Book contents
- 6000 BC
- 6000 BC
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Upper Mesopotamia and Eastern Mediterranean
- Part II Anatolia
- Chapter 6 A Conspectus on the Status of Tepecik-Çiftlik Excavation (Cappadocia)
- Chapter 7 The Downturn in Tepecik-Çiftlik’s Ceramic Production Continuity
- Chapter 8 Çatalhöyük East and Köşk Höyük
- Chapter 9 Abandoning Çatalhöyük
- Chapter 10 Çatalhöyük West and the Late Neolithic to Early Chalcolithic Transition in Central Anatolia
- Chapter 11 The Potter’s Riddle at Çatalhöyük
- Chapter 12 Pots for a New Millennium
- Part III Aegean and Marmara
- Part IV Southeast Europe
- Part V Modeling the Change
- Part VI Commentaries
- Index
- References
Chapter 12 - Pots for a New Millennium
Ceramics and Culture Change in Anatolia around 6000 cal BC
from Part II - Anatolia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2022
- 6000 BC
- 6000 BC
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Upper Mesopotamia and Eastern Mediterranean
- Part II Anatolia
- Chapter 6 A Conspectus on the Status of Tepecik-Çiftlik Excavation (Cappadocia)
- Chapter 7 The Downturn in Tepecik-Çiftlik’s Ceramic Production Continuity
- Chapter 8 Çatalhöyük East and Köşk Höyük
- Chapter 9 Abandoning Çatalhöyük
- Chapter 10 Çatalhöyük West and the Late Neolithic to Early Chalcolithic Transition in Central Anatolia
- Chapter 11 The Potter’s Riddle at Çatalhöyük
- Chapter 12 Pots for a New Millennium
- Part III Aegean and Marmara
- Part IV Southeast Europe
- Part V Modeling the Change
- Part VI Commentaries
- Index
- References
Summary
Around 6000 cal BC on the Konya plain in central Anatolia the nature of ceramic assemblages changed considerably, with higher quantities of pottery in use, a greater range of vessel shapes and new forms of surface treatment, principally comprising painted geometric motifs. Based on quantitative analysis of a pottery assemblage from the West Mound of Çatalhöyük, this chapter explores the details of these changes and their implications for understanding Anatolian societies at the turn of the 6th millennium. The argument turns on the need to interpret ceramic decoration in the context of broader networks of material practice.
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- 6000 BCTransformation and Change in the Near East and Europe, pp. 196 - 210Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022