The Neolithic Age saw humanity’s great leap forward
in its history. Agriculture, animal domestication, and sedentary living
developed resulting to the foundations of future civilizations. In the Levant,
Abu Hureyra provided one of the largest site to serve as a window during this
revolutionary period.
Unearthing
Tell Abu Hureyra
The excavation of Tell Abu Hureyra came as part of
a rescue mission in the 1970’s. Located in the south banks of the Euphrates
River, a British archaeological team led by Andrew Moore, Gordon Hillman, and
Anthony Legge excavated the site with support from the Syrian government and
UNESCO from 1972 to 1974. The construction of the Tabqa Dam resulted to rising
water levels that endangered numerous site with flooding so UNESCO called for a
massive archaeological rescue of numerous historical sites. Numerous countries
joined the effort including Moore and company’s team to collect and document as
many information, samples, and artifacts as they can before the water level
rose and created the lake now known as Lake Assad.
The site of Abu Hureyra measured around 11.5
hectares making it one of the largest Neolithic sites in the Levant alongside
Jericho. The site once flourished during 11,000 – 5,000 BCE. During the
excavation, the archaeological team gathered about 250 different species of
wild plants. Abu Hureyra tells the story of a people that transformed from a
community of hunter-gatherers to a settlement of farmers – a narrative of the
Neolithic Revolution.
History of
Abu Hureyra
Abu Hureyra had 2 periods conveniently named Abu
Hureyra 1 and Abu Hureyra 2. The first revealed a community of
hunter-gatherers, but with sudden change in climactic condition ushered the
development of agriculture. The second revealed a developing Neolithic
community with expanding agriculture.
Abu Hureyra 1 flourished from 11,000 to 10,000 BCE.
Hunter-gatherers established the village relying on surrounding flora and fauna
to survive. Around 9,000 BCE, they suffered a subtle change in climate that
annihilated their traditional food source. They then domesticated plants and
developed agriculture. Around 8,000 BCE, the people of Abu Hureyra abandoned
the site. Their homes later became filled with ruble and dirt starting the formation
of a tell or mound built by layers of successive inhabitation. Then, people
returned to build a new settlement above the first founding Abu Hureyra 2.
Abu Hureyra 2 began around 7,000 BCE and built up
the agriculture started by the previous period. Agriculture and livestock
progress until 5,000 BCE, when the site once again laid abandoned.
Living in
Abu Hureyra
Life in Abu
Hureyra 1
Abu Hureyra 1 survived through living of the land.
They built semi-subterranean houses, foraged for fruits and seed, and hunted
available animals in the area. Eventually they developed agriculture centered
on grain and lentils.
People of Abu Hureyra 1 lived in semi-subterranean
pit houses. This meant the half of the house laid below ground level. They dug
a circular pit from which they built their houses up using wood for walls and
reeds for roof.
Abu Hureyra’s inhabitance survived through foraging
and hunting. Excavation team extracted about 250 species of fruits and seeds
from the site showing the bountiful sources of food for the people. They also
hunted Persian gazelles, deer, hare, and foxes using desert kites – made of
stone walls in a v layout to trap animals. When the climate changed and their
traditional cuisine drastically altered, they developed agriculture centered on
rye and lentils. They also showed early signs of developing wheat.
Living in Abu
Hureyra 2
Abu Hureyra 2, on the other hand, expanded the
developments that began with the previous period. They have greater number of
crops and tools and also showed the rise of trade and communication. They
literally built a new Abu Hureyra above the first.
The dwellings of the people of Abu Hureyra 2
greatly differed from the first. After
dirt and ruble filled the homes of the Abu Hureyra 1, the next batch built
above this with level rectangular houses made of sundried mud bricks with
several rooms. Their floors plastered and either painted black then burnished
or red. They also had platforms in the
house to serve as beds or workstations. During night, their hearth in the
middle provided light and warmth.
The economy of Abu Hureyra 2 saw greater improvements.
In agriculture, they cultivated rye, lentils and einkorn wheat. Later on, they
also included emmer wheat, two- and six-rowed barley, chickpeas, and common
vetch. In livestock, from hunting Persian gazelles, they domesticated and
raised in pens sheep, goats, cattle, and pigs. With the expanding food
production, they started to conduct trade with neighboring regions including
the people from Anatolia, Taurus Mountains, and the coast of the Mediterranean Sea.
Abu Hureyra imported materials such as malachite powder, said to be used for
cosmetics, cowrie shells, as well as gypsum for wares.
More tools also seemed to develop during this
period. They used flint and bones to make various tools such as arrowheads and
burins. Later on, with trade, they developed instruments utilizing obsidian but
in small quantities only.
Like those in Catal Hoyuk, the people of Abu Hureyra also buried their dead beneath their
homes. They initially buried their dead in a crouched position and later
exhumed the body when only the bones remained. They then removed the skull to
be buried in another place while the body remained beneath the home. They also
sometimes buried along the dead several artifacts such as flints tools or
pieces of unique butterfly bead.
At the apex of Abu Hureyra 2, the population
reached 4,000 – 6,000 people. A division of labor emerged with the men working
in the fields and women doing domestic chores and the processing of produce.
They did most of their labor kneeling, thus they mostly suffered from either
arthritis or lower back pains.
Summing Up
Abu Hureyra served as a window during the life of
the earliest people. They reminded the modern world the simple roots of today’s
achievements. Sadly, Abu Hureyra today would not be able to shed more about the
life of early humans as it fell victim to the progress of mankind and now laid
beneath the waters of Lake Assad.
See also:
Bibliography:
Books:
Akkermans, Peter & Glenn Schwartz. The
Archaeology of Syria: From Complex Hunter-Gatherers to early Urban Society (ca.
16,000 – 300 BCE). New York, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
Lockard, Craig. Societies, Networks, and
Transitions: A Global History, Volume: To 1500. Boston, Massachusetts:
Wadsworth, Cengage Learning, 2011.
McCarter, Susan Foster. Neolithic. New York, New
York: Routledge, 2007.
Website:
Hirst, K. Kris. “Abu Hureyra, Syria: Early Evidence
of Agriculture in the Euphrates Valley” ThoughtCo. Accessed on June 6, 2020.
URL: https://www.thoughtco.com/abu-hureyra-syria-170017
Thesis:
AMT Moore. “The Neolithic of the Levant.” (Oxford
University, 1978)
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