Arkeoloji Bölümü
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12514/37
Browse
Browsing Arkeoloji Bölümü by WoS Q "Q2"
Now showing 1 - 8 of 8
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Article Citation - WoS: 2Lake Van Basin Urartian Period Road Routes Survey: First Preliminary Report (2017-2018): Muradiye And Tuşba Districts(Ege Univ, 2021) Gokce, Bilcan; Kuvanc, Rifat; Genc, BulentFor about two-hundred-fifty years between the mid-9th - early 6th centuries BC, the Urartian Kingdom established its hegemony in Eastern Anatolia and the neighboring regions of Northwestern Iran, Nakhchivan, and Armenia, as the most influential political, military, and economic power of its time. Despite the rugged geography and rough climatic conditions of this mountainous terrain, the Urartu thrived by developing a centralized administrative state apparatus. Urartu excelled in many areas of state-building, including road networks. Particularly textual sources and supporting archaeological evidence demonstrate the importance of road networks for the Urartian state. Surveys in Tushba and Muradiye districts have allowed us to identify the main route of the northern capital road, which continues north and reaches Muradiye Plain, and an alternative northern route that follows the Karasu Stream valley towards Muradiye Plain. An eastern route, which enabled the kingdom to exert control in Northwestern Iran, goes through Ozalp district of Van province across the modern border to Iran and reaches Hoy and Salmas. These alternative and auxiliary routes along deep canyons that developed over time suggest that the Urartian state had established an intricate security web in its dominion.Article A New Settlement from the Epi-Palaeolithic Period: The Operational Sequence and Techno-Typology of the Knapped Stone Industry at the Kızılin Site (Antalya, Turkey)(2021) Erbil Eşref, Kartal Gizem, Zeynep Beyza AğırsoyKızılin is a cave settlement within the provincial borders of Antalya. The settlement is dated to the Epi-palaeolithic period. Some knapped stone findings were identified during the terrace excavation conducted in this site. This study focuses on examining the knapped stone chaîne opératoire of the inhabitants, and on analyzing the knapped stone findings by a technotypological approach. Our analyses led us to identify all technological phases of knapped stone process practiced at the Kızılin site. Typologically, the knapped stone tool industry was found to consist of microliths and macroliths. It has been observed that the microliths are higher in number compared to the macroliths. In this context, the results obtained were compared with the Epi-palaeolithic layers of Öküzini and Karain settlements where their similarities and differences are revealed.Article Özfırat, A., "Bozkurt Kurgan Mezarlığı Kazıları", Belleten LXXIII-268, 2009: 635-674.(2009) Özfırat, Aynur…Article Özfırat, A., "Doğu Anadolu Yüksek Yaylası'ndan M.Ö. 2. Binyıl Kurganları", Belleten LXVI-246, 2002: 343-371.(Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 2002) Özfırat, Aynur…Article Sevin, V., Özfırat, A., "Hakkari Stelleri: Doğu Anadolu'da Savaşçı Çobanlar İlk Not", Belleten LXV-243, 2002: 501-530.(Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 2001) Özfırat, Aynur…Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 4A text of Shalmaneser I from Üçtepe and the location of Šinamu(Anatolian Studies, 2022) Genç, Bülent; Macginnis, JohnThis article presents a newly discovered cuneiform text from the site of üçtepe in Diyarbaklr province in southeastern Turkey. The text bears a previously unknown inscription of the Assyrian king Shalmaneser I. While incomplete, it never-theless gives the most extensive lists of the conquests of Shalmaneser I yet known, including a number of previously unattested toponyms. This is in itself an important contribution to the historical documentation of the Middle Assyrian period. Furthermore, the fact that the text was written to record Shalmaneser's rebuilding of the city wall of Sinamu allows us to propose that üçtepe is to be identified with the site of ancient Šinamu, known to have been an important centre from the late third millennium BC and subsequently a regional capital in the provincial system of the Middle Assyrian empire. This is a significant advance on our previous understanding of the historical geography of the region. These issues are discussed in the context of the Middle Assyrian occupation of the Upper Tigris and the results of the archaeological exploration of recent decades.
