Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Alexander the Great at Bactra: A Burning Question
- Ai Khanoum and Greek Domination in Central Asia
- La découverte de l'Ancienne Termez, métropole de la Bactriane du Nord
- Ὁμόγλωττοι παρὰ μικρον?
- King Huviška, Yima, and the Bird: Observations on a Paradisiacal State
- Storehouses and Storage Practices in Old Nisa (Turkmenistan)
- Lasser-scanner Survey at Kong-e Yār ‘Alīvand. Research of the Iranian-Italian Joint Expedition in Kūzestān
- Crépuscule de l'Empire parthe – Les dernières drachmes
- The Syriac Book of the Laws of the Countries, Eusebius’ Preparation for the Gospel, and the Clementine Recognitions: Early Witnesses for Christianity in Central Asia?
- I Am Your Father! Dynasties and Dynastic Legitimacy on Pre-Islamic Coinage between Iran and Northwest India
- The Deities on the Kushano-Sasanian Coins
- Sakastan in the Fourth and Fifth Century AD. Some Historical Remarks Based on the Numismatic Evidence
- Review
- Electrum
Storehouses and Storage Practices in Old Nisa (Turkmenistan)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Alexander the Great at Bactra: A Burning Question
- Ai Khanoum and Greek Domination in Central Asia
- La découverte de l'Ancienne Termez, métropole de la Bactriane du Nord
- Ὁμόγλωττοι παρὰ μικρον?
- King Huviška, Yima, and the Bird: Observations on a Paradisiacal State
- Storehouses and Storage Practices in Old Nisa (Turkmenistan)
- Lasser-scanner Survey at Kong-e Yār ‘Alīvand. Research of the Iranian-Italian Joint Expedition in Kūzestān
- Crépuscule de l'Empire parthe – Les dernières drachmes
- The Syriac Book of the Laws of the Countries, Eusebius’ Preparation for the Gospel, and the Clementine Recognitions: Early Witnesses for Christianity in Central Asia?
- I Am Your Father! Dynasties and Dynastic Legitimacy on Pre-Islamic Coinage between Iran and Northwest India
- The Deities on the Kushano-Sasanian Coins
- Sakastan in the Fourth and Fifth Century AD. Some Historical Remarks Based on the Numismatic Evidence
- Review
- Electrum
Summary
Abstract: The article analyses the body of evidence related to the storage and administration of food in Parthian Nisa, according to the results of the recent excavations of the Italian Archaeological Expedition in Turkmenistan. A new corpus of clay sealings, khums (big jars) and ostraka came to light in the so-called SW Building, which, together with the previously known findings from the other buildings of Nisa, gave way to some speculations about the storage and administration practice within the Arsacid citadel. The spatial distribution of the khums gives information on the function of each building and their single rooms; the texts on the ostraka inform us on the nature and quantities of the food stored in the khums; the various ways the sealings were impressed on clay suggest some ideas on the number and roles of the officers involved in the administration of the storehouses, and perhaps on the nature of the goods stored as well. In general, the findings from the latest excavations provide fundamental information on the economic life of the citadel and of the Parthian society as well. Despite the lack of scholarly debate on such issues as related to the Parthian and Central Asian world, the authors try to interpret the evidence from the Nisa excavations, and give a preliminary reading of the data from the new and old excavations in the Arsacid citadel.
Key words: Parthian archaeology, Parthian economical history, Old Nisa, storage and administration practice, sealings.
Storehouses at Nisa (C. Lippolis)
Despite the rich archaeological evidence supporting the existence of storehouses, systematic record-keeping and storage practices in Old Nisa (Turkmenistan), to this day there has been no study on the architecture of Nisa's functional building complexes, nor on the storage and distribution practices employed within them. The attention of schol-ars has always been monopolised by the ceremonial buildings, even though the presence of extensive storehouses and storage areas is, in fact, a meaningful feature of the site.
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- Central Asia and Iran - Greeks, Parthians, Kushans and Sasanians , pp. 115 - 142Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2015