Titris Hoyuk (also Titriş Höyük) is an ancient Near East archaeological site in Turkey. It lies 45 kilometers north of
Şanlıurfa
Urfa, officially known as Şanlıurfa () and in ancient times as Edessa, is a city in southeastern Turkey and the capital of Şanlıurfa Province. Urfa is situated on a plain about 80 km east of the Euphrates River. Its climate features ext ...
, near the Euphrates River valley. It is a two-period site from the 3rd millennium BC. Unlike most archaeological sites in the region, the primary focus has been on excavating non-elite, mostly domestic, areas rather than elite spaces.
[Nishimura, Yoko, "North Mesopotamian Urban Neighborhoods at Titris Höyük in the Third Millennium BC", Making ancient cities: space and place in early urban societies. Andrew T. Creekmore III and Kevin D. Fisher, eds, pp. 74–110, 2014] It has been suggested that the city name was Dulu in the 3rd millennium BC.
History
The main mound, 3.3 hectares in area and rising 30 meters above the plane, was occupied from the
Chalcolithic
The Copper Age, also called the Chalcolithic (; from grc-gre, χαλκός ''khalkós'', "copper" and ''lÃthos'', "stone") or (A)eneolithic (from Latin '' aeneus'' "of copper"), is an archaeological period characterized by regular ...
through the Islamic periods (including the Hellenistic, Roman, and Medieval periods) and has not yet been excavated.
Early Bronze
The site was active in two periods.
Early Bronze III
In the first, between 2700 and 2400 BC, it reached a size of 43 hectares developing in an unplanned manner from the center. This was a time when other northern Mesopotamian sites also experienced significant growth including
Tell Brak and
Tell Mardikh
Ebla (Sumerian language, Sumerian: ''eb₂-la'', ar, إبلا, modern: , Tell Mardikh) was one of the earliest kingdoms in Syria. Its remains constitute a Tell (archaeology), tell located about southwest of Aleppo near the village of Mard ...
. There were production areas for
Canaanean blade
A Canaanean blade is an archaeological term for a long, wide blade made out of stone or flint, predominantly found at sites in Israel and Lebanon (ancient Canaan). They were first manufactured and used in the Neolithic Stone Age to be used as weapo ...
s on the outskirts.
Early Bronze IV
After a period of abandonment the second occupation period began around 2300 BC, reaching 35 hectares. This phase of development was centrally planned with regular streets and terraces.
[T. Matney, "Urban planning and the archaeology of society at Early Bronze Age Titris ̧Höyük", In: D. C. Hopkins (Hrsg.), Across the Anatolian Plateau. Readings in the archaeology of ancient Turkey. The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 57, Boston, pp. 19–34, 2002] It also gained a 3-meter wide mud brick (with stone foundations) fortification wall complete with a moat. This phase ended by the close of the 3rd millennium BC.
A group burial at the end of this phase has been interpreted as the result of a massacre or possibly the result of a battle. In the following several centuries pit graves were cut into the abandoned buildings.
A manna (duck) weight inscribed with the name of an official of the Akkadian ruler
Shu-durul was recovered from a looted context.
Archaeology
Work was restricted to non-elite areas, in the Lower Town (which extends east and west of the main mound) and in the Outer Town (north of the main mound) with one sounding on the main mound. A small modern village lies adjacent to the east. Over 16 hectares of the site were subjected to a magnetometry survey. Eight seasons of excavation (with one study season) were conducted and directed by
Guillermo Algaze
Guillermo Algaze (born November 24, 1954) is a Cuban-born American anthropologist and recipient of a 2003 MacArthur Award,
Algaze is a former chair of the anthropology department at University of California, San Diego, and project director of the ...
.
An Early Bronze Age lead mold used to produce lead ornaments was found at Titris Höyük. It was used to produce objects including a "pendant carving ‘in the shape of a reed hut framed with two poles, each of which are capped with a single bullhead".
[Laneri, Nicola, "The Discovery of a Funerary Ritual: Inanna/Ishtar and Her Descent to the Nether World in Titriş Höyük, Turkey", East and West, vol. 52, no. 1/4, pp. 9–51, 2002]
A notable find was a burial from the late Early Bronze age where
See also
*
Cities of the ancient Near East
The earliest cities in history were in the ancient Near East, an area covering roughly that of the modern Middle East: its history began in the 4th millennium BC and ended, depending on the interpretation of the term, either with the conquest by ...
References
{{Reflist
Further reading
*Algaze, Guillermo, et al., "Early Bronze Age urbanism in southeastern Anatolia and Upper Mesopotamia: Recent analyses from Titriş Höyük", Antatolica 47, pp. 1-70, 2021
*Honca D, Algaze G., "Preliminary report on the human skeletal remains at Titris ̧ Höyük:1991–1996 seasons", Anatolica 24, pp. 101–141, 1998
*Benech, Christophe, "Étude croisée sur un plan d'urbanisme irrégulier du Bronze ancien: le cas de Titriş Höyük", Parcours d'Orient. Recueil de textes offert à Christine Kepinski, hrsg. v. Bérengère Perello, Aline Tenu, pp. 1-8, 2016
*Hald, Mette Marie, "Distribution of Crops at Late Early Bronze Age Titriş Höyük, Southeast Anatolia: Towards a Model for the Identification of Consumers of Centrally Organised Food Distribution", Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 69–77, 2010
*Hartenberger, Britt Elizabeth, "A study of craft specialization and the organization of chipped stone production at Early Bronze Age Titriş Höyük, southeastern Turkey", Disertation, Boston University, 2003
atney, Timothy, et al., "Understanding Early Bronze Age social structure through mortuary remains: A pilot aDNA study from Titriş Höyük, southeastern Turkey", International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 22.3, pp. 338–351, 2012
imothy Matney, "Infant Burial Practices as Domestic Funerary Ritual at Early Bronze Age Titriş Höyük", Near Eastern Archaeology, vol. 81, no. 3, pp. 174–81, 2018
*Nishimura, Yoko, "Domestic Material Culture and Wealth Equality: Bronze Age Houses and Intramural Tombs at Titriş Höyük, Turkey", Near Eastern Archaeology 86.3, pp. 176-184, 2023
chneider, Adam William, The Perfect Storm: A New Multicausal Model of the Political Collapse of Titriş Höyük, an Early Bronze Age City-State in Southeastern Anatolia", Dissertation, University of California, San Diego, 2015
*Schneider, Adam W., et al., "Stable carbon and oxygen isotope evidence for late third millennium BCE environmental and social change at Titriş Höyük, an Early Bronze Age urban center in the Lower Turkish Euphrates watershed", The Routledge Handbook of the Bioarchaeology of Climate and Environmental Change, Routledge, pp. 453-472, 2020
External links
Evidence of Early Bronze Age Massacre Found in Turkey – IBT – Sanskrity Sinha – 02/25/12 Archaeological sites of prehistoric Anatolia
Populated places established in the 3rd millennium BC
Former populated places in Turkey
Archaeological sites in Southeastern Anatolia