Lodian culture

The Lodian culture or Jericho IX culture is a Pottery Neolithic archaeological culture of the Southern Levant dating from the first half of the 5th millennium BC, existing alongside the Yarmukian and Nizzanim cultures. The Lodian culture appears mainly in areas south of the territory of the Yarmukian culture, in the Shfela and the beginning of the Israeli coastal plain, the Judaean Mountains and in the desert regions around the Dead Sea and south of it.[1]

Map of Pottery Neolithic in the Southern Levant in
  Lodian (Jericho IX) culture

The Lodian culture is defined by its distinctive pottery. It was first identified by John Garstang during his excavations of the eponymous Layer IX at Jericho. Thomas Levy later coined the term Lodian, shifting the type site to that of Lod, first excavated by Jacob Kaplan in the 1950s. The relationship between the Lodian culture and the two other Southern Levantine Pottery Neolithic cultures, the Yarmoukian and the Wadi Raba culture, has been debated for many years. Levy argued that it was a short-lived but distinct tradition that emerged after the Yarmoukian and before the Wadi Raba.[2]

Settlements

Most known settlements associated with the Lodian culture were small and ephemeral. From the few sites remains of architecture have been found, it appears the inhabitants lived in circular, semi-subterranean rounded structures, 2-3 meters in diameter, made from mudbrick. Next to the structures were many pits dug by these inhabitants. They kept domestic animals, including sheep, goats, cattle and pigs, and also fished and hunted wild gazelle. It is assumed that they also grew the typical Neolithic crops, e.g. cereals and legumes, but no archaeobotanical evidence has been recovered from Lodian sites to confirm this.[2][1]

Sites with Lodian material include Jericho, Lod, Tel Megiddo, Ghrubba, Teluliot Batashi, Tel Lachish, Tel Ali, Abu Zurayq, Wadi Shueib, Dhra′, Khirbet ed-Dharih, Nizzanim, and En Esur.[2][1][3]

Very few burials have been found at Lodian sites. The inhabitants may have disposed of their dead in other ways, or used dedicated cemeteries away from settlements, as the later Wadi Raba culture was known to do.[4]

Tools

Lodian pottery is identical in shape to the Yarmukian pottery but different in decoration. The typical Lodian pottery vessels are painted and burnished, with distinctive geometric motifs and vessel forms. Its lithic industry is dominated by flake tools, including several characteristic types of arrowheads (Haparsa, Nizzanim, and Herzlia points) and sickle blades. Bipolar cores, common in preceding cultures, disappeared during the Lodian. Figurines and other ritual objects are notably rare in Lodian assemblages, unlike the Yarmoukian.[2][1] The flint tools area also similar to those of the Yarmukian. One distinctive type of flint tool that is unique to the Lodian culture is a rectangular sickle, shaped with pressure flaking.[1]

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References

  1. Yosef Garfinkel (2019). "Sha'ar Hagolan Volume 5, Early Pyrotechnology: Ceramics and White Ware". Qedem Reports. Institute of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. 14: 12. JSTOR 26747746.
  2. Levy, Thomas Evan (1998). The archaeology of society in the Holy Land (2nd ed.). Leicester University Press. pp. 210–211. ISBN 9780718501655. OCLC 40143782.
  3. Yannai, Eli; Ariel, Donald T.; Carmi, Israel; Grosinger, Zohar; Horowitz, Aharon; Khalaily, Hamoudi; Lazar-Shorer, Dorit; Marder, Ofer; Milevski, Ianir (2006). "The Pottery Assemblages". 'En Esur ('Ein Asawir) I: excavations at a protohistoric site in the coastal plain of Israel. 31. Israel Antiquities Authority. pp. 63–178. JSTOR j.ctt1fzhf9f.
  4. Goring-Morris, A. Nigel; Belfer-Cohen, Anna (2019). "The Nature of the Beast: The Late Neolithic in the Southern Levant". In Marciniak, Arkadiusz (ed.). Concluding the Neolithic: The Near East in the Second Half of the Seventh Millennium BCE. Lockwood Press. pp. 61–76. ISBN 9781937040840 via Google Books.
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