The 'Ghassulian' was an archaeological stage dating to the Middle
Chalcolithic Period in southern Palestine (c. 3800–c. 3350 BC). Its
type-site, 'Tulaylat al-Ghassul', is located in the
Jordan Valley near the
Dead Sea in modern
Jordan and was excavated in the nineteen thirties. The Ghassulian stage was characterized by small hamlet settlements of mixed farming peoples, and migrated southwards from
Syria into
Palestine. Houses were trapezoid-shaped and built
mud-brick, covered with remarkable
polychrome wall paintings. Their pottery was highly elaborate, including footed bowls and horn-shaped drinking goblets, indicating the cultivation of wine. Several samples display the use of sculptural decoration or of a
reserved slip (a clay and water coating partially wiped away while still wet). The Ghassulians were a Chalcolithic culture as they also smelted copper.
Funerary customs show evidence that they buried their dead in stone
dolmens.
Ghassulian culture has been identified at numerous other places in southern Palestine, especially in the region of
Beersheba. The Ghassulian culture correlates closely with the
Amratian of Egypt and may have had trading affinities (e.g., the distinctive churns, or “bird vases”) with early
Minoan culture in Crete.
Origins
Ghassulian culture replaced the
Minhata and
Yarmoukian culture, and seems to have developed in part from a fusion of
Pre-Pottery Neolithic B in the
Amuq Valley, with Minhata and nomadic pastoralists of the circum Arabian nomadic pastoral complex. It was associated with the
Older Peron, which began in the 5000
BCE to 4900 BCE era, and lasted to about 4100 BCE, a period of generally clement and balmy weather conditions that favored plant growth.
The Ghassulian phase seems to have been formative for the
Syro-Palestinian Canaanite civilization - in which a chalcolithic structure pioneered a Mediterranean mixed economy, involving the intensive subsistence production of horticultural fruit and vegetables, extensive farming of grains and cereals,
transhumance and
nomadic pastoral systems of animal husbandry, and commercial production (as in
Crete) of wine and olives.
See also
★
Pre-history of the Southern Levant
★
History of pottery in the Southern Levant
External links
★ Paul James Cowie, Archaeowiki:
Teleilat Ghassul
★ Andie Byrnes,
The Chalcolithic
★ Paul James Cowie, Archaeowiki:
Chalcolithic of the Southern Levant