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IRANIAN ART & ARCHAEOLOGY: PRE-MEDIAN ERA Pre-Median Archaeology History & Method of Research By: T. C. Young
1.
The sequence of events. The history of archaeological
research in Iran may be divided into two periods, before and after the Second
World War. The early period can in turn be subdivided into a first phase of
mainly French activity (ca. 1884-1931), and a second phase in which archaeology
in Iran became a multinational affair (1931-40). The modern period can be
subdivided into what might best be called the "quiet phase" (1940-57)
and the "explosive phase" (1958-78). Of course an interest in the
antiquities of Iran predates 1884 and the beginnings of systematic
archaeological exploration. As early as the 17th century, a number of European
travellers reported with surprise on the remarkable ancient monuments to be seen
throughout the countryside. The first scientific and scholarly attempt to deal
with one such monument, however, was Rawlinson's recording of the Bisotun (Behistun)
inscription (1836-41). While hardly a prehistoric project, that effort, which
resulted in the decipherment of Aryan (Old Persian), Elamite, and Akkadian
cuneiform, led to a quickening of interest in ancient western Asia and in the
history and prehistory of Iran. The next effort of note is the work of Flandin
and Coste, who, between 1843 and 1854, recorded numerous standing monuments and
sites in both words and drawings. At the same time, the first actual excavations
were undertaken by Loftus, who recovered Achaemenid remains on the
Āpādānā
mound
at Susā (1851-53).
A. The Early Period The
First Phase, from the start of
systematic excavations at Susa in 1884 until roughly 1931, has been identified
as the "French monopoly," and in fact, efforts were made to keep other
foreign missions out of the country. Early French excavations concentrated on
Susa, under the direction of M. Dieulafoy from 1884 to 1886, J. J. de Morgan
from 1897 to 1912, and Comte R. de Mecquenem from 1912 to 1939, with an interruption in fieldwork during the First World War. The main prehistoric
results from Susā came from the explorations of the Acropole mound. The basic
cultural sequence established there for Khuzistān (Kūzestān) provided the
chronological and cultural yardstick against which archaeologists measured the
prehistoric cultures discovered on the plateau for some time. This strictly prehistoric sequence
(in terms of Iran) was topped by deep deposits that covered the history of Elam
from about 2300 BCE to well into the first millennium. Numerous finds from these
strata at Susā either were Mesopotamian objects, usually out of context at Susā,
which could at least be securely dated in terms of Mesopotamian history (e.g.,
the Law Code of Hammurapi, the Victory Stele of Narim Sin), or were locally made
objects that betrayed Mesopotamian influences and thus were good chronological
markers within the sequence. Such clear, strong, and comparatively well-dated
links to the cultures of Mesopotamia were rare in most of the archaeological
remains from the plateau, and the Susa sequence assumed a particular importance
in establishing the prehistoric chronology of Iran. Outside of Susā the French
undertook small excavations at Tepe Duvaisyah, Djaffarābād (Ĵa`farābād),
and Mūsyān (and surrounding mounds) in Khuzistān all of which yielded painted
pottery that could be related to the Susa sequence. Under de Morgan the French
Mission expanded its efforts into regions beyond Khuzistān, with striking
results. From 1899 to 1902 and again in 1909 he undertook surveys and soundings
at various sites in Gurgān (Ĵorĵān) and, most notably, in the Tawalesh (Tawāleš) region of eastern Azarbāijan, where a sequence of
Bronze Age cemeteries was discovered. This preliminary work on the plateau
indicated that there was much profitable work to be done in the highlands. The Second Phase of the
Early Period in Iranian archaeology begins in 1931 with the end of the
"French monopoly." Two non-French expeditions had actually predated
this phase, for A. Stein conducted a survey in Seistān (Sīstān) in 1915-16,
and E. Herzfeld made a remarkable trip of discovery through western Iran in
1925-26. Extensive excavations sponsored by numerous institutions, mainly in the
United States, however, began only in the early 1930s. Three expeditions focused
attention on Gūrgān and the northeast corner of the plateau. F. Wulsin's
excavations at Tureng Tepe for the University Museum in Philadelphia, E. F.
Schmidt's work at Tepe Hissar for the same institution, and the Swedish
expedition under T. S. Arne to Shah Tepe in Gurgān all revealed an early 5th-
and 3rd-millennium BCE painted pottery culture underlying 3rd- and early
2nd-millennium plain grey-wares. G. Langsdorf excavated at Bākūn near
Persepolis in 1932 for the Oriental Institute of Chicago and discovered yet
another corpus of painted pottery that had cultural connections with prehistoric
Susa. Schmidt's work at Cheshmeh (Češma) `Ali (Ray) in 1934-36 demonstrated that the painted
pottery of early Hissār and Gurgan extended west at least as far as the Tehran
area. Stein surveyed (and sounded selected sites) in Baluchistān and Fars in
1932-34, while Schmidt carried out the first aerial survey in the Zagros
mountains in 1935-36, and did some excavation in Luristān (Lorestān) in
1934-35 and 1937-38. The latter effort revealed materials of both Bronze and
Iron Age date and was inspired by the chance discovery and clandestine
excavation of the famous (or infamous) Luristan Bronzes, which first began to
appear in the European art market shortly before 1930. Meanwhile the French expanded their
active role. Excavations continued at Susa, and new ventures were made onto the
Plateau. The search for the source of the Luristān Bronzes led G. Contenau and
R. Ghirshman to excavate at Tepe Giyān near Nehāvand in 1931-32; the sequence
of prehistoric painted pottery phases they discovered remained, until recently,
the type sequence of cultures for central western Iran from the 4th (possibly
even 5th) to the 1st millennium BCE Work by Ghirshman at Siyalk in 1933-37
revealed yet another 5th- through early 3rd-millennium pottery sequence, in part
related to the materials from Tepe Hissār, and two Iron Age cemeteries. In
Khuzistān Le Breton worked at the important prehistoric sites of Bendebāl and
Djowi and reopened the excavations at Djaffarābād. His subsequent detailed and
masterful analysis of these materials and those excavated earlier in Khuzistān
(published in Iraq 19, 1957), provided until recently the definitive exposition
of the Khuzistān sequence.
B. The Modern Period The Quiet Phase: Following the hiatus during the
Second World War archaeological activity in Iran resumed gradually over the
period of a decade after 1945. The French Mission returned to Susā under the
direction of R. Ghirshman in 1946, though from 1951 to 1962 Ghirshman's main
concern was the excavation of the monumental Elamite site of Tchogā (Čōγā)
Zanbīl. On the plateau, meanwhile, M. Rād and `A. Hākemi led an expedition on
behalf of the Archaeological Service of Iran to Hasanlu (Hasanlū), south of
Lake Urmia, where Stein's brief excavation in 1936 had revealed Bronze Age
painted pottery and Iron Age graves.
B.
Brown of Manchester University, England, dug at Geoy Tepe near Urmia for a
fortnight in 1948 and established a preliminary ceramic sequence for western
Azerbaijan from the late 4th to the 1st millennium BCE. The first investigation
of the important remains from Paleolithic Iran came with C. Coon's explorations
on behalf of the University Meseum, Philadelphia, in 1949-51. Soundings at more
than one cave yielded Mousterian or middle Paleolithic materials, and extensive
excavations at Belt and Hotu caves in the cliffs of the Caspian foreshore in Māzandarān
produced well stratified evidence for terminal Paleolithic/early Holocene
occupations. The site of Khurvin (Xorvīn), west of Tehran, already much damaged
by pot hunters and antiquity dealers, was tested in 1950 by Rād and Hākemi and
shown to consist primarily of graves now dated to the first two phases of the
Iron Age (1450-800 BCE The
Explosive Phase: The increase in activity in Iranian archaeology which began
toward the end of the 1950s is so remarkable that it can only be described as an
intellectual and scholarly explosion. More field work was done by more scholars
between 1958 and 1978 than had been undertaken in all the years between 1884 and
1958. Indeed, the record is so full of activity that, even if we confine
discussion only to substantial excavations and surveys and to those projects
which produced truly significant results, a narrative presentation is prohibited
in the space available for this article. (See L.
Vanden Berghe, Archéologie de l'Iran ancien, Leiden, 1959, and Bibliographie
analytique de archéologie de I'Iran ancien, Leiden,
1979.) Therefore, events are summarized in two tables. Table 1 presents the
record of sites excavated by region and excavator, and Table 2 lists important
surface surveys by decade. These tables reveal some interesting trends over the
past twenty plus years.
(a)
Greater international involvement. Before the war the Americans were the
only real rivals of the French; after 1958 we find expeditions from Great
Britain, Japan, Italy, West Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Canada, and Austria as
well as from France and the United States. The American presence remained
strong, with some fifteen excavation projects and numerous surveys; and the
French continued as important contributors to the discipline, with a
particularly vital and diversified effort in Khuzistan after Perrot became
Director of the French Mission in 1968. In part these changed proportions of
nations represented is a reflection of the founding early in the period of
German, British, Italian, and American institutes in Tehran. (b)
Increased Iranian participation in fieldwork and research. While there
had been essentially no Iranian excavations before the war, and, at least in
terms of prehistory, only a limited amount of Iranian research in the decade
after 1945, Table 1 lists no fewer than eight important Iranian-sponsored and
staffed expeditions and Table 2 reveals a significant Iranian contribution to
survey work. Were we here considering the archaeology of periods later than the
Median, the Iranian contribution would be still greater proportionately. This
increased Iranian participation is a reflection of three events: first, the
maturation of the Iranian Archaeological Service, founded under the tutelage of
the French before the war but staffed entirely by Iranians by 1960; second the
development of a strong program in archaeology at the University of Tehran under
the direction of E. Negahbān; and third, the foundation of the Iranian Centre
for Archaeological Research within the Archaeological Service in the early
seventies directed by F. Bagherzadeh. (c)
Rapid change in the 1960s. Table 1 shows no fewer than 45 excavations
beginning in the 1960s. The fewer number of excavations beginning in the 1970s
is balanced by the marked increase in surveys during that decade, in part a
reflection of changing intellectual priorities within the discipline and of
increasing costs of excavation (see below). (d)
Continued focus on Khuzistan. Twelve excavations (19 per cent of the
total) and a massive amount of survey in that province (which was the site of
most excavations in
the early period as well) mean that we now have more data from the flood plains
of the Karkha (Karxa) and Kārūn rivers than from any other region of Iran. Considerable
interest is also shown in Azerbaijan (eleven sites excavated; seventeen percent)
and, particularly, in the central-western Zagros (eighteen sites; twenty-eight
percent). Fourteen of the surveys listed in Table 2 focus on these two areas of
the Zagros. If the work in Fars is added to that in Khuzistan, the
central-western Zagros, and Azerbaijan, forty-eight sites or seventy-five
percent of all excavations are concentrated on the west of the plateau; eastern
Iran remains a comparatively neglected part of the country. (e) Changing chronological focus. While there is an overall balance of interest in all periods of history, a comparison with sites excavated before 1958 reveals three shifts. First, there is a noticeable increase in research on the Paleolithic period: four important excavations and six surveys have either an exclusive or a strong Paleolithic focus. Second, there is a noticeable concern with the Neolithic period, during which Iran played an important role in the earliest development of agricultural subsistence systems in the Near East. Twelve excavations have produced significant evidence for the study of the Food Producing Revolution. Third, the Iron Age (ca. 1450-550 BCE) has received considerable attention, with eighteen excavated sites producing important new data. All three of these critical prehistoric time ranges had been practically ignored before the Second World War. These changing emphases can be attributed to at least two causes: the sheer increase in the number of scholars active in the field, with a comparable increase in the number of sites that could be excavated; and altered interests within archeology as a scholarly pursuit (see below).
2. Method, Theory, and Content As
in Mesopotamia, the first archeologists in Iran were motivated by the search for
antiquities, and the early explanatory theories and methods of excavation suited
these simple, treasure-hunting goals. Unfortunately, whereas archeologists
working in Mesopotamia began to progress beyond such motivations and concepts in
the 1930s, archeology in Iran remained relatively archaic in its methods and
theory, if not in its goals, until after the Second World War.
To
be sure, archeologists working in Iran in the thirties were confronted by
massive problems. The country itself is as large as the United States east of
the Mississippi river. Only a handful of archeologists were active in the field,
and few sites were, or could be, dug. Nonetheless, two early archeologists in
Iran, J. J. de Morgan and R. Pumpelly, had some rather advanced, even modern,
ideas about archeological method and theory. De Morgan was perhaps the first
Near Eastern archeologist to argue that an archeological expedition should be
interested in more than just human and artifactual remains. Archeologists, he
suggested, should investigate not only the human past, but also its natural
setting; a proper archeological research strategy, therefore, should be
concerned with all components of the environment-geology, climate, geography,
plants, and animals-as well as with architecture and objects. In this modern
attitude de Morgan was matched by Pumpelly, who, when he decided in 1903 to
investigate the site of Anau in what is now Soviet Turkmenistan (Iranian in the
wider sense of the term), stated that his goals were not just to excavate a
site, but to study the ecology, human and natural, of an entire oasis. Unfortunately,
both de Morgan (in this regard) and Pumpelly were so far ahead of their times
that their goals and epistemology did not find favor among their colleagues. It
was not until after the Quiet Phase of the late 1950s that these same aims were
reintroduced and accepted by most prehistorians working in Iran. One
of the main difficulties for early archeologists in Iran was coming to grips
with the phenomenon of prehistory as opposed to the well-documented high
civilizations of Assyria, Babylon, Sumer, Elam, and Achaemenid Iran. The methods
of analysis and the very philosophical frameworks that had been developed for
the study of ancient literate civilizations were not suitable to the study and
analysis of prehistoric cultures. There were no archeologists specifically
trained in prehistoric research working in Iran until after 1945. Scholars who
had spent their student and early digging days studying ancient languages and
history, and who had as their prime concern the recovery of artifacts that would
provide data for art history and ancient history, were not familiar with the
analytical techniques useful for the study of prehistoric time ranges. Such
techniques were being developed in the early decades of this century in Europe
and North America, but those traditions had little influence in Iran. One
specific problem was that early Iranian archeologists were unaware of the time
depth of prehistory in Iraq and Iran. As late as 1950 it was argued that the
dates for the Ubaid period could not extend back much beyond 4000 BCE and that
the origins of agriculture in the area dated to about 5000 BCE We now know
that the Ubaid period may have begun in southern Mesopotamia and Khuzistan as
early as 6000 BCE and that the Food Producing Revolution was underway in the
Zagros mountains by the 9th millennium BCE, if not earlier. In part, earlier
misconceptions resulted from the excavation methods being used. Without any
finegrained stratification, and without good evidence for the spatial
relationships of objects within a single horizontal context, it remained
impossible for excavators to appreciate the time scales with which they dealt or
to use the excavated materials (the only evidence in a prehistoric site) to
reconstruct ancient patterns of life. The
search for antiquities-especially portable antiquities that could be removed to
museumsencouraged excavating in order to move a maximum amount of earth with the
funds and time available. This approach to field work was best examplified by
the excavations at Susa under de Morgan and de Mecquenem (the latter originally
trained as a mining engineer). After systematically removing the upper levels of
the whole Acropole mound at Susa, de Morgan decided to probe the lower
prehistoric levels with his famous "Deep Trench" on the west side of
the mound. This trench, measuring 25 by 90 m, eventually reached virgin soil in
an area 20 by 80 m at a depth of over 30 m. The sides of the trench were stepped
in 5 m units to provide shovel platforms. Hundreds of workmen stood on each
step, shoveling the earth into mining cars set on rails, so that it could be
carted away. The five-meter deep step also provided the basic vertical unit to
which objects recovered were assigned; in de Morgan's words, "A general
excavation was therefore called for without taking into account the natural
levels, which are imperceptible and which it would be childish to try to
distinguish." Three
main difficulties arise from such massive earthmoving methods of digging (it can
hardly be called excavation). First, any details of the vertical relationships
among objects are lost, and the chronological ordering of materials becomes
dependent on typologicalconstructs supported only in the grossest way by
stratigraphy. Second, much architecture is lost, and with it, the horizontal
relationships among objects. The separation of sun-dried mud-brick walls and
pavements from the decayed brick matrix in which they rest is a complicated task
requiring much patience, time, and money. De Morgan could hardly afford the
effort, since he wanted to limit expenditures at Susa to 2.25 gold francs for
each cubic meter of earth removed. Third, the emphasis on objects of museum
quality dictates for the most part that only intact or virtually intact pieces
are recovered and recorded. Thousands of sherds and fragments of other artifacts
tend to go unrecorded and usually even unrecovered, for they move rapidly to the
dump on the shovels of the workmen. It
has been argued that much improvement on all fronts was effected during the
thirties. It is true that some progress was made, but there is little evidence
that the discipline managed to reach even contemporary Near Eastern standards of
excavation and analysis. In Mesopotamia, Syria, and Palestine several excavators
had begun to struggle with the complications of stratification in large Near
Eastern sites as early as the 1920s, and, for the time, good excavation
techniques were fairly common in the thirties. In Iran, at Hissar,Shah Tepe,
Tureng Tepe, and Giyan, however, excavation failed to meet even the standards of
architectural recovery and stratification then commonplace at such sites as Tepe
Gawraand in the Diyala region in Mesopotamia. Giyan yielded almost no coherent
building remains. The work at Hissar was only marginally better, although the
final chronological organization of the ceramics recovered was based almost
entirely on typology. The excavations at Siyalk and Baknn were something of an
exception to this pattern, but nevertheless failed to match the quality of work
being done elsewhere in the Near East. Nowhere east of Suez did the standards of
fieldwork reflect what was achieved in the 1930s in Great Britain and on parts
of the European continent. Conceptual
frameworks likewise showed minimal progress. D. McCown's Comparative
Stratigraphy of Early Iran, published in 1942, represents an effort to
synthesize overall patterns in Iranian archeology based on the new materials
excavated in the 1930s.Two epistemological principles seem to be central. First,
ceramics are themselves treated as "cultures," with the materials
divided into the Red and Buff Ware Cultures. The entire discussion is couched in
these terms, with almost no consideration given to the underlying social,
economic, or political dynamics. As in the prehistoric sections of Ghirshman's
Iran, one is left with the strong impression that the artifacts themselves are
viewed as the dynamic element. What is clearly lacking is a conceptual mechanism
whereby the archeologist can turn the material remains of the past into real
people and real cultural history. Second, there is still a marked tendency for
Iranian archeologists to view events on the plateau and in Khuzistan almost
exclusively in terms of development in Mesopotamia. Although a legitimate
exercise, the resort to Mesopotamian sequences in order to provide comparative
dates for Iranian materials too often led to assumptions about Mesopotamian
cultural and historical influences in Iran that are not warranted by the
evidence. As a result, few scholars saw Iranian prehistory as a subject in its
own right, and little attention was given to the construction of internal,
strictly local cultural history.
For
the Modern Period it is probably premature to attempt any detailed analysis of
developments in archeological theory, method, or content within Iranian
prehistory. Much has been excavated; almost nothing has been published. So at
best one can observe some general trends and directions within the field. These
trends, however, are instructive, for they mark radical departures from the past
and no doubt will much influence developments of the near future (particularly
since fieldwork has been temporarily interrupted by current political and social
events in modern Iran). In
many ways V. G. Childe's book, The Most Ancient East, first published in 1928
and rewritten as New Light on the Most Ancient East in 1934, contains in the
chapter titled "From the Tigris to the Indus" the first systematic
effort by a prehistorian to place Iranian prehistory into a larger context and
to interpret it as a whole. Childe himself never worked in the East, but as a
European prehistorian he was convinced that he could not make sense of his own
materials until he understood the influence of the East. Childe's efforts to
construct explanatory models for the Neolithic Revolution and the origins of
agriculture in the Near East, including Iran, both informed and inspired Robert
Braidwood, an archeologist working in the Near East (Syria) in the 1930s. After
the Second World War Braidwood returned to the field convinced that a systematic
program of excavation backed by collaborative research among archeologists and
natural scientists would shed much light on the critical economic and social
developments of the late Paleolithic and Neolithic. He worked first in Iraqi
Kurdistan, an area that was part of the larger Iranian scene in prehistoric
times, and then later (195960) in the Kirmanshah (Kermānšāh) region (at the
sites of Warwasi, Āsīāb, Sarāb, and Sīāhbīd). D.
Garrod's work in Iraqi Kurdistan before the Second World War suggested that Iran
was an important region in Paleolithic times, and Coon's preliminary
explorations in the Quiet Phase paved the way for further work in Iran proper.
Following Braidwood's expedition, which was interested in the Paleolithic as the
background to the Neolithic Revolution, scholars such as McBurney, Hole, Speth,
and Smith came to Iran specifically to work on Paleolithic problems. Their
organized effort was enriched by a number of chance discoveries of Paleolithic
materials. More
important was the very considerable increase of interest in, and work on, the
Neolithic period following Braidwood's pioneering efforts. It was clear by then
that peoples in western Iran and the Zagros highlands had played a critical role
in the development of early food production, and, since that turning point in
human history was a popular topic worldwide among prehistorians of the late
fifties and sixties, much attention was directed to Iran. Excavations at Guran (Guran),
Ganj Dareh (Ganj-dara), 'Ali Kosh (Koš), Abdul Hossein (`Abd-al-Hosayn), Sarab,
and Hajji (Half) Firuz were all conducted with the specific goal of finding new
evidence relevant to the study of the Neolithic. With
this new work came new conceptual frameworks and models of interpretation that
for the first time provided sensible methods of sorting out and dealing with
Iranian prehistory. Excavated data was now treated more in terms of what it
revealed about human patterns of adaptation to natural and social circumstances
in Iran, and less as material useful for constructing comparative stratigraphies
or for displaying the radiating influences of developments in the Tigris and
Euphrates valleys. Archeologists in Iran began to consider dynamic social
explanations for their data; some real people, still only dimly perceived, began
to come into focus behind the flints and potsherds. Real people had always been
behind the archeological remains from historic periods-Elamites, Babylonians,
Iranians-but now they were visible in prehistory as well. Similarly,
new field methods and dynamic explanatory mechanisms animated intensive efforts
to study the rise of urban civilization and the state in Khuzistan during the
4th and early 3rd millennia BCE The anthropologist R. Adams did a preliminary
survey of Khuzistan in 1960-61 that dealt mainly with problems of early
urbanism. His survey work was extended by F. Hole, H. Wright, R. Wenke, R.
Shacht, G. Johnson, and P. de Miroshedji. Excavations at Choga Mish (Coga 11Ts),
Farukhabad (Farrokabdd), and Susa also addressed these issues. W. Sumner's work
at Malyan in Fars and his survey of that region was an effort to study
systematically the development of urbanism in what is clearly a transplanted or
secondary mode. The increased emphasis on survey (Table 2) was itself an
expression of a new conceptual framework-in this case one concerned with the
spatial relationships among sites as expressed in settlement patterns. In this
sense work in Khuzistan paralleled certain developments in the highlands of the
plateau: archeologists such as R. Dyson, W. Kleiss, L. Levine, C. Goff, T. C.
Young, and L. Vanden Berghe began to turn away from the old research models that
focused on the excavation of a single site and to address their problems in
terms of whole regions. A secondary development of this approach was the
realization that it was premature to attempt the construction of prehistoric
cultural sequences for the whole of Iran (or even for the whole of western
Iran). Instead, by the seventies research had begun to concentrate on the
development of strictly local sequences, sometimes confined to a single valley
within the Zagros mountains (e.g. the Kangavar valley sequence). In time this
approach revealed that even the lowlands of the southwest could not be treated
as a unit: clear sequential distinctions developed between Susians and Deh Luran
(Deh Loran). Not all of these methodological innovations-research directed at
problemsolving, the search for local sequences, regional interpretations of
sites-were the direct result of increased interest in the rise of the state and
the growth of urbanism, but those interests were certainly a significant spur. Most
recently there has been a growing realization among Iranian prehistorians, that,
while the Neolithic and Early Urban periods are exciting, fashionable, and
worthy of study, the long Chalcolithic period that separates them is possibly of
equal importance. How did people move from the origins of agriculture to the
beginnings of city life? What pressures and historical trends within the
Chalcolithic (6th-5th millennia BCE) led to the rise of literate civilization?
These are critical questions, but apparently it has been difficult for
prehistorians to construct useful explanatory models for the Chalcolithic. As Table 1
shows, much attention has been directed to Chalcolithic sites, and the
publication of these data will undoubtedly advance explanatory frameworks for
this critical time range. Archeologists
working on Iron Age materials-the other end of the prehistoric spectrum in
Iran-have equaled both the quantities of data recovered and, at least in part,
the development of field techniques and conceptual frameworks for earlier time
ranges. Much of this effort has been inspired by Dyson (another anthropologist)
and his work at Hasanln. Approaches to the Iron Age have always followed lines
more familiar to historians than to prehistorians, for there is a considerable
body of relevant textual material primarily from Assyria and Babylonia.
Traditionally, scholars have asked when and from where did the Iranians enter
onto the Iranian plateau, or, what is the ethnological and political background
of the Median/Achaemenid empire? While the approach to such questions remains,
as it should, essentially historical, scholars working on the Iron Age have
profited much from developments in method and theory among archeologists dealing
with more strictly prehistoric situations. One result of such epistemological
influence is that economic and social patterns within the Iron Age are now
considered as worthy of study as ethno-political issues. In
all this activity one period has remained relatively neglected: the Middle and
Later Bronze Age (2500-1400 BCE). Outside of Khuzistan, only two significant
sites for this time range have been excavated-Tureng and Godin Tepes. In both
cases the main motivation for excavation was the establishment of a regional
cultural sequence in depth, without which no further analysis could be
attempted. It appears that this important period has been, and continues to be
neglected because it yields few beautiful objects and is too dimly lit by
textual evidence to inspire those scholars with an historical orientation, while
it presents the prehistorian with none of the exciting problems contained in the
concept of the Neolithic or Urban Revolutions. As a result no dynamic
explanatory models, or even any very clear idea of what explanations are
needed„ have been developed to animate research on the Bronze Age, and those
archeologists dealing with this time range remain perhaps the most traditional
of all scholars working in Iranian archeology. Perhaps the most pervasive trend in Iranian archeology over the last two decades has been the gradual realization that we should attempt to understand Iranian prehistory for its own sake. As a result, Mesopotamian relations and cultural connections are increasingly seen as a secondary issue. Such connections are of vital importance in understanding prehistoric events on the Iranian plateau and in Khuzistan, but Iranian prehistory is no longer viewed as a study undertaken primarily to illuminate ancient Mesopotamia. At the same time, discoveries about the prehistory of Iran can and should be incorporated on their own merits into our efforts at understanding the prehistory of the Near East as a whole and prehistoric people around the world. Although these two developments might seem contradictory-on the one hand the growth of a kind of archeological nationalism and independence, and on the other, the realization that Iranian prehistory is only part of an international picture-they are the natural and compatible developments which result from the maturation of any academic discipline.
Bibliography:
Given in the text. Contin... Median Archaeology: History & Method of Research
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