Publication: Cup-marks and citadels: evidence for libation in 2nd-millennium B.C.E. western Anatolia
Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Advisor
Publication Date
2017
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Shallow conical depressions hewn into bedrock, known as cup-marks, have been documented at and around 2nd-millennium B.C.E. citadels in the Marmara Lake basin of the Gediz Valley, western Anatolia. These rupestral features are among the best indications of the presence of libation ceremonies in the region and provide evidence that local communities shared in cultural traditions spread over western and central Anatolia. Libation rituals in the basin were probably intended to summon the divine for protection, stewardship of the dead, and/or assurance of agricultural prosperity through maintenance of stable environmental conditions. Periodic catastrophes, resulting from massive inundations and/or droughts typical to the region, weigh in favor of an environmental interpretation. We frame our discussion of the topography and archaeology of the Gediz Valley and the evidence for Middle to Late Bronze Age cup-marks within the context of historical geography and the archaeology of Anatolia.
Description
Source:
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research
Publisher:
American Schools of Oriental Research
Keywords:
Subject
Archeology, History of art