HAJJI
FIRUZ TEPE
Hajji
Firuz Tepe
Location
: Iran
Region : West Azarbaijan province
Coordinates : 36.9944° N 45.4744° E
Type : Tell
Length : 200 metres (660 ft)
Width : 140 metres (460 ft)
Height : 10.3 metres (34 ft)
History
Periods : Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Late Bronze
Age/Iron Age, Islamic
Site notes
Excavation dates : 1936, 1958, 1960, 1961, 1968
Archaeologists : A. Stein, C. Burney, T. Cuyler
Young Jr., R.H. Dyson, Mary M. Voigt
Hajji
Firuz Tepe is an archaeological site located in West Azarbaijan
province in north-western Iran and lies in the north-western part
of the Zagros Mountains. The site was excavated between 1958
and 1968 by archaeologists from the University of Pennsylvania Museum
of Archaeology and Anthropology. The excavations revealed a Neolithic
village that was occupied in the second half of the sixth millennium
BC where some of the oldest archaeological evidence of grape-based
wine was discovered in the form of organic residue in a pottery
jar.
History
of research :
Hajji Firuz Tepe was first noted in 1936 by Sir Aurel Stein,
who collected pottery sherds from the surface of the site. The
site was more thoroughly investigated between 1958 and 1968, when
four excavation seasons took place as part of the larger Hasanlu
Project conducted by the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology
and Anthropology. The site was originally selected in order to investigate
the early periods that had been attested in the occupation sequence
of nearby Hasanlu. These excavations were supervised by Charles
Burney (1958, 1961), T. Cuyler Young Jr. (1961) and Robert H. Dyson
and Mary M. Voigt (1968). During these seasons, excavation squares
were opened in four different parts of the site, with the largest
exposure being reached on the north-eastern slope of the mound.
The
site and its environment :
Hajji Firuz Tepe lies in the Gadar River valley in West Azarbaijan
province, north-western Iran. It is a tell, or settlement mound,
of roughly oval shape measuring 200 by 140 metres (660 by 460 ft)
at its base and reaching an elevation of 10.3 metres (34 ft) above
the plain, but archaeological deposits also continue to an unknown
depth below the modern surface of the plain. The plain in which
Hajji Firuz Tepe is located lies in the north-western part of the
Zagros Mountains at an elevation of 1,300–1,350 metres (4,270–4,430
ft) amsl. The Gadar River flows through it toward the east to eventually
end in marshes bordering Lake Urmia. The area is an important crossroads,
with routes leading in all directions, including an easy route toward
the west, crossing the Zagros Mountains via Rowanduz and Arbil toward
the Mesopotamian Plains. The Gadar River valley falls within both
the modern and ancient distribution zones of the wild grape (Vitis
vinifera subsp. sylvestris) and of the terebinth.
Occupation
history :
View
of the Zagros Mountains
Although the excavations focused primarily on the Neolithic occupation
layers of the site, evidence for later occupation was also attested.
On different parts of the tell, material from the Chalcolithic,
Late Bronze Age/Iron Age and Islamic (eleventh century AD) periods
was recovered, although the Neolithic occupation seems to have been
the most significant occupation. The Neolithic occupation has been
divided in 12 phases, named A–L from latest to earliest.
Hajji
Firuz period :
Recent studies indicate that the Hajji Firuz period in northwest
Iran can be dated c. 6000–5400 cal BC. Then, there was a short
gap in chronology, or perhaps a transitional period.
The
Dalma tradition then emerged; new radiocarbon dates for this tradition
are c. 5000–4500 cal BC. Dalma seems like the result of a
long local sequence of development from the Hajji Firuz period.
Evidence
for winemaking :
The evidence for winemaking consisted of six 9-litre (2.4 US gal)
jars that were embedded in the floor of what archeologists suspect
was a kitchen area in a mudbrick building that was inhabited some
time between 5400–5000 BC. Inside was yellowish deposits that
chemical analysis showed contained residue of tartaric acid and
calcium tartrate. Additionally, analysis found deposit of resin,
identified as from the terebinth tree (Pistacia terebinthus) that
grew wild in the area. It is possible that the resin was used as
a preservative, in a manner similar to the Greek wine Retsina still
being produced today, suggesting that winemaking in Hajji Firuz
Tepe was deliberately taking place over 7,000 years ago.
Implications
of the discovery :
While the residue in the jar is not definitive proof of winemaking,
it does provide strong evidence for the possibility. Grapes are
unique in being one of the few natural sources for tartaric acid,
which is the most abundant acid in wine and often crystallizes into
deposits that are left in containers that have held wine. Grapes
also have a natural propensity to break down into alcohol by a process
that we now know as fermentation where the yeast on the grape skins
metabolize the sugar in the grapes into alcohol. This happens most
readily in a close container that is kept in room temperature. Whether
or not the action was deliberate, storing grapes in jars that were
then embedded in the floor would have created conditions favorable
for wine production.
The
presence of the terebinth resin deposits in the same container as
the wine give a stronger indication that winemaking was perhaps
deliberate in Hajji Firuz Tepe. Resin has had a long history of
being used as ancient sealant and preservative, even before it became
associated with winemaking by the ancient Greeks. The volume that
was stored (54 litres (14 US gal)) also seems to indicate large
scale production beyond just household storage of a food product
for sustenance. Additionally, archaeologists found clay stoppers,
corresponding in size to the opening of the jars, nearby that also
suggest a deliberate attempt at long term preservation and protection
from air exposure.
Other
discoveries :
The Zagros Mountains, which separate modern day Iran from Armenia,
Iraq and Turkey, is home to many wild species of grapevines in the
Vitis family. While wild vines are distinguished by separate
male and female vines, the potential for pollination and the production
of grapes could have easily happened, providing the inhabitants
access to grapes. Several archaeological sites in the Zagros Mountains
have uncovered similar findings as Hajji Firuz Tepe of jars containing
tartaric deposits and wine residues. South of Hajji Firuz Tepe is
Godin Tepe, a site that appears to have been inhabited just after
the neolithic period (around 3500–3000 BC). Archaeologists
there have discovered even more evidence of large scale winemaking
with 30-litre (7.9 US gal) and 60-litre (16 US gal) wine jars as
well as large basins containing wine residue, indicating that they
might have been used for treading grapes as an early wine press.
The residue on the jars was also found on the side of the containers,
rather than the bottom, indicating that these jars were kept on
their side, most likely for long term storage.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Hajji_Firuz_Tepe