ARCHAEOLOGY Subscribe! Special Introductory Offer
Renew Subscription
Buy Back Issues
Give a Gift Subscription
A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
 
Email this article
features
Urbanization at Tell Brak, Syria Volume 61 Number 1, January/February 2008
by Heather Pringle

Tell Brak • Syria

[image]

[image]

Pottery sherds from Syria's Tell Brak show that the Bronze Age city developed from a central core surrounded by satellite communities. (Courtesy Jason Ur)

Archaeologists have long believed that the world's oldest cities lay along the fertile riverbanks of southern Mesopotamia, in what is now Iraq. There, in a land of plenty, went the idea, powerful kings began coercing their subjects to live together some 6,000 years ago. Their great invention--the city--later spread throughout the Near East. But last August, Harvard University archaeologist Jason Ur and two British colleagues turned that idea on its head. Their intensive field survey and surface collection of potsherds at the site of Tell Brak in northern Syria revealed that an ancient city rose there at exactly the same time as urban centers first sprouted up in southern Mesopotamia, but followed a very different model of development. "Urbanism," says Ur, "is not one brilliant idea that occurred one place and then diffused."

Tell Brak first came to scientific attention in the 1930s when British archaeologist Max Mallowan and his wife Agatha Christie started excavations there. But recently, a team led by Cambridge University archaeologist Joan Oates has unearthed new clues to the city's early years. By 3900 B.C., the ancient metropolis sprawled across some 130 acres and boasted a flourishing bureaucracy and skilled artisans turning out fine marble chalices and other luxury goods for the ruling class.

Intriguingly, Tell Brak seems to have grown from the outside in. In the south, cities began as a central settlement--under a single authority--that grew outward. But Ur's field survey shows that Tell Brak started as a central community ringed by smaller satellite settlements that expanded inward. "There isn't a very tight control over these surrounding villages, at least at this beginning period," says Ur. "So the assumption that we're making is that people were coming in under their own volition."

More Top Discoveries of 2007

-----
© 2008 by the Archaeological Institute of America
www.archaeology.org/0801/topten/tell_brak.html

Share this page:



del.icio.us  StumbleUpon

Share

E-Update

Stay up-to-date on news and
new features on our website.
Click here to sign up.

Buy current & back issues:

ARCHAEOLOGY back issues
See what's available!

current issue
Current Issue

online content

Exclusive Features
Taft Blackhorse & John Stein, Uncanny Archaeology, The Newark Earthworks

Latest News
Daily archaeological headlines

Interactive Digs
Zominthos, Crete; El Carrizal, Mexico; Sagalassos, Turkey

On Site
Voyage to Crete, Picturing the Holy Land

Reviews
"Becoming Human," "Discovering Ardi," "Magic in Ancient Egypt"

Interviews
Richard Leakey, Edward Bleiberg, Andrew Edwards

Privacy Policy - Contact Us - Advertise
© 2009 Archaeological Institute of America
Website by Castle Builder Design
Hosting donated by Hurricane Electric
he.net