JIROFT
CULTURE
Jiroft,
Iran
Jiroft
culture bronze vase, created 2500 BC to 2200 BC
The
"Jiroft culture" also known as the Intercultural style
or the Halilrud style, is a postulated early Bronze Age (late 3rd
millennium BC) archaeological culture, located in the territory
of present-day Balochistan and Kerman Provinces of Iran. The
hypothesis is based on a collection of artifacts that have not been
formally excavated but rather recovered from looters by Iranian
authorities; accepted by many to have derived from the Jiroft area
in south central Iran, as reported by online Iranian news services,
beginning in 2001.
The
proposed type site is Konar Sandal, near Jiroft in the Halil River
area. Other significant sites associated with the culture include;
Shahr-e
Sukhteh (Burnt City), Tepe Bampur, Espiedej, Shahdad, Tal-i-Iblis
and Tepe Yahya.
The
proposition of grouping these sites as an "independent Bronze
Age civilization with its own architecture and language", intermediate
between Elam to the west and the Indus Valley Civilization to the
east, is due to Yusef Majidzadeh, head of the archaeological excavation
team in Jiroft. He speculates they may be the remains of
the lost Aratt
Kingdom, but his conclusions have met with skepticism from some
reviewers. Other conjectures (e.g. Daniel T. Potts, Piotr
Steinkeller) have connected Konar Sandal with the obscure city-state
of Marhashi, that apparently lay to the east of Elam proper.
Discovery and excavation :
Many artifacts associated with Jiroft were recovered from looters
described as "destitute villagers" who had scavenged the
area south of Jiroft before 2001, when a team led by Yusef Majidzadeh
began excavations. The team uncovered more than two square kilometers
of remains from a city dating back to at least the late 3rd millennium
BC. The data Madjidzadeh's team has gathered demonstrates that
Jiroft's heyday was from 2500 BC to 2200 BC.
The
looted artifacts and some vessels recovered by the excavators were
of the so-called "intercultural style" type of pottery
known from Mesopotamia and the Iranian Plateau, and since the 1960s
from nearby Tepe Yahya in Baft. The "Jiroft civilization"
hypothesis proposes that this "intercultural style" is
in fact the distinctive style of a previously unknown, long-lived
civilization.[citation needed]
This
is not universally accepted. Archaeologist Oscar Muscarella of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art criticizes that the excavators resorted
to sensationalist announcements while being more slow in publishing
scholarly reports, and their claims that the site's stratigraphy
shows continuity into the 4th millennium as overly optimistic. Muscarella
does nevertheless acknowledge the importance of the site.
Earlier
excavations at Kerman were conducted by Sir Aurel Stein around 1930.
Jiroft culture artifact
One of the most notable archaeological excavations done in Kerman
Province was one done by a group led by Professor Joseph Caldwell
from Illinois State Museum in 1966 (Tal-i-Iblis) and Lamberg-Karlovsky
from Harvard University in 1967 (Tepe Yahya Sogan Valley, Dolatabad).
Archeological
excavations in Jiroft led to the discovery of several objects belonging
to the fourth millennium BC.
According
to Majidzadeh, geophysical operations by French experts in the region
indicate the existence at least 10 historical and archaeological
periods in the region belonging to different civilizations who lived
in this area during different periods of time in history. According
to the French experts who studied this area, the evidence remained
from these civilizations may be traced up to 11 meters under the
ground.
"What
is obvious is that the evidence of Tal-i-Iblis culture in Bardsir
can be traced in all parts of the region. Tal-i-Iblis culture, known
as Ali Abad period (fourth millennium BC) was revealed by Joseph
R. Caldwell, American archaeologist,"[citation needed] said
Majidzadeh.
Jiroft vase, 2800 - 2300 BC
Jiroft
vase, 2800 - 2300 BC
Vase
from the Jiroft region. A "two horned" figure wrestling
with serpents
Jiroft
statuette, 2800 - 2300 BC
Site
:
The primary Jiroft site consists of two mounds a few kilometers
apart, called Konar Sandal A and B with a height of 13 and 21 meters,
respectively (approximate location 28.5° N 57.8° E). At
Konar Sandal B, a two-story, windowed citadel with a base of close
to 13.5 hectares was found.
Helmand
culture :
Master
of animals in chlorite, Jiroft, Kerman ca. 2500 BC, Bronze Age I,
National Museum of Iran
Helmand culture of western Afghanistan was a Bronze Age culture
of the 3rd millennium BC. Some scholars link it with Shahr-i Sokhta,
Mundigak, and Bampur.
The
term "Helmand civilization" was proposed by M. Tosi. This
civilization flourished between 2500 and 1900 BC, and may have coincided
with the great flourishing of the Indus Valley Civilization. This
was also the final phase of Periods III and IV of Shahr-i Sokhta,
and the last part of Mundigak Period IV.
Thus,
Jiroft culture is closely related to Helmand culture. Jiroft
culture flourished in the eastern Iran, and the Helmand culture
in western Afghanistan at the same time. In fact, they may represent
the same cultural area. Mehrgarh culture, on the other hand, is
far earlier.
Writing
system :
Jiroft
culture inscriptions
An inscription, discovered in a palace, was carved on a brick whose
lower left corner only has remained, explained Yusef Majidzadeh,
head of the Jiroft excavation team."The two remaining lines
are enough to recognize the Elamite script," he added. "The
only ancient inscriptions known to experts before the Jiroft discovery
were cuneiform and hieroglyph," said Majidzadeh, adding that
"The new-found inscription is formed by geometric shapes and
no linguist around the world has been able to decipher it yet."
Some
Iranian archeologists believe the discovered inscription is the
most ancient script found so far, predating these others, and that
the Elamite written language originated in Jiroft, where the writing
system developed first and was then spread across the country.
Other
scholars have called the authenticity of the cyphers into question,
suggesting they may be examples of several modern forgeries in circulation
since the earlier looting at the site.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Jiroft_culture