The Seeds of Civilization
Why did humans first turn from nomadic wandering to villages and togetherness? The answer may lie in a 9,500-year-old settlement in central Turkey
- By Michael Balter
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2005, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Such traditional explanations for the Neolithic Revolution fall short, according to Hodder, precisely because they focus too much on the beginnings of agriculture at the expense of the rise of permanent communities and sedentary life. Though prehistorians once assumed that farming and settling down went hand in hand, even that assumption is being challenged, if not overturned. It’s now clear that the first year-round, permanent human settlements predated agriculture by at least 3,000 years.
In the late 1980s, a drought caused a drastic drop in the Sea of Galilee in Israel, revealing the remains of a previously unknown archaeological site, later named Ohalo II. There, Israeli archaeologists found the burned remains of three huts made from brush plants, as well as a human burial and several hearths. Radiocarbon dating and other findings suggested that the site, a small, year-round camp for huntergatherers, was about 23,000 years old.
By about 14,000 years ago, the first settlements built with stone began to appear, in modern-day Israel and Jordan. The inhabitants, sedentary hunter-gatherers called Natufians, buried their dead in or under their houses, just as Neolithic peoples did after them. The first documented agriculture began some 11,500 years ago in what Harvard archaeologist Ofer Bar-Yosef calls the Levantine Corridor, between Jericho in the JordanValley and Mureybet in the EuphratesValley. In short, the evidence indicates that human communities came first, before agriculture. Could it be, as Hodder tends to believe, that the establishment of human communities was the real turning point, and agriculture just the icing on the cake?
Hodder has been influenced by the theories of the French prehistory expert Jacques Cauvin, one of the first to champion the notion that the Neolithic Revolution was sparked by changes in psychology. In the 1970s Cauvin and his co-workers were digging at Mureybet, in northern Syria, where they found evidence for an even earlier Natufian occupation underneath the Neolithic layers. The sediments corresponding to the transition from the Natufian to the Neolithic contained wild bull horns. And as the Neolithic progressed, a number of female figurines turned up. Cauvin concluded that such findings could mean only one thing: the Neolithic Revolution had been preceded by a “revolution of symbols,” which led to new beliefs about the world.
After surveying several Neolithic sites in Europe, Hodder concluded that a symbolic revolution had taken place in Europe as well. Because the European sites were full of representations of death and wild animals, he believes that prehistoric humans had attempted to overcome their fear of wild nature, and of their own mortality, by bringing the symbols of death and the wild into their dwellings, thus rendering the threats psychologically harmless. Only then could they start domesticating the world outside. It was Hodder’s search for the origins of that transformation that eventually took him to Catalhoyuk.
By the time Catalhoyuk was first settled—about 9,500 years ago, according to a recent round of radiocarbon dating at the site—the Neolithic epoch was well under way. The residents of this huge village cultivated wheat and barley, as well as lentils, peas, bitter vetch and other legumes. They herded sheep and goats. Paleoecologists working with Hodder say the village was located in the middle of marshlands that may have been flooded two or three months out of the year. But ongoing research suggests the village wasn’t anywhere near its crops.
So where did they grow food? Tentative evidence has come from Arlene Rosen, a geoarchaeologist at the Institute of Archaeology in London and an expert in the analysis of phytoliths, tiny fossils formed when silica from water in the the soil is deposited in plant cells. Researchers think phytoliths may help reveal some of the conditions in which plants were grown. Rosen determined that the wheat and barley found at marshy Catalhoyuk were likely grown on dry land. And yet, as other researchers had shown, the closest arable dry land was at least seven miles away.
Why would a farming community of 8,000 people establish a settlement so far from its fields? For Hodder, there is only one explanation. The settlement site, once right in the middle of marshlands, is rich in the dense clays that villagers used to make plaster. They painted artworks on plaster, and they fashioned sculptures and figurines out of plaster. “They were plaster freaks,” Hodder says.
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Comments (5)
Both Runnels and Hodder may be correct. One thing I have learned is there are always exceptions to the rule. We must be very careful with our desire to interpret; we have made so many mistakes before with interpretations of not only archeology but literature. Caesar wrote of the Celtic people in a very negative fashion to justify destroying their culture so he could come back to Rome a hero---and for years we 'bought' it. It is much more difficult to change the public's mind when they have been misled for so many years. It's time to stop talking in absolutes.
Posted by Denise Krisinger on May 18,2011 | 10:54 AM
Your question is:why did humans first turned from nomadic wandering to villages and togetherness?
Many of us have gone on a trip to a spot where we've said: "Man it's so beautiful, this is where I'd love to live." And some of us have never left that particular place.
This is your answer my friend.
NB. You must remember that nomad tribes already had togetherness and that ounce they found a place that everyone loved, the decision was relatively easy to be taken by all.
Posted by Jean-Paul Gosselin on January 20,2011 | 03:28 PM
It is amazing to me that we have found so much information about our ancestors and how they lived. The information and knowledge is overwhelming and vast. I hope to learn more.
Posted by LaVonne on August 26,2009 | 07:33 PM
The article explains the dwellings and the lifestyles of the people from the Neolithic period. It tells us they they must have been a close nit people to be burried together (more than one person and up to 68). It also tells us that they had to transport food, water and buliding materials to their villages because they settled outside of the wooded areas and not close to the crops and other resources that were used.
Posted by Marcus Hunt on May 28,2009 | 05:41 PM
This article describes how Jame Mellaart discovered the site of Catahoyuk in 1958. It talks about the Neolithic Age in which farming and the domestication of animals took place. It also tells us that the people of this age worshiped a "mother-goddess". Mellaart was alleged to be involved in a scandel where artifacts was discovered missing but he was laster exonerated but not allowed back at the site.
Posted by Marcus Hunt on May 28,2009 | 04:22 PM