE God had eclipsed some of the pre –
eminence of the Pharaoh. Also the royal control of administration slackened
under USERKEF as provincial officials grew in importance, particularly in upper
Egypt. The pyramids of 5th dynasty are smaller and less solidly constructed.
At least 3 kings of the dynasty built magnificent temples dedicated to the Sun
God RE. These have been found at Sahure site.
Besides, the scenes on the temples reveal warlike enterprises and expeditions
of the kings both by sea and land i.e. depiction of the rule through conquests
which are chronicled. This was a changed focus from earlier dynasties which
mainly chronicled matters of religious importance i.e. funerary details on
stones.
In fact the latest pyramid belonging to the 5th dynasty and built at Saqqarah of
the king Unas is inscribed with long Pyramid Texts. The chief events recorded
on the stones are gifts and endowments to the temples. Evidently priestly
influence was strong at the Egyptian court and the Pyramid Texts document
the redistribution of goods between the royal palace, the temples and the
officials.
The tales of this dynasty have also been written on “papyrus”.
RE worship was the official religion of the Egyptian state but at the common
people’s level religious beliefs and practices exhibited great diversity. This was
the popular religion of Egyptians.
Primitive beliefs persisted as people worshiped Wepwamet, the wolf god,
Khentiamentio, the jackal god, Sobek, the crocodile god as survivals of ancient
totems. Over the centuries Egyptian popular religion kept evolving and in the
5th dynasty there was a general decline in the importance of female deities. For
example the lion headed goddess Sekhmet became consort of god Ptah, the
main god of the capital city Memphis.
While RE bestowed immortality to the Pharaoh. The solar cult had begun to be
patronised from 3rd dynasty onwards became official religion in the 5th dynasty.
The kingship became centred around the RE god meaning that the Pharaoh
was above the mankind and begins to be referred as the “good god” and as
such the Pharaoh lived in communion with his fellow gods. He became the
40
chief priest between RE and the Egyptian people i.e. the link between God and
mankind. The RE temples were thus maintained by the Egyptian State in order
to promote the cult of Pharaoh. Gigantic size statues of the Pharaoh were
created and huge temples cum burial complexes emerged.
6th DYNASTY
The tombs of this dynasty are inscribed and spread throughout Egypt but main
focus remained ABYDOS. The inscribed tombs tell us about kings organising
expeditions to the Sinai Peninsula and Palestine. By now stones for pytramid
construction was transported to Abydos from Elpinstone stone quarries by the
use of slave labour.
There also existed trading caravans carrying goods from and to to different
parts of Egypt but the dynasty is known for the decline of the OLD KINGDOM.
Last named king of the 6th dynasty was Pepi II. After him there is an ominous
gap in the monuments and this gap marks the end of the Old Kingdom.
This end has to be qualified as it was intensely political in form. By now the
royal authority seemed to have considerably weakened. The King – God, it was
beginning to be understood, suffered mortal limitations at age 94. Pepi II
seemed to have become senile due to his age and long rule. The rule itself
seemed to have become impoverished as the kings of the 6th dynasty seemed
to have squandered money and land grants by giving out “mortuary grants” or
as “temple endowments”.
The Pharaohs of the 6th dynasty found it increasingly difficult / hard to control
a powerful nobility. The nobles as high - ranking officials were no more
dependent on the royal favour but claimed office/rank/ position by hereditary
right. They had evolved as a new power block in the later part of the 6 th
dynasty. The nobles did not reside at the court but had built miniature states in
their nomes. After Pepi II died, for a time, petty landlords ruled the provinces.
Then from the city of Hierakonpolis there emerged a ruling family led by one
Khetty who for a time being held sway over the whole of Egypt. However, this
was shortlived and Egypt split into North ruled from Hierakonpolis and South
ruled by Thebes.
By now nobles became extremely powerful and developed a distinct identity.
As chiefs they had already carved out small kingdoms for themselves and were
by now were inclined to strengthen themselves and their position at the
41
expense of their neighbours. They had earned lot of honours through faithful
service. In fact the tombs of the favoured wealthy nobles of this time are
magnificent, particularly of certain families in the region of Bani hasan, Al
Bersha, Asyut, Dayr Rifah – regions which became the centres of powerful
chiefs.
It is possible that each of these regions had a court, an administrative
organisation, within a nome/district in the name of the noble. It was similar to
a miniature royal palace. The Pharaohs required a firm hand to hold the noble
chiefs in check and to distribute honours to them but the royal authority was
no more as strong, neither was it centralised.
Several causes were responsible for the downfall of the Old Kingdom.
Government revenues became exhausted because Pharaohs had invested
heavily in such grandiose projects as pyramid building and temple cum
mortuary complexes. To make matters worse, Egyptian prosperity was heavily
affected by climatic disasters which created crop failures. In the meantime
provincial nobles usurped more and more power until central authority
virtually disappeared. The nobles created their own principalities and political
chaos was aggravated by internal dissensions as well as invasions by desert
tribes.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------