Chalcolithic religious practice at the site of cadir Hoyuk (central Anatolia) included the insertion of ritual deposits into the architectural fabric of the settlement, "consecrating" spaces or imbuing them with symbolic properties. These deposits are recognizable in the archaeological record by their consistent use of ritually-charged material, such as ochre, copper, human and animal bone, and certain kinds of ceramics. During the 800-year period considered in this paper, the material practice of making these ritual deposits remained remarkably consistent. However, the types of spaces where the deposits are made change as shifting social organization reforms the divisions between private and public space
Scholars have recently investigated the efficacy of applying globalisation models to ancient culture...
Human sacrifice has long been associated with the rise of hierarchical centralised societies. Recent...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Çadır Höyük, located in the Yozgat Province of the north-central Anatolian plateau, was continuously...
Excavations at Hacmebi have revealed three phases of Late Chalcolithic occupation, each with extensi...
Excavations that started in 2011 at Hacılar Büyük Höyük, which is located 27 km southwest of Burdur,...
The site of Aktopraklık in northwestern Turkey was inhabited during the Late Neolithic and Early Cha...
Radyokarbon tarihleri Orta Batı Anadolu bölgesinde Neolitik yerleşimlerin MÖ 6. binyılın ilk çeyreği...
In the last 5-10 years archaeological data to support “ cultic” or ritual activity amongst communiti...
In this paper we examine why common methodologies for determining ‘religious architecture’ do not ac...
Çadır Höyük provides rich evidence for the endurance and transformation of specific cultural featur...
Cadir Hoyuk, located in the Yozgat Province of the north-central Anatolian plateau, was continuously...
In this paper, a particular type of unusual archaeological deposits found at some high medieval (12–...
The Cadir Höyük mound is located in the Yozgat Province, approximately 16 km from the modern town of...
The Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (EBA) 1 are dynamic prehistoric eras, encapsulating cruci...
Scholars have recently investigated the efficacy of applying globalisation models to ancient culture...
Human sacrifice has long been associated with the rise of hierarchical centralised societies. Recent...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Çadır Höyük, located in the Yozgat Province of the north-central Anatolian plateau, was continuously...
Excavations at Hacmebi have revealed three phases of Late Chalcolithic occupation, each with extensi...
Excavations that started in 2011 at Hacılar Büyük Höyük, which is located 27 km southwest of Burdur,...
The site of Aktopraklık in northwestern Turkey was inhabited during the Late Neolithic and Early Cha...
Radyokarbon tarihleri Orta Batı Anadolu bölgesinde Neolitik yerleşimlerin MÖ 6. binyılın ilk çeyreği...
In the last 5-10 years archaeological data to support “ cultic” or ritual activity amongst communiti...
In this paper we examine why common methodologies for determining ‘religious architecture’ do not ac...
Çadır Höyük provides rich evidence for the endurance and transformation of specific cultural featur...
Cadir Hoyuk, located in the Yozgat Province of the north-central Anatolian plateau, was continuously...
In this paper, a particular type of unusual archaeological deposits found at some high medieval (12–...
The Cadir Höyük mound is located in the Yozgat Province, approximately 16 km from the modern town of...
The Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (EBA) 1 are dynamic prehistoric eras, encapsulating cruci...
Scholars have recently investigated the efficacy of applying globalisation models to ancient culture...
Human sacrifice has long been associated with the rise of hierarchical centralised societies. Recent...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...