Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T21:50:13.380Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

EXCAVATIONS AT KURD QABURSTAN, A SECOND MILLENNIUM b.c. URBAN SITE ON THE ERBIL PLAIN1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Abstract

Excavations at the 109 hectare site of Kurd Qaburstan on the Erbil plain in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq were conducted by the Johns Hopkins University in 2013 and 2014. The Middle Bronze Age (Old Babylonian period) is the main period of occupation evident on the site, and the project therefore aims to study the character of a north Mesopotamian urban centre of the early second millennium b.c. On the high mound, excavations revealed three phases of Mittani (Late Bronze) period occupation, including evidence of elite residential architecture. On the low mound and the south slope of the high mound, Middle Bronze evidence included domestic remains with numerous ceramic vessels left in situ. Also dating to the Middle Bronze period is evidence of a city wall on the site edges. Later occupations include a cemetery, perhaps of Achaemenid date, on the south slope of the high mound and a Middle Islamic settlement on the southern lower town. Faunal and archaeobotanical analysis provide information on the plant and animal economy of the second millennium b.c. occupations, and geophysical results have documented a thirty-one hectare expanse of dense Middle Bronze Age architecture in the northern lower town.

Type
Research Article
Information
IRAQ , Volume 79 , December 2017 , pp. 213 - 255
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

We are very grateful to our colleagues in the antiquities organization of the Kurdistan Regional Government for their assistance and encouragement. In the Directorate-General of Antiquities, we are particularly grateful to Kak Mala Awat (Abubakir Othman Zainaddin) and Kak Kaifi Mustafa for their support. In the Erbil Department of Antiquities, we are thankful for the invaluable assistance of Kak Nader Babakr and his staff, including Kak Saber Hassan, head of inspectors, Kak Guran Muhammad Muhammad Amin, head of excavations, and our representatives (for 2013: Kak Guran Muhammad Muhammad Amin, Kak Pishtiwan Ahmad Ibrahim, Kak Rojgar Rashid Hamed, and Pawan Kamal Ahmad Khan; for 2014: Kak Gharib Ismail Bawa Murad and Kak Amir Karim Abdullah).

We greatly appreciate the help provided by Kak Qubad Talabani, former KRG Representative, Washington, D.C., and the extensive assistance supplied by Kak Najat Abdullah, Director of Culture and Community of the KRG Representation in Washington, D.C., in acquiring our excavation permit and in many other areas. Also much appreciated is the support received from the National Science Foundation (grant BCS-1156171 for fieldwork at Kurd Qaburstan, BCS-1229061 for geophysics instruments, and Early Faculty CAREER grant 1054938 to Alexia Smith for archaeobotanical research), the National Geographic Society, the Johns Hopkins University, the University of Northern Colorado, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, GardaWorld International Protective Services, and the Arthur and Isadora Dellheim Foundation.

The project is indebted to Jason Ur for calling attention to the potential for investigating Kurd Qaburstan, providing advice on initiating a field project in Kurdistan, and sharing the EPAS surface collection data from Kurd Qaburstan. Among our friends and colleagues in Erbil, we would especially like to thank David Michelmore for his generous hospitality, Manhal Shaya for his superb assistance with logistical and administrative issues, and Paul Sutphin and Joseph Pennington, U.S. Consuls-General, and Jinnie Lee, Kim Krhoutek, Kari Paetzold of the U.S. Consulate-General for their help. We are also very grateful to Julian Allen, Nicholas Bennett, Jessica Giraud, Kathryn Hanson, Jessica Johnson, Abdullah Khorsheed, Konstantinos Kopanias, Brian Lione, Maria Grazia Masetti-Rouault, and Olivier Rouault for their advice and assistance. For ideas useful in preparing this article, we thank Mark Garrison, Benjamin Sass, and Diana Stein. Anna Soifer and Clara Hickman helped prepare the illustrations.

References

Adams, R. M. 1981. Heartland of Cities. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Akkermans, P. M. M. G. and Schwartz, G.. 2003. The Archaeology of Syria: From Complex Hunter-Gatherers to Early Urban Societies, ca. 16,000–300 bc . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Armstrong, J., and Gasche, H.. 2014. Mesopotamian Pottery: A Guide to the Babylonian Tradition in the Second Millennium b.c . Ghent: University of Ghent/Chicago: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Bär, J. 2003. Die älteren Ischtar-Tempel in Assur: Stratigraphie, Architektur und Funde eines altorientalischen Heiligtums von der zweiten Hälfte des 3. Jahrtausends bis zur Mitte des 2. Jahrtausends v. Chr. Saarbrücken: Saarbrücker Druckerei und Verlag.Google Scholar
Beuger, C. 2014. “Pottery Traditions from the Mittanian to the Early Neo-Assyrian Period – Evidence from Soundings in Ashur and Kar-Tukulti-Ninurta”, in Luciani, M. and Hausleiter, A. (eds.), Recent Trends in the Study of Late Bronze Age Ceramics in Syro-Mesopotamia and Neighbouring Regions. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 263–88.Google Scholar
Bor, N. 1968. Flora of Iraq, Vol. 9. Baghdad: Ministry of Agriculture, Republic of Iraq.Google Scholar
Buringh, P. 1960. Soils and Soil Conditions in Iraq. Baghdad: Republic of Iraq, Ministry of Agriculture, Directorate of Agricultural Research and Projects.Google Scholar
Carl, P., Kemp, B., Laurence, R., Coningham, R., Hingham, C., and Cowgill, G.. 2000. “Were Cities Built As Images?”. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 10: 327–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castel, C., and Peltenburg, E.. 2007. “Urbanism on the Margins: Third Millennium b.c. Al-Rawda in the Arid Zone of Syria”. Antiquity 81: 601–16.Google Scholar
Charles, M. 1998. “Fodder from Dung: the Recognition and Interpretation of Dung-Derived Plant Material from Archaeological Sites”. Environmental Archaeology 1: 111–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charles, M., and Bogaard, A.. 2001. “Third Millennium b.c. Charred Plant Remains from Tell Brak”, in Oates, D., Oates, J., and McDonald, H., Excavations at Tell Brak, Vol. 2: Nagar in the Third Millennium B.C. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research and the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, pp. 301–26.Google Scholar
Charpin, D. 2004. “Histoire politique du proche-Orient Amorrite (2002–1595)”, in Attinger, P., Sallaberger, W., and Wäfler, M. (eds.), Mesopotamien: die altbabylonische Zeit (Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis, 160/4). Fribourg: Academic Press, pp. 25480.Google Scholar
Charpin, D. 2015. “Le mariage d'une princesse de Qabra avec un prince de Qaṭna”, in Marti, L., Nicolle, C., and Shawaly, K. (eds.), Recherches en Haute Mésopotamie, Vol. 2: Mission archéologique de Bash Tapa (campagnes 2012–2013) et les enjeux de la recherche dans la région d'Erbil (Mémoires de NABU, 17). Paris: SEPOA, pp. 512.Google Scholar
Collon, D. 1986. Catalogue of the Western Asiatic Seals in the British Museum: Cylinder Seals, Vol. 3: Isin-Larsa and Old Babylonian Periods. London: The British Museum.Google Scholar
Creekmore, A. 2010. “The Structure of Upper Mesopotamian Cities: Insight from Fluxgate Gradiometer Survey at Kazane Höyük, Southeastern Turkey”. Archaeological Prospection 17 (2): 7388.Google Scholar
Creekmore, A. 2014. “The Social Production of Space in Third Millennium Cities of Upper Mesopotamia”, in Creekmore, A. and Fisher, K. (eds.), Making Ancient Cities: Space and Place in Early Urban Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 3273.Google Scholar
Curtis, J. 2005. “The Achaemenid Period in Northern Iraq”, in Briant, P. and Boucharlat, R. (eds.), L'archéologie de l'empire Achémenide: nouvelles recherches. Paris: De Boccard, pp. 179–95.Google Scholar
Curtis, J., and Tallis, N. (eds.). 2005. Forgotten Empire: The World of Ancient Persia. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
D'Agostino, A. 2014. “The Tell Barri Sequence of Late Bronze Levels: Evolution Trends Within Late 2nd Millennium Ceramic Culture”, in Luciani, M. and Hausleiter, A. (eds.), Recent Trends in the Study of Late Bronze Age Ceramics in Syro-Mesopotamia and Neighbouring Regions. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 235–61.Google Scholar
Davis, P. H. 1965–1985. Flora of Turkey and the East Aegean Islands, Vols. 1–9. Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press.Google Scholar
Deller, K.-H. 1990. “Eine Erwägung zur Lokalisierung des aB ON Qabrā/Qabarā”. NABU 1990/3 no. 84.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, E. 1999. Uruk: Late Babylonian Seal Impressions on Eanna-Tablets (Ausgrabungen in Uruk-Warka Endberichte, 18). Mainz: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, E. 2007. “Persian Conquerors, Babylonian Captivators”, in Crawford, H. (ed.), Regime Change in the Ancient Near East and Egypt from Sargon of Agade to Saddam Hussein (Proceedings of the British Academy, 136). Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 95103.Google Scholar
Fink, A. S. 2008. “Levantine Standardized Luxury in the Late Bronze Age: Waste Management at Tell Atchana (Alalakh)”, in Fantalkin, A. and Yasur-Landau, A. (eds.), Bene Israel: Studies in the Archaeology of Israel and the Levant during the Bronze and Iron Ages in Honor of Israel Finkelstein. Leiden: Brill, pp. 165–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frane, J. 1996. “The Tell Leilan Period I Habur Ware Assemblage”. PhD Dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Garrison, M. B., and Root, M. C.. 2001. Seals on the Persepolis Fortification Tablets I, Images of Heroic Encounter (Oriental Institute Publications, 117). Chicago: The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Graham, P. J., and Smith, A.. 2013. “A Day in the Life of an Ubaid Household: Archaeobotanical Investigations at Kenan Tepe, Southeastern Turkey”. Antiquity 87: 405–17.Google Scholar
Harmanşah, Ö. 2013. Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helbaek, H. 1966. “The Plant Remains from Nimrud”, in Mallowan, M. E. L., Nimrud and its Remains, Vol. 2. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co, pp. 613–20.Google Scholar
Huot, J.-L., Rougeuelle, A., and Suire, J.. 1989. “La structure urbaine de Larsa: une approche provisoire”, in Huot, J.-L. (ed.), Larsa, travaux de 1985. Paris: Editions Recherche sur les civilisations, pp. 1952.Google Scholar
Ismail, B. and Cavigneaux, A.. 2003. “Dadušas Siegelstele IM 95200 aus Ešnunna: Die Inschrift”. Baghdader Mitteilungen 84: 129–56.Google Scholar
Kepinski-Lecomte, C. 1992. Haradum I. Une ville nouvelle sur le Moyen-Euphrate (XVIIIe-XVIIe siècles av. J.-C.). Paris: Éditions Recherche sur les Civilisations.Google Scholar
Koliński, R. 2000. Tell Rijim, Iraq: the Middle Bronze Age Layers (British Archaeological Reports International Series, 837). Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Koliński, R. and Piątkowska-Małecka, J.. 2008. “Animals in the Steppe: Patterns of Animal Husbandry as a Reflection of Changing Environmental Conditions in the Khabur Triangle”, in Kühne, H., Czichon, R. M., and Kreppner, F.J . (eds.), Proceedings of the 4th International Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East, 29 March – 3 April 2004, Freie Universität Berlin, Vol. 1. Wiesbaden: Visual Communication, pp. 115–27.Google Scholar
Lemoine, X., Zeder, M. A., Bishop, K. J., and Rufolo, S. J.. 2014. “A New System for Computing Dentition-Based Age Profiles in Sus scrofa” . Journal of Archaeological Science 47: 179–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lion, B. 2009. “Les porcs à Nuzi”, in Wilhelm, G. (ed.), General Studies and Excavations at Nuzi, Vol. 11/2: In Honor of David I. Owen on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday October 28, 2005 (Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians, 18). Bethesda, Maryland: CDL, pp. 259–86.Google Scholar
MacGinnis, J. 1995. Letter Orders from Sippar and the Administration of the Ebabbara in the Late Babylonian Period. Poland: “Bonami” Wydawnictwo.Google Scholar
MacGinnis, J. 2013a. Erbil in the Cuneiform Sources: A Catalogue and Historical Assessment. Erbil: Kurdistan Regional Government Ministry of Culture and Youth.Google Scholar
MacGinnis, J. 2013b. “Qabra in the Cuneiform Sources”. Subartu 6–7: 310.Google Scholar
Margueron, J.-Cl. 2004. Mari: metropole de l'Euphrate. Paris: Picard.Google Scholar
Matney, T. 2002. “Urban Planning and the Archaeology of Society at Early Bronze Age Titriş Höyük”, in Hopkins, D. (ed.), Across the Anatolian Plateau: Readings in the Archaeology of Ancient Turkey (The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 57), pp. 1934.Google Scholar
Matney, T. 2012. “Northern Mesopotamia”, in Potts, D.T. (ed.), A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Malden, Massachusetts: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 556–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matney, T., and Donkin, A.. 2006. “Mapping the Past: An Archaeogeophysical Case Study from Southeastern Turkey”. Near Eastern Archaeology 69 (1): 1226.Google Scholar
Matthews, D. 1997. “The Mitanni Seals from Tell Brak”, in Oates, D., Oates, J. and McDonald, H. (eds.), Excavations at Tell Brak. Vol. 1: The Mitanni and Old Babylonian Periods. Cambridge: McDonald Institute, pp. 4760.Google Scholar
McCorriston, J. 1995. “Preliminary Archaeobotanical Analysis in the Middle Habur Valley, Syria and Studies of Socioeconomic Change in the Early Third Millennium b.c.. Bulletin of the Canadian Society for Mesopotamian Studies 29: 3346.Google Scholar
McMahon, A. 2015. “Waste Management in Early Urban Southern Mesopotamia”, in Mitchell, P. (ed.), Sanitation, Latrines and Intestinal Parasites in Past Populations. Farnham: Ashgate, pp. 1939.Google Scholar
Meyer, J.-W. 2006. “Zur Frage der Urbanisierung von Tell Chuera”, in Butterlin, P., Lebeau, M., Monchambert, J.-Y., Montero Fenollós, J. L., and Muller, B. (eds.), Les espaces syro-mésopotamiens: Dimensions de l'expérience humaine au Proche-Orient ancien: volume d'hommage offert à Jean-Claude Margueron (Subartu, 17). Turnhout; Brepols, pp. 179–89.Google Scholar
Miller, N. F. 1984. “The Interpretation of Some Carbonized Cereal Remains as Remnants of Dung Cake Fuel.” Bulletin on Sumerian Agriculture 1: 4547.Google Scholar
Miller, N. F., and Smart, T. L.. 1984. “Intentional Burning of Dung as Fuel: A Mechanism for the Incorporation of Charred Seeds into the Archeological Record”. Journal of Ethnobiology 4: 1528.Google Scholar
Mitchell, T. C., and Searight, A.. 2007. Catalogue of the Western Asiatic Seals in the British Museum, Stamp Seals III: Impressions of Stamp Seals on Cuneiform Tablets, Clay Bullae, and Jar Handles. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Moorey, P. R. S. 1980. Cemeteries of the First Millennium b.c. at Deve Hüyük, Near Carchemish, Salvaged by T. E. Lawrence and C. L. Woolley in 1913 (with a Catalogue Raisonné of the Objects in Berlin, Cambridge, Liverpool, London and Oxford) (British Archaeological Reports International Series, 87). Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Muscarella, O. 1988. Bronze and Iron: Ancient Near Eastern Artifacts in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.Google Scholar
National Directorate of Antiquities, Iraq. 1976. Atlas of the Archaeological Sites in Iraq (Arabic). Baghdad: National Directorate of Antiquities.Google Scholar
Nesbitt, M. 2006. Identification Guide for Near Eastern Grass Seeds. London: University College London, Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Nishimura, Y. 2014. “North Mesopotamian Urban Neighborhoods at Titriş Höyük in the Third Millennium b.c. ”, in Creekmore, A. and Fisher, K. (eds.), Making Ancient Cities: Space and Place in Early Urban Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 74110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oates, D. 1982. “Tell al Rimah”, in Curtis, J. (ed.), Fifty Years of Mesopotamian Discovery. London: British School of Archaeology in Iraq, pp. 8698.Google Scholar
Oates, D. 1985. “Walled Cities in Northern Mesopotamia in the Mari Period”. MARI 4: 585–94.Google Scholar
Oates, D., Oates, J. and McDonald, H.. 1997. Excavations at Tell Brak. Vol. 1: The Mitanni and Old Babylonian Periods. Cambridge: McDonald Institute.Google Scholar
Pappalardo, R. 2012. “The Islamic Common Ware from Tell Barri: A Preliminary Study”, in Matthews, R. and Curtis, J. (eds.), Proceedings of the 7th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 647–56.Google Scholar
Parker, B. 1975. “Cylinder Seals from Tell al Rimah”. Iraq 37: 2138.Google Scholar
Parpola, S., Radner, K., Mattila, R., Schmitt, R., and Zadok, R.. 1998. The Prosopography of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Vol. 1/ II: B-G. Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project.Google Scholar
Pedde, F. 2000. Vorderasiatische Fibeln, von der Levante bis Iran. Berlin: Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft, and Saarbrücken: Saarbrücker Druckerei und Verlag.Google Scholar
Pedde, F. 2015. Gräber und Grüfte in Assur, Teil 2: Die mittelassyrische Zeit (Wissenschaftliche Veröffentlichung der Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft, 144). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.Google Scholar
Peregrine, P. 1996. “Geomagnetic Mapping at Tell es-Sweyhat”. Expedition 38 (1): 3033.Google Scholar
Pfälzner, P. 2007. “The Late Bronze Age Ceramic Traditions of the Syrian Jazirah”, in al-Maqdissi, M., Matoïan, V., and Nicolle, C. (eds.), Céramique de l’âge du bronze en Syria II: L'Euphrate et la region de Jézireh. Beirut: Institut français du Proche-Orient, pp. 239–99.Google Scholar
Pfälzner, P., Wissing, A., A. and Hubner, C.. 2004. “Urbanismus in der Unterstadt von Urkeš: Ergebnisse einer geomagnetischen Prospektion und eines archäologischen Surveys in der südostlichen Unterstadt von Tall Mozan im Sommer 2002”. Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft zu Berlin 136: 4186.Google Scholar
Poppa, R. 1978. Kamid el-Loz, Teil 2: Der eisenzeitliche Friedhof, Befunde und Funde. Bonn: Rudolf Habelt.Google Scholar
Porada, E. 1944–45. Seal Impressions of Nuzi (The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 24). Missoula: Scholars Press.Google Scholar
Postgate, C., Oates, D. and Oates, J.. 1997. The Excavations at Tell al Rimah: The Pottery. Warminster: Aris and Phillips/British School of Archaeology in Iraq.Google Scholar
Pulhan, G. 2000. “On the Eve of the Dark Age: Qarni-Lim's Palace at Tell Leilan”. PhD Dissertation, Yale University.Google Scholar
Rapoport, A. 2006. “Archaeology and Environment-Behavior Studies”, in Ashmore, W., Dobres, M.-A., Nelson, S., and Rosen, A. (eds.), Integrating the Diversity of Twenty-First Century Anthropology: The Life and Intellectual Legacies of Susan Kent. Washington D.C.: American Anthropological Association, pp. 5970.Google Scholar
Reiche, A. 2014. “Late Bronze Age Pottery from Nemrik (Northern Iraq)”, in Luciani, M. and Hausleiter, A. (eds.), Recent Trends in the Study of Late Bronze Age Ceramics in Syro-Mesopotamia and Neighbouring Regions. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 289332.Google Scholar
Ristvet, L. 2007. “The Third Millennium City Wall at Tell Leilan, Syria: Identity, Authority, and Urbanism”, in Bretschneider, J., Driessen, J., and Van Lerberghe, K. (eds.), Power and Architecture: Monumental Public Architecture in the Bronze Age Near East and Aegean. Leuven: Peeters, pp. 183212.Google Scholar
Ristvet, L. 2012. “Resettling Apum: Tribalism and Tribal States in the Tell Leilan Region, Syria”, in Laneri, N., Valentini, S. and Pfälzner, P. (eds.), Looking North: The Socioeconomic Dynamics of the Northern Mesopotamian and Anatolian Regions during the Late Third and Early Second Millennium b.c . Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 3750.Google Scholar
Ristvet, L. 2014. Ritual, Performance, and Politics in the Ancient Near East. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Root, M. C. 2008. “The Legible Image: How did Seals and Sealing Matter in Persepolis?”, in Briant, P., Henkelman, W., and Stolper, M. (eds.), L'archive des Fortifications de Pérsépolis, État des questions et perspectives de recherches. Paris: de Boccard, pp. 87148.Google Scholar
Salje, B. 1990. Der ‘Common Style’ der Mitanni-Glyptik und die Glyptik der Levante und Zyperns in der späten Bronzezeit. Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Schwartz, G. 2013. “An Amorite Global Village: Syrian-Mesopotamian Relations in the 2nd Millennium b.c. ”, in Aruz, J., Graff, S. and Rakic, Y. (eds.), Cultures in Contact: From Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean in the Second Millennium bc . New Haven: Yale University Press, pp. 211.Google Scholar
Schwartz, G. 2015. “Kurd Qaburstan”, in Kopanias, K., MacGinnis, J., and Ur, J. (eds.), Archaeological Projects in the Kurdistan Region in Iraq. The Directorate of Antiquities of Kurdistan (http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:14022526).Google Scholar
Schwartz, G. 2016. “Kurd Qaburstan, A Second Millennium b.c. Urban Site: First Results of the Johns Hopkins Project”, in Kopanias, K. and MacGinnis, J. (eds.), The Archaeology of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and Adjacent Regions. Oxford: Archaeopress, pp. 385401.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, A. T. 2003. The Political Landscape. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, A. 2012. “Akkadian and Post-Akkadian Plant Use at Tell Leilan”, in Weiss, H. (ed.), Seven Generations Since the Fall of Akkad (Studia Chaburensia, 3). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 225–40.Google Scholar
Smith, A., Graham, P. J., and Stein, G.. 2015. “Ubaid Plant Use at Tell Zeidan, Syria”. Paléorient 41: 5169.Google Scholar
Smith, M. 2007. “Form and Meaning in the Earliest Cities: A New Approach to Ancient Urban Planning”. Journal of Planning History 6 (1): 347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M. 2010. “The Archaeological Study of Neighborhoods and Districts in Ancient Cities.” Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 29: 137–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M. 2011. “Empirical Urban Theory for Archaeologists”. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 18: 167–92.Google Scholar
Starr, R. 1935. “Notes on the Tracing of Mud-brick Walls”. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 58: 1827.Google Scholar
Starr, R. 1937. Nuzi. Report on the Excavations at Yorgan Tepa Near Kirkuk 1927–1936. Vol. 2: Plates and Plans. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Starr, R. 1939. Nuzi. Report on the Excavations at Yorgan Tepa Near Kirkuk 1927–1936. Vol. 1: Text. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Stone, E. 2007. “The Mesopotamian Urban Experience”, in Stone, E. (ed.), Settlement and Society: Essays Dedicated to Robert McCormick Adams. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, pp. 213–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, E., Lindsley, D., Pigott, V., Harbottle, G., and Ford, M.. 1998. “From Shifting Silt to Solid Stone: The Manufacture of Synthetic Basalt in Ancient Mesopotamia”. Science 280: 2091–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone, E. and Zimansky, P.. 2004. The Anatomy of a Mesopotamian City: Survey and Soundings at Mashkan-shapir. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Stronach, D. 1959. “The Development of the Fibula in the Near East”. Iraq 21: 180206.Google Scholar
Tallqvist, K. 1902. Neubabylonisches Namenbuch (Acta Societatis Scientiarum Fennicae, 32.2).Google Scholar
Townsend, C. and Guest, E. (eds.). 1974. Flora of Iraq. Vol. 3: Leguminales. Baghdad: Ministry of Agriculture and Agrarian Reform.Google Scholar
Ur, J. 2010a. “Cycles of Civilization in Northern Mesopotamia”. Journal of Archaeological Research 18: 387431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ur, J. 2010b. Urbanism and Cultural Landscapes in Northeastern Syria: The Tell Hamoukar Survey. Chicago: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Ur, J., de Jong, L., Giraud, J., Osborne, J., and MacGinnis, J.. 2013. “Ancient Cities and Landscapes in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq: The Erbil Plain Archaeological Survey 2012 Season”. Iraq 75: 89117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van de Mieroop, M. 1997. The Ancient Mesopotamian City. Oxford: The Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
van Haaften, C. 1988. “Details of Architecture and Construction”, in van Loon, M. (ed.), Hammam et-Turkman, Vol. 1. Leiden: Nederlands Historisch-Archeologisch Instituut te Istanbul, pp. 129141.Google Scholar
van Zeist, W. and Bakker-Heeres, J. A. H.. 1984 (1986). “Archaeobotanical Studies in the Levant 2. Neolithic and Halaf Levels at Ras Shamra”. Palaeohistoria 26: 151–70.Google Scholar
van Zeist, W. and Bakker-Heeres, J. A. H.. 1985 (1986). “Archaeobotanical Studies in the Levant 4. Bronze Age Sites on the North Syrian Euphrates”. Palaeohistoria 27: 247316.Google Scholar
Vezzoli, V. 2008. “Islamic Period Settlement in the Tell Leilan Region (Northern Jazira): The Material Evidence from the 1995 Survey”. Levant 40 (2): 185202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiss, H. (ed.). 1986. The Origins of Cities in Dry-Farming Syria and Mesopotamia in the Third Millennium b.c . Guilford, Connecticut: Four Quarters.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T. J. 1990. “Soil Development and Early Land Use in the Jazira Region, Upper Mesopotamia”. World Archaeology 22: 87103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkinson, T. J. 2003. Archaeological Landscapes of the Near East. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T. J. and Tucker, D. J.. 1995. Settlement Development in the North Jazira, Iraq: A Study of the Archaeological Landscape. Warminster: British School of Archaeology in Iraq.Google Scholar
Yates, C. 2014. “Beyond the Mound: Locating Complexity in Northern Mesopotamia During the ‘Second Urban Revolution’”. PhD Dissertation, Boston University.Google Scholar
Zeder, M. 2006. “Reconciling Rates of Long Bone Fusion and Tooth Eruption and Wear in Sheep (Ovis) and Goat (Capra)”, in Ruscillo, D. (ed.), Ageing and Sexing Animals from Archaeological Sites. Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 87118.Google Scholar
Zeder, M. A., Lemoine, X., and Payne, S.. 2015. “A New System for Computing Long-bone Fusion Age Profiles in Sus scrofa. Journal of Archaeological Science 55: 135–50.Google Scholar
Zettler, R. L. 1979. “On the Chronological Range of Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid Seals”. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 38: 257–70.Google Scholar
Zohary, D., Hopf, M., and Weiss, E.. 2012. Domestication of Plants in the Old World. The Origin and Spread of Cultivated Plants in South-west Asia, Europe, and the Mediterranean Basin. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar