Vast in scale and densely inhabited, Late Neolithic Near Eastern megasites have been variously considered in relation to urbanity. Often viewed as failed experiments on the path to proper urbanism or proto-urban sites, these settlements reveal few signs of hierarchical social stratification despite their large size; as such, they represent a challenge for the understanding of early processes of community formation and social integration. Drawing upon a wide range of data and using socio-material network analysis as a methodological tool, this paper explores the way the late Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük was organized internally and specifically the way individual houses were embedded in the wider social fabric of the site. This study sheds l...
Exploring the Early Holocene Occupation of North-Central Anatolia: New Approaches for studying Archa...
Recent approaches have described the evolutionary dynamics of the rst Neolithic soci- eties as a cyc...
The 5th and 6th millennia in the Near East, falling “between the revolutions” represented by the eme...
Vast in scale and densely inhabited, Late Neolithic Near Eastern megasites have been variously consi...
The cognitive, psychological and sociological mechanisms underpinning complex social relationships a...
In the Near East, nomadic hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary farmers for the first time duri...
One fascinating aspect of archaeological analysis is the explanation of the frequency with which mat...
The Late Neolithic period in Upper Mesopotamia is generally associated with a surge in human settlem...
The multi-layered and multi-scalar nature of the term ‘community’ makes it a useful tool for both pa...
This paper introduces key concepts of network theory and analysis, and their relevance to archaeolog...
Storing information and circulating it between individuals and groups is a critical behaviour that s...
The origins of urbanism are a controversial subject, with neo-evolutionary progress through graduate...
The Neolithic in the Near East witnessed increased duration of settlements and the emergence of food...
Archaeological studies of early civilizations in southwestern Asia concentrate on the evolution of u...
This thesis investigates the development of early farming societies in Western Anatolia and Southeas...
Exploring the Early Holocene Occupation of North-Central Anatolia: New Approaches for studying Archa...
Recent approaches have described the evolutionary dynamics of the rst Neolithic soci- eties as a cyc...
The 5th and 6th millennia in the Near East, falling “between the revolutions” represented by the eme...
Vast in scale and densely inhabited, Late Neolithic Near Eastern megasites have been variously consi...
The cognitive, psychological and sociological mechanisms underpinning complex social relationships a...
In the Near East, nomadic hunter-gatherer societies became sedentary farmers for the first time duri...
One fascinating aspect of archaeological analysis is the explanation of the frequency with which mat...
The Late Neolithic period in Upper Mesopotamia is generally associated with a surge in human settlem...
The multi-layered and multi-scalar nature of the term ‘community’ makes it a useful tool for both pa...
This paper introduces key concepts of network theory and analysis, and their relevance to archaeolog...
Storing information and circulating it between individuals and groups is a critical behaviour that s...
The origins of urbanism are a controversial subject, with neo-evolutionary progress through graduate...
The Neolithic in the Near East witnessed increased duration of settlements and the emergence of food...
Archaeological studies of early civilizations in southwestern Asia concentrate on the evolution of u...
This thesis investigates the development of early farming societies in Western Anatolia and Southeas...
Exploring the Early Holocene Occupation of North-Central Anatolia: New Approaches for studying Archa...
Recent approaches have described the evolutionary dynamics of the rst Neolithic soci- eties as a cyc...
The 5th and 6th millennia in the Near East, falling “between the revolutions” represented by the eme...