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Tepe Hissar

Coordinates: 36°09′16″N 54°23′06″E / 36.1545°N 54.3850°E / 36.1545; 54.3850
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Tepe Hissar
Tepe Hissar is located in Iran
Tepe Hissar
Shown within Iran
Alternative nameTappeh Hesār
LocationSemnan Province, Iran
Coordinates36°09′16″N 54°23′06″E / 36.1545°N 54.3850°E / 36.1545; 54.3850
History
PeriodsChalcolithic and Bronze Age
Site notes
Excavation dates1931-1932, 1972, 1976, 1995
ArchaeologistsErich Schmidt, Robert H. Dyson, Maurizio Tosi, Giuseppe Tucci, Esmaiil Yaghmaii

Tepe Hissar (also spelled Tappeh Hesār) is an ancient Near Eastern archaeological site in Semnan Province in northeastern Iran about 360 kilometers east of modern Tehran. It is located near the village Heydarabad two kilometers southeast of the medieval town of Damghan.

The site is notable for its uninterrupted occupational history from the 5th to the 2nd millennium BC. The quantity and elaborateness of its excavated artifacts and funerary customs position the site prominently as a cultural bridge between Mesopotamia and Central Asia. It is thought to have been a stop on the Great Khorasan Road.

Expeditions in 1931–32 by the University of Pennsylvania and 1976 by the University of Pennsylvania Museum revealed that the site was inhabited from 3900 to 1900 BC. Evidence was uncovered of pottery-making and metallurgy. A large Sasanian Empire palace was also uncovered.[1]

Archaeology

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Ancient pottery from Tepe Hissar Strata IIIC

The 6 hectare site of Tepe Hissar has a total diameter of about 600 meters rising about 7 meters above the plain. It consists of a 200 meter by 300 meter main mound with a lower terrace extending to the north and with 5 smaller hillocks lying mostly to the southwest with a few scattered flat settlement areas. A small hillock on the east edge of the main mound was designated Treasure Hill after two very rich Strata IIIC buried hoards were found there. The site was eroded and a deep gulch divided it. The surface of the main mound contained a number of burials. Examination of the largest hillock found it to hold the remains of a Sassanian building.[2][3]

The site was first discovered in 1877 by Albert Houtum-Schindler who noted that locals were digging at the site in hopes of finding artifacts.[4] In 1925 Ernst Herzfeld examined the site as part of a regional survey, recommended it for excavations, and also noted the looting.[5] It was then excavated in two seasons, from July until mid-November 1931 and May through November 1932, by Erich Schmidt, on behalf of the University of Pennsylvania Museum. The first season focused on the Sassanian mound and initial work on the main mound. The excavators determined a relative chronology of the site, dividing it into a number of layers. Note that unlike usual practice strata are numbers from oldest to most recent.[2][1][6][7][8]

Painted Redware pottery from Tepe Hissar Strata IB
  • Strata I (subdivided into IA, IB, and IC) - painted pottery. Only examined in soundings so full extent is unknown though it is estimated to have covered and area with a diameter of 200 meters. Building were constructed with sun-dried mud bricks. Some walls were buttressed. Subdivisions are based on pottery with IA being handmade with rectilinear designs, IB being wheelmade decorated with animal or floral motifs and IC wheelmade with dark brown decoration on a light grayish brown ground. Clay finds included spindle whorls, cones, bicones, dics, and figurines. A number of seals were found but no sealings leading to the idea they were being used as decoration. Copper objects (in IA) included knife and dagger blades, pins, and needles. Numerous lithic and bone objects were also excavated as well as 144 burials.
  • Strata II (subdivided into IIA and IIB) - grey pottery. IIA featured wheelmade pottery with motifs similar to Strata IC while decoration changed somewhat in IIB. Strata II is the thinnest of the layers and assumed to have been the shortest occupation though this is not certain. Buildings construction and plan were similar to Strata I so this Strata is largely defined by pottery type. Small finds, lithics, figurines etc., were also similar to Strata I. More copper objects and types appeared including maceheads, rings, bracelets, anklets, earrings, and various tools. A few small gold and silver ornaments were found. Of the 209 burials excavated, those in IIA contained more and varied grave goods.
Figurine from Tepe Hissar, Strata IIIC, Alabaster
  • Strata III (subdivided into IIIA, IIIB, and IIIC) - handmade burnished greyware pottery. The oldest level, IIIA is minimal and ill-defined and its principle value is in making clear the demarcation between Strata IIB and Strata IIIB. The final and most recent layer at Tepe Hissar, IIIC, is also very thin and the buildings are few and insignificant however burials from that layer are "extraordinarily well-equipped" and the buried hoards on Treasure Hill was particularly rich in finds. Strata IIIB was the principle occupation layer including some structures destroyed by conflagration. One, called the Burned Building (BB) was, unlike the others, burned while occupied and still retaining its possessions. This occurrence provided the excavators with a number of skeletal remains and finds as well as baking the mudbrick walls. The BB was the best constructed and elaborate building in Strata IIIB with six rooms (with several stairways leading to the roof), gateway passage, courtyard, outside latrine, and a tower at the door. The excavators declared it the residence of the towns most prominent resident and not a cultic site. Finds in the main room included numerous lapis lazuli, chalcedony, gold, and silver ornaments, copper daggers (one with a grip of silver bands), and large copper vessels. A storeroom contained a number of sizable lidded storage vessels as well as a copper mattock and two copper stamp seals. A large numbers of flint arrowheads were found inside and outside of the BB. Baked clay and lithic finds from Strata III were similar to those of Strata II while metal finds were much more numerous and varied, primarily of copper and silver.[9] Burials excavated were 106 of Strata IIIA, 270 of Strata IIIB and 53 of Strata IIIC. After Strata IIIC the site was abandoned.

While the majority of burials were simple pit graves (a few double burials) where the body was wrapped in woolen garments, five cist graves, one "vault" grave, and one communal grave were also found. One cist grave (CG25, Strata II, adult male) was notable for its grave goods which included "a large copper stamp seal hung from his pelvic bone, a mace head, along with an abundance of copper jewelry, earrings and multiple-coil bracelets near his head and on his arm, copper pins with double scroll heads on his chest, a silver head band, and lapis lazuli, carnelian, turquoise beads scattered on his chest". The communal grave (CG15, Strata II-III, mostly males and infants) contained a variety of grave goods, primarily copper ornaments, a copper mattock, and a copper knife. Five of the pit graves were of high status with many grave items, often of copper - "Dancer" (CF55 x1), "Warrior 1" (DF19 x2); "Warrior 2" (DF09 x1); "Priest" (DF08 x1) and "Little Girl" (DF18 x1) all dated to Strata IIIC.[10]

A large Sassanian period building, built with large baked bricks and termed a Palace by the excavators, was explored on a hillock near the main mound. It contained large (6 feet in diameter) ornamented stucco columns. The building was decorated with polychrome painting. Finds included a number of plaques, a bust, and a few copper coins.[11][1][12]

A one-week surface survey for lithic (stone) finds was carried out by a team led by Giuseppe Tucci with the Italian Archaeological Mission in Iran in 1972. Thousands of lithic tools, mostly fragmentary, were found primarily drills, burins, blades, and scrapers.[13] In 1976 a two month long re-study project was performed, utilizing modern methods of stratigraphic assessments, ceramic typological analysis and radiocarbon dating led by Robert H. Dyson and Maurizio Tosi for the University of Pennsylvania Museum, the University of Turin and Iran Center for Archaeological Research. After a surface survey four stratigraphic cuts were made, three on the main mound and one on an hillock to the southwest. The study included a cleaning and replaning of the Strata IIB Burned Building, finding an additional room and hearth and showing the "tower" of the excavators was actually a buttress. In association with that on the Damghan Plain two surveys were conducted. A geomorphological survey found that Tepe Hissar was settled on a natural hill that was next to a river that now flows further to the east. A surface survey found no other sites from the same period as Tepe Hissar.[14][15] In 1995, a rescue excavation, due to an earlier rail line being run through the center of the site, was conducted by Esmaiil Yaghmaii, followed by areal soundings in 2006.[16][17]

The absolute chronology of the occupation levels, especially Strata IIIB and IIIC have been an issue of continuing research and speculation. The original excavators were uncertain but suggested Strata 1A began in the 5th millennium BC, IC ended around 3500 BC, and Strata III lay in the early 2nd millennium BC. Proposals for the end date of Hissar IIIC have ranged from 2300 BC down to 1500 BC. There has also been much speculation of the regional and cultural influences of Strata IIIB and IIIC. Cultural connections have been proposed as far away as Turkmenistan and the Oxus Civilization.[1][18][19] Radiocarbon dates of levels thought to be chronologically contemporary with some at Tepe Hissar are available i.e. Tureng Tepe (II - 3055 BC, 2813 BC) (IIIB - 2639 BC), Altyndepe (IIIB - 2696 BC), and Yarim Tepe (IIIB - 2626 BC).[20] A single Tepe Hissar radiocarbon date from a sample taken in 1974 provided a calibrated date of 1841 BC +/- 64 for the end of Strata IIIC.[21] As part of the 1976 re-excavation a number of stratified samples were taken for radiocarbon dating from four locations, Main Mound (Buildings 1, 2, and 3), North Flat (Burned building area), South Hill (industrial workshop), and Twins). Results were:[22]

  • Strata I, painted pottery, (6 samples) - 1st half of 4th millennium BC
  • Strata II, greyware pottery, lapis lazuli working and copper smelting (20 samples) - 2nd half of 4th millennium BC
  • Strata IIIB, burnished greyware pottery (2 samples) - 2nd half of 3rd millennium BC
  • Strata IIIC, end of occupation (1 sample) - 1st quarter of 2nd millennium BC

Further confusing the matter, the 1976 excavators kept Schmidt's strata for burials but invented a new set of construction and occupation "stages" (A, B, C1, C2, D1, D2, D3, E1, E2, E3, F1, F2, and F3) in reverse chronological order. As a sample:[23]

  • Stage A = Strata IIIC (c. 2200 BC - 1800 BC)
  • Stage E = Strata IIA (c. 3650 BC - 3400 BC)
  • Stage F = Strata IC (c. 3900 BC - 3700 BC)

In 2016 DNA was extracted from a human skeletal sample (Strata not identified in source) and was found to carry a mtDNA Haplogroup of H32.[24]

A single unpublished tablet (excavation number H 76–122) with three symbols was found at the site as well as an unknown number of tablet blanks.[25] A radiocarbon date from the Strata II layer associated with the findspot, a lapis lazula work area, gave a calibrated date of 3650 BC to 3370 BC, too early for Proto-Elamite. It appears to be of a type generally called "numerical tablets" or "impressed tablets", mostly found at Susa and Uruk.[22][26]

History

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The earliest dating is uncertain but established as after 5000 BC in the Chalcolithic period. This period (Hissar IA and IB) is characterized by mud-bricks buildings and hand-made (IA) and fine wheel-made (IB) ware, decorated with geometric, plant and animal patterns. The most widespread shapes are represented by small cups, bowls and vases.

In the second period (Hissar IIA and IIB), dated to the 4th millennium BC and the beginning of the 3rd, the burnished grey ware becomes predominant and the large number of lapis lazuli beads and alabaster finds, as well as the evidence of large-scale production of copper-based alloys and lead-silver, suggests that the site was playing a very important role in the trade and export of metal artifacts and semi-precious stones from the Middle Asia quarries to Mesopotamia and Egypt.

The third period of development (Hissar IIIA, IIIB and IIIC, chronologically attributed to the second half of the 3rd millennium BC and the beginning of the 2nd (Bronze Age), can be described as a proto-urban phase, mainly characterized by increased wealth, demographic concentration, mass production of plain ware and the construction of large public and ceremonial buildings. The finding of mass burials and individuals showing signs of violence have been interpreted as either due to warfare or interpersonal violence.[27]

There is considerable cultural continuity from the early Cheshmeh Ali-period settlements in Iran, and into the later Hissar period.

"Traditionally, the early ceramic sequence of north-eastern Iran begins with Neolithic Soft Wares (c. 6000 BC), then Djeitun wares (sixth millennium BC), Cheshmeh Ali “clinky” wares (c. 5300–4300? BC), and finally Hissar IA wares."[28]

Agriculture

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The subsistence economy was based on agriculture. From Hissar II onward plant remains indicate “an agricultural system based on cereals [glume and free-threshing wheats, naked and hulled barley] and the utilization of local fruit [olive, grapevine] plant resources”.[29] Lentil seeds, peas and legumes were also present. Animal (cattle, goat and sheep) figurines indicate herding activities.[30]

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d [1] E.F. Schmidt, "Excavations at Tepe Hissar, Damghan, Iran: with an additional chapter on the Sasanian Building at Tepe Hissar", Philadelphia, 1937 ISBN 9781512822489
  2. ^ a b [2] E.F. Schmidt, "The Tepe Hissar Excavations 1931", Museum Journal of Philadelphia, 23/4, pp 322–485, 1933
  3. ^ Gürsan-Salzmann, Ayşe, "Tepe Hissar, an Introduction", in The New Chronology of the Bronze Age Settlement of Tepe Hissar, Iran, University of Pennsylvania Press for the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, pp. 1-12, 2016 ISBN 9781934536834
  4. ^ Houtum-Schindler, A., "Historical and Archæological Notes on a Journey in South-Western Persia, 1877-1878", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 312–26, 1880
  5. ^ Herzfeld, E., "Iran in the Ancient East: Archaeological Studies Presented in the Lowell Lectures at Boston", New York: Hacker Art Books, 1988
  6. ^ [3] Yule, Paul, Schmidt, Erich Friedrich, "Tepe Hissar : neolithische und kupferzeitliche Siedlung in Nordostiran / nach den Arbeiten von E.F. Schmidt dargestellt von Paul Yule", München: C.H. Beck, 1982
  7. ^ Gürsan-Salzmann, Ayşe, "Erich F. Schmidt Excavations (1931–32)", in The New Chronology of the Bronze Age Settlement of Tepe Hissar, Iran, University of Pennsylvania Press for the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, pp. 13-40, 2016 ISBN 9781934536834
  8. ^ [4] Christopher P.Thornton and Thilo Rehren, "A truly refractory crucible from fourth millennium Tepe Hissar, Northeast Iran", Journal of Archaeological Science, vol. 36, iss. 12, pp. 2700-2712, December 2009
  9. ^ R.H. Dyson Jr., "The Burned Building of Tepe Hissar IIIB, a Restatement", Bāstān-šenāsi wa honar-e Irān, vol. 9, no. 10, pp. 57–83, 1972
  10. ^ Gürsan-Salzmann, Ayşe, "Death and Burial Culture of Tepe Hissar", in The New Chronology of the Bronze Age Settlement of Tepe Hissar, Iran, University of Pennsylvania Press for the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, pp. 217-266, 2016 ISBN 9781934536834
  11. ^ "A Sasanian Palace at Tepe Hissar", Bulletin of the Pennsylvania Museum, vol. 27, no. 147, pp. 121–22, 1932
  12. ^ [5] Haji, S., and M. Chehri "Animal figures of Sasanian stucco in Tepe Hissar", Journal of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences 2.2, 2013
  13. ^ Bulgarelli, Grazia M., "Tepe Hiṣar. Preliminary Report on a Surface Survey, August 1972", East and West, vol. 24, no. 1/2, pp. 15–27, 1974
  14. ^ R.H., Dyson Jr. and S.M. Howard, eds., "Preliminary Reports of the Tappeh Hesar Restudy Project, 1976", Monografie di Mesopotamia 2, Florence, 1989
  15. ^ Dyson, Robert H., "Tepe Hissar, Iran Revisited", Archaeology, vol. 30, no. 6, pp. 418–20, 1977
  16. ^ Roustaei, K., "Tepe Hissar. Proceedings of the seven thousand years of culture and civilization of Hissar", Iranian Centre for Archaeological Research, Tehran, Iran, 2006
  17. ^ Roustaei, K, "Tepe Hesār, once again", in Matthiae, P., Pinnock, F., Nigroand, L. & Marchetti, N. (eds): International Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East, Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East, Reports on recent field archaeology in the Near East. Volume 2. – Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden., pp. 613-633, 2010
  18. ^ Gordon, D. H., "The Chronology of the Third Cultural Period at Tepe Hissar", Iraq, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 40–61, 1951
  19. ^ Hemphill, Brian E., "Foreign elites from the Oxus civilization? A craniometric study of anomalous burials from Bronze Age Tepe Hissar", American Journal of Physical Anthropology: The Official Publication of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists 110.4, pp. 421-434, 1999
  20. ^ [6] Bessenay-Prolonge, Julie, and Régis Vallet, "Tureng Tepe and its high terrace, a reassessment" The Iranian Plateau during the Bronze Age: Development of Urbanisation, Production and Trade, pp. 165-178, 2020
  21. ^ Bovington, C. H., et al., "The radiocarbon evidence for the terminal date of the Hissar IIIC culture", Iran, pp. 195-199, 1974
  22. ^ a b [7] Hurst, Barbara J., and Barbara Lawn, "University of Pennsylvania radiocarbon dates XXII", Radiocarbon 26.2, pp. 212-240, 1984
  23. ^ Gürsan-Salzmann, Ayşe, "Stratigraphy and Architecture", in The New Chronology of the Bronze Age Settlement of Tepe Hissar, Iran, University of Pennsylvania Press for the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, pp. 41-70, 2016 ISBN 9781934536834
  24. ^ Zargari, P., et al., "New Perspective on Tappeh Hesar", SM J Biol 2.2, 2016
  25. ^ [8] Peter Damerow and Robert K. Englund, "The Proto-Elamite Texts from Tepe Yahya", The American School of Prehistoric Research Bulletin 39, Cambridge, MA, 1989 ISBN 0-87365-542-7
  26. ^ Dyson, R.H., "The relative and absolute chronology of Hissar II and the proto-Elamite horizon of northern Iran", in Aurenche, O., Evin, J. & Hours, F. (eds.) Chronologies in the Near East: relative chronologies and absolute chronology 16,000-4,000 B.P. British Archaeological Reports, Series 379, V2, Oxford, England, pp. 647-678, 1987
  27. ^ [9] Afshar, Z. and Roberts, C. and Millard, A., "Interpersonal violence among the Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages inhabitants living on the Central Plateau of Iran : a voice from Tepe Hissar.", Anthropologischer Anzeiger., vol. 75, iss. 1, pp. 49-66, 2018
  28. ^ R. H. Dyson Jr. and C. P. Thornton, "Shir-i Shian and the fifth millennium sequence of Northern Iran", Iran 47, pp. 1–22, 2009
  29. ^ L. Costantini and R.H. Dyson Jr., "The Ancient Agriculture of the Damghan Plain: The Archaeological Evidence from Tepe Hissar", in N.F. Miller, ed., Economy and Settlement in the Near East: Analyses of Ancient Sites and Materials , MASCA, Research Papers in Science and Archaeology 7, Suppl., Philadelphia, pp. 46–68, 1990
  30. ^ M.Y. Mashkour “Faunal remains from Teppeh Hissar (Iran),” in Proceedings of XIII International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, Forli, Italia,September 1996 I, (3), Forli, pp. 543–51, 1998

Further reading

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  • [10] Afshar, Zahra, "Palaeopathological Analyses of Human Skeletons: Statistical Analysis of Health and Disease among the Chalcolithic and Bronze Age Populations at Tepe Hissar", Int J Soc Iran Archaeol 5, pp. 31–44, 2017
  • [11] Afshar, Zahra, et al., "The evolution of diet during the 5th to 2nd millennium BCE for the population buried at Tepe Hissar, north-eastern Central Iranian Plateau: The stable isotope evidence", Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 27, 2019
  • Andaroodi, Elham, and Mojgan Aghaeimeybodi, "Analysis of Prehistoric Architecture in the Northeast of the Iranian Plateau: A Study of Architectural Developments in the Residential-ritual Sections of Damghan’s Tepe Hissar", pazhoheshha-ye Bastan shenasi Iran 11.28, pp. 53–71, 2021
  • Anisi, Alireza, "Tepe Hissar in Damghan: A Conservation and Management Plan", Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 23.3-4, pp. 172–194, 2021
  • Hozhabri, Ali, and Mohammad Mortezaei, "Determining the Chronology and Function of Monument of Tepe Hissar-Damghan; A Survey of the Building of Qumis, Northeastern of Iran", Journal of Iran's Pre Islamic Archaeological Essays 7.1, pp. 115–128, 2022
  • Pigott, V. C., Howard, S. M. and Epstein, S. M., "Pyrotechnology and culture change at Bronze Age Tepe Hissar (Iran)", in Early pyrotechnology: Washington, D.C. Smithsonian Institution, pp. 215–36, 1982
  • Sankalia, H. D., "Kot Diji and Hissar III", Antiquity 43.170, pp. 142–144, 1969
  • Thornton, C. P., "A Return to the South Hill of Tepe Hissar, Iran", 'My Life is like the Summer Rose', Maurizio Tosi e l'Archeologia come modo di vivere. Papers in honour of Maurizio Tosi for his 70th birthday, hrsg. v. C. C. Lamberg-Karlovsky, B. Genito, B. Cerasetti (British Archaeological Reports International Series)., pp. 711–718, 2014
  • Thornton, Christopher P., A. Gürsan-Salzmann, and Robert H. Dyson, "Tepe Hissar and the Fourth Millennium BC of North-Eastern Iran", Ancient Iran and Its Neighbors: Local Developments and Long-Range Interactions in the Fourth Millennium BC, edited by Cameron A. Petrie, pp. 131–44, 2013
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