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Hasanlu V

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Hasanlu V provides archaeologists with a new, more accurate chronology of Hasanlu, the largest and arguably the most important archaeological site in the Gadar River Valley of northwestern Iran. Th...
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  • 24 September 2013
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Hasanlu V provides archaeologists with a new, more accurate chronology of Hasanlu, the largest and arguably the most important archaeological site in the Gadar River Valley of northwestern Iran. This revised chronology introduces Hasanlu Periods VIa, V, and IVc for the first time. Based on new findings, the report overturns current constructions of the origins of the archaeological culture in Hasanlu, which sought to link the Monochrome Burnished Ware Horizon (formerly known as the Early Western Grey Ware Horizon) to the migration of new peoples into western Iran in the later second millennium B.C. Hasanlu V shows instead that the Monochrome Burnished Ware Horizon developed gradually from indigenous traditions. This reappraisal has important implications for our understanding of Indo-Iranian migrations into the Zagros region.

University Museum Monograph, 137

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Price: $89.95
Pages: 520
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Publication Date: 24 September 2013
ISBN: 9781934536629
Format: eBook
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology, Archaeology by period / region
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"This handsomely produced book is a welcome addition to the long-delayed publication of the important site of Hasanlu, in Iranian Azerbaijan. The site was excavated by a University of Pennsylvania team, together with the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Archaeological Service of Iran from 1956-1977. . . . A valuable volume."
Michael D. Danti is an archaeologist of the Near East, Assistant Professor at Boston University, and Consulting Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. He is author of The Ilkhanid Heartland: Hasanlu Tepe (Iran) Period I, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Megan Cifarelli teaches art history and directs the Museum Studies Program at Manhattanville College.