3家庭和制度:公元前3千年晚期伊拉克Tell Asmar的一个社区(古Eshnunna)

Lise A. Truex
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了测试邻里和社区概念的价值,以理解古代美索不达米亚早期王朝晚期城邦和阿卡德国家城市景观中的邻里考古学,本章考察了伊拉克Tell Asmar(古代Eshnunna)一个住宅区的物质文化的社会经济变化,并调查了该地区成为更统一的精英家庭的过程。Tell Asmar是迪亚拉河下游地区的几个主要城市定居点之一,该遗址的占领可以追溯到史前晚期。研究数据集包括由20世纪30年代芝加哥东方研究所迪亚拉探险队发掘的从泰尔阿斯马尔北部宫殿地区和私人住宅地区恢复的考古证据的有限子集,并集中于公元前3千年晚期的住宅占领水平,建筑,文物以及古代文本。一项详细的分析将一个家庭的生命周期跨越了第三个千年晚期,与三个晚期阿卡德房屋的家庭进行了比较,这些房屋出现在北宫大楼的建筑重组中。本章不仅探讨了私人家庭在美索不达米亚城市社区中的作用,而且还展示了私人住宅区和北宫大楼作为一个社区不断发展,因为居民们不断地谈判和维护相互联系的私人和官方关系,作为一个社区,他们分享了与更广泛的社会经济和政治发展联系在一起的增长、衰落和复兴。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
3 Households and Institutions: A Late 3rd Millennium BCE Neighborhood at Tell Asmar, Iraq (Ancient Eshnunna)

To test the value of the neighborhood and community concepts for understanding the archaeology of neighborhoods in the urban landscapes of the late Early Dynastic city-states and the Akkadian state in ancient Mesopotamia, this chapter examines socioeconomic changes in the material culture across occupation levels in a residential area at Tell Asmar (ancient Eshnunna), Iraq and investigates processes by which the area became a more uniformly elite set of households. Tell Asmar was one of several major urban settlements in the lower Diyala River region, with occupation of the site extending back into late prehistory. The research dataset comprises a limited subset of archaeological evidence recovered from the Tell Asmar Northern Palace Area and the Private Houses Area by the 1930s Oriental Institute of Chicago Diyala Expedition excavations and concentrates on late 3rd millennium BCE residential occupation levels, architecture, and artifacts, as well as ancient texts. A detailed analysis compares one household with a life cycle that spanned the late 3rd millennium with the households of three late Akkadian houses that appeared alongside the architectural reorganization of the Northern Palace Building. This chapter seeks not only to explore the roles of private households within an urban Mesopotamian neighborhood but also to show that the Private Houses Area and the Northern Palace Building continually evolved as a neighborhood because residents were constantly negotiating and maintaining interconnected private and official relationships, and as one community, they shared in the growth, decline, and resurgence that connected them to broader socioeconomic and political developments.

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