KONYA - Dogan News Agency
Excavations works that have been
continuing in the earliest settlement of Çatalhöyük in the central Anatolian
province of Konya have revealed a 9,000-year-old piece of linen fabric. The
world’s first hemp-weaved fabric has been found in the ground of a burned
house.
The report about the new findings includes the process between June 15 and Aug.
15. More than 120 people from 22 countries worked for the excavations in this
process. The most striking thing on the report is this fabric, which was
wrapped around a baby skeleton.
Best preserved piece
The head of the excavations, Stanford University member Professor Ian Hodder,
said that the most important finding in 2013 had been discovered thanks to
protection conditions of the tumulus. Speaking about the piece of cloth, he
said:
“The fire warmed up the ground and platforms of the building and created a kiln
drying effect. Therefore the pieces and this piece of cloth underground have
been so far protected. Examinations in the laboratory show that this piece of
cloth is linen weaved with hemp.
This is a first in the world and one of the best preserved examples.”
HDN Speaking about the relation of the piece of fabric with trade, Hodder said,
“This piece of linen, which is weaved very thin, most probably came from the
eastern Mediterranean from the central Anatolia. It is already known that obsidians
and sea shells had been exchanged in long-distance trade in the Middle East
during the Neolithic era. But this fabric may have revealed another side of the
trade.”
Hodder noted that they also had discovered a new wall painting, and continued:
“In the 2013 excavation season we also started excavations in the Neolithic era
buildings in the southern skirt of the eastern tumulus. These buildings really
have different features from the early era buildings. They have thick walls and
big bricks on the walls. They were not set fire to when people left them. A
wall painting on the eastern wall of a building here is a unique one that we
have never seen. Generally, paintings in Çatalhöyük are in red and black colors
on white ground. But in this example, there are white geometrical shapes on
dark ground. We believe that this painting continues through the northern walls
of three buildings. It was an exciting experience for us to unearth this wall.”
The report on Çatalhöyük excavations has been published on a website
www.catalhoyuk.com. The website is designed for those interested in the ongoing
excavations in the ancient settlement. Its aim is to provide information about
the activities of the project and the different aspects of the research being
conducted in the area.
February/03/2014
Link to the story:
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