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zoobyshoe
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It seems to me this is the case. Every aspect of it could probably be reasonably questioned.Andre said:All in all, it seems that the dating is not as clearly defined as it looks.
It seems to me this is the case. Every aspect of it could probably be reasonably questioned.Andre said:All in all, it seems that the dating is not as clearly defined as it looks.
The comparison of the heads to Egyptian pyramids as status symbols probably holds water. Were you suggesting the circles in Turkey might have had a similar function?arildno said:You may read the following article by Jared Diomand:
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/24/042.html
It is fairly uncontroversial that it was NOT the Europeans that brought upon Easter Islan its decline, it was a self-destructive cycle of status competition; self-destructive with massive deforestation on an isolated island, where the logs where used at great bonfires&banquets and as rollers for the statues.
It makes sense that geometric designs would be arrived at incidental to the process of weaving. They are carried over, though, onto non-woven artifacts like painted designs and pottery glazes and wood carvings, due, I would say, to their inherent visual power (which is probably due to the fact of Kluver Form Constants). As you say, this isn't math or Geometry. And, generally, this kind of non-geometric geometric design is only applied in cases where it doesn't take that long to make.apeiron said:Geometric decoration, as opposed to geometric monumentalism, is in fact very old. See - http://www.bradshawfoundation.com/geometric_signs/geometric_signs.php
But again, this would about symbolism rather than "geometry" - proto-writing rather than proto-maths.
Societies that favoured geometric decoration were also most likely responding to constraints in their materials. Such as a habit of body painting - simple patterns rather than representations making more sense when your skin is the canvas. Likewise, weaving and beading rather push the maker in the direction of simple geometric patterns.
Which leads me to the not-very-serious suggestion these things could have been elaborate public toilet facilities for all we know.Amusing you should mention Hundertwasser. His was the first proper exhibition I went to as a kid. Unfortunately he had very little architectural impact on NZ - the only monument he left here was his local public toilets I think!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kawakawa,_New_Zealand
Yes.zoobyshoe said:The comparison of the heads to Egyptian pyramids as status symbols probably holds water. Were you suggesting the circles in Turkey might have had a similar function?
The article Andre referenced was from 2008, the oldest parts of the site that they have uncovered are now believed to be over 12,000 years old.zoobyshoe said:It seems to me this is the case. Every aspect of it could probably be reasonably questioned.
This all makes perfect sense. Rather than religious sites these things might have been essentially political.arildno said:Yes.
Nor is it unlikely, considering what is well attested in other cultures.
The concept "conspicuous consumption" is well established within anthropology in that a primary manner in which local magnates rule is NOT through terror&violence, but by proving their worth to the community through spectacular feasting, temple building, organizing great gladiatorial displays etc. (It is these "gifts" that in a way "justify" them in also, when they feel the need, to maintain their power through..terror&violence)
Furthermore, the concept of conspicuous consumption is, in MY view, probably related to the biological principle underlying, for example, the male pheasant's ridiculous tail:
It is only the very strongest males, in genetic terms, that can survive with such a anti-adaptive tail (considered relative to factors like flight capability, being able to hide from predators etc), and THUS, the females will pick these as their favourites.
A not incidental side effect of the system of conspicuous consumption is that it effectively bars wannabe magnates from becoming actual magnates.
Who would you follow?
The one who can invite you to great banquets, or the one who can't afford to organize such in the first place?
The dirt used to fill in might be much older than the monument, though. If they took the fill dirt from layers of ancient middens, the organic matter in that dirt would be much older than the monument it buried. Carbon dating of charcoal that seems to come from the layer right on top of which the pillars were first erected would be the most reliable, I'd think.Evo said:The article Andre referenced was from 2008, the oldest parts of the site that they have uncovered are now believed to be over 12,000 years old.
But the plants and bones they tested might have been backfill thousands of years after the structure was built, so yes, it is highly likely that the actual structures are much older than thought.
That separation is just meaningless for just about any other culture than the judeo-Christian.zoobyshoe said:This all makes perfect sense. Rather than religious sites these things might have been essentially political.
But, rather than a whole monument being about one "magnate" the various animals each might symbolize a clan, tribe, or clan/tribe leader/magnate, who had entered into a pact of some sort with all the others. As time went on and old leaders died off, the political climate could have dramatically shifted. The past would be, quite literally, buried and a new picture of the new political structure would have to be created nearby.
On the other hand, they could all each be about one magnate. If we say a given 'circle' represents a given prehistoric 'Caesar', the various different animal slabs might represent the various foreign peoples he had subjugated under the central government. Here, too, the political situation would have to be revised over time as successive 'Caesars' won or lost dominion.
I think there's a lot of realistic non-religious purposes these things could have been created to serve. Religion would naturally be the matrix in which it was all set, but only in the sense most governments have historically been set in a religious matrix.
This is interesting. I was wondering if sighting along the tops of the pillars pointed to any astronomical events. I'm not sure what this diagram shows though. Some sort of moon calendar?Dotini said:There may be a bit of archeoastronomy going on in this one:
http://www.seshat.ch/home/goebekli.GIF
arildno said:Sure, these are a number of hypotheses that are highly interesting; we might even be able with more knowledge make some of them more likely to be true than others.
It's hard to say, but they did find piles of animal bones that show signs of having been butchered by humans. I would assume that the piles of bones would not have been from piles of dirt moved there. They have also done testing on the pillars, but the tests only show when they were buried. Carbonate layers only begin to form after the burial.zoobyshoe said:The dirt used to fill in might be much older than the monument, though. If they took the fill dirt from layers of ancient middens, the organic matter in that dirt would be much older than the monument it buried. Carbon dating of charcoal that seems to come from the layer right on top of which the pillars were first erected would be the most reliable, I'd think.
The distinction arises from your concept of the magnate, though. If only a magnate can afford to commission a temple and the point is to conspicuously consume to create the aura of power and wealth, the conclusion that it is essentially a political, rather than religious, gesture is obvious. That's a completely different motivation than propitiating the spirits of the dead because they'll haunt you if you don't, sort of thing.arildno said:That separation is just meaningless for just about any other culture than the judeo-Christian.
Rather, those sites are AS MUCH religious as they are political. There is no reason, to think, that the magnates were snickering atheists out to awe the dumb religionists. Furthermore, to curry favour from the gods by creating temples clearly has the premise that you believe in the gods to begin with. Even though you hope the gods will favour you with political success.
There's quite a bit more to dig up as Evo pointed out, so there's no telling what interesting clues are still hidden.Sure, these are a number of hypotheses that are highly interesting; we might even be able with more knowledge make some of them more likely to be true than others.
Something like this occurred to me after reading one of your earlier posts.Dotini said:Since we may be able to put Gobekli Tepe in the context of Kilisik, Navali and Catal Huyuk, it occurs to me that what we may have is a sort of Neolithic University. Founded by a powerful and persuasive elite, knowledgeable from earlier experiments in proto-agriculture, a center of initiation and learning is established from which graduating classes may be sent to establish flourishing cultures throughout Anatolia, Mesopotamia, the Levant and beyond. Each class builds its ring, and fills it in after training is accomplished?
Respectfully submitted,
Steve
Not really, because what you base it on is a very narrow conception of how people regard the spirit world from interacting with the real world, and how "secular" power is considered as proofs of "sparks of divinity" in those individuals fortunate to have it.zoobyshoe said:The distinction arises from your concept of the magnate, though. If only a magnate can afford to commission a temple and the point is to conspicuously consume to create the aura of power and wealth, the conclusion that it is essentially a political, rather than religious, gesture is obvious. That's a completely different motivation than propitiating the spirits of the dead because they'll haunt you if you don't, sort of thing.
I think I'm familiar with the concept you're talking about but from a completely different source. The artist, George Catlin, observed and described the same thing being in play among the Mandan Indians, a tribe he lived with for a few months and whose culture he recored in both paintings and journal entries. For the Mandan everything was a matter of sacred power: if a guy was a better marksman with a bow and arrow it was because he had more sacred power, if he won more at gambling, same cause, if he bested someone in a trade of goods, same thing: more sacred power. There was no secular concept of skill, intelligence, acumen.arildno said:Not really, because what you base it on is a very narrow conception of how people regard the spirit world from interacting with the real world, and how "secular" power is considered as proofs of "sparks of divinity" in those individuals fortunate to have it.
For example, the hero cults in Hellenistic Greece and the imperial cults in Rome are highly interesting in these respects.
The historian Price has written an excellent, and still considered seminal, study on the Roman Imperial Cult in Asia minor, "Rituals and Power: The Roman Imperial Cult in Asia Minor "
This book has university academic standard, and was used in my stint at studying history at oslo University.
Here's the Amazon link:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/052131268X/?tag=pfamazon01-20
My main point of contention though, are what WORDS are appropriate in history, and which we should not use.
The couple "essential/inessential" is basically either rhetorically pointing at som "eternal essence" (and I do NOT think you intended that), OR, as a quantifying measure of relative weights.
But, quantification of the importance of different causes in history is highly suspect, or must be used with extreme caution, and we need a more modest idea besides:
To which extent our sources seem to indicate that analytically separate ideas were intertwined in some particular culture, or equivalently, how "separate" those ideas where.
(Judeo-)Christianity is quite unique in this degree of separatedness of the sacred and the secular, the normal picture seems to indicate a much stronger degree of intertwining.
BTW, Price* is quite adept in showing that in terms of quantification, LOCAL status competition for construction of imperial cults was probably more important than heavy-handed, centrally directed adoration policy from the Roman State.
It was the LOCAL magnates, in scurrying not just for (or even mainly for) imperial favour, but in order to be resplendent in the eyes of the local population by having a "closer tie" with the almost-divine, far-off Emperor through his temple construction in his honour..
More than enough sources indicate that the Emperors themselves were rather embarassed on the personal level at the prevalence of this religio-political "Greek" phenomenon, closely related to the city-state structure of Asia Minor.
*Whose main laudable effort in that work is to "de-Christianize" religion as such, in particular opposing the traditional view that worship of a living, or dead, person, was some sort of "debasement" of religion for "mere political" reasons. Rather, the mentality landscape, Price argues, between religious might and secular power should NOT be regarded in such a way that the clear distinction between "religion" and "politics" is to be assumed to have been felt as "natural" as it is for cultural Christians.
Great post. You suddenly reminded me of the fact of "societies" in plains Indian culture. In most tribes men and women were inducted into one "society" or another when they came of age. These were something like a cross between a fraternity and the Freemasons. Each society had their own secret rituals and lore and also their public contributions to the tribe, which might be a practical or spiritual service. With no cable T.V. as you say, a person's life might revolve around their membership in a society. These sites could have been a particular society's traditional meeting place.apeiron said:A gathering of the clans is an attractive model. You can imagine the men going off to do the sacred work, the women then left to gather grass seed to feed the group. Learning to collect, mill and bake wild wheat may have indeed been the key to it all. But if that was going on, then the evidence should be there as well.
The fact that what is being found is a lot of rock shaping flints and a lot of gazelle bones suggests a simpler scenario so far.
You could turn the story around I guess. As is said about the San bushmen, the hunter-gatherer lifestyle can leave people with a lot of time on their hands. So people might invent crazy religious projects like these circles as they want something "meaningful" to do. They had no cable TV in those days.
I couldn't understand that abstract, but thanks.Evo said:It's hard to say, but they did find piles of animal bones that show signs of having been butchered by humans. I would assume that the piles of bones would not have been from piles of dirt moved there. They have also done testing on the pillars, but the tests only show when they were buried. Carbonate layers only begin to form after the burial.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/gea.20134/abstract
zoobyshoe said:I think I'm familiar with the concept you're talking about but from a completely different source. The artist, George Catlin, observed and described the same thing being in play among the Mandan Indians, a tribe he lived with for a few months and whose culture he recored in both paintings and journal entries. For the Mandan everything was a matter of sacred power: if a guy was a better marksman with a bow and arrow it was because he had more sacred power, if he won more at gambling, same cause, if he bested someone in a trade of goods, same thing: more sacred power. There was no secular concept of skill, intelligence, acumen.
Catlin's own artistic abilities amazed the Indians and he was deferred to everywhere due to the perception he had a huge amount of sacred power. All the local magnates lined up to have their portrait painted.
In one band of Indians, though, he was disturbed to find out that a particular shaman was preaching against him, warning that he was evil and up to no good. He was perplexed at first, but then he figured out what was going on. He invited the shaman to sit and have his portrait painted, and suddenly the man's whole attitude changed. He suddenly announced he'd been wrong and that Catlin had completely good "sacred power", and was a good man.
I don't think it would be any different in Greek and Roman hero cults. Regardless of how any of those ancients might rationalize their purely political maneuvers as having a religious motivation, it doesn't mean we are misunderstanding them if we don't buy it as they would represent it. This isn't Judeo-Christian vs ancient pagan, it's modern secular psychology vs primitive.
The quantification of the importance of different causes in history happens. Many claim Caesar's Gallic campaigns were essentially self serving, intended to increase his status, in contradiction to his own characterization of them as necessary for the good of the empire. I think the whole point and advantage of retrospective analysis is to sort out what was most likely really going on from a third party, outside perspective, rather than to side with any participant on their own terms.
To that end I appreciate you linking to that book and I'll make an effort to get hold of it at some point. I think you'd love Catlin's book given your general interest in anthropology. It's called Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Conditions of North American Indians. Two volumes, published by Dover.
zoobyshoe said:I would be interested to find out the most recent possible date for the site. That is, if all the parameters were weighed in favor of the most recent date, what would that give us? Would it still predate any similar site by thousands of years?
I thought the final burial of the entire site was dated at 8,000 BC? That seems to be an accepted date.Dotini said:Gobekli Tepe's final occupational horizon ends around 7000BC, the same time that Catal Huyuk first arose near Konya not very far away.
At Catal Huyuk there was a funerary ritual called excarnation. Excarnation involves laying out the body, usually in a circular stone tower called a Dakhma. Vultures were key part of this process.
Respectfully submitted,
Steve
A Tower of Silence or Dakhma (Persian: دخمه) is a circular, raised structure used by Zoroastrians for exposure of the dead.
But Gobekli Tepe predates dakhmas by thousands of years. So to suggest that the later Dakmahs have any rituals passed down by the inhabitants of Gobekli Tepe thousands of years earlier is rather unlikely. More probably they may have seen a ring structure and made some similar structures, but using their current religion.thorium1010 said:I think dakhma is a ritual seen in Zoroastrian tradition . wiki link to it -
[URL="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakhma]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakhma[/URL]
Evo said:I thought the final burial of the entire site was dated at 8,000 BC? That seems to be an accepted date.
Yes, that's possible.Dotini said:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Göbekli_Tepe#Dating
Lab-Number Date BP Cal BC Context
Ua-19561 8430 ± 80 7560–7370 enclosure C
Ua-19562 8960 ± 85 8280–7970 enclosure B
Hd-20025 9452 ± 73 9110–8620 Layer III
Hd-20036 9559 ± 53 9130–8800 Layer III
Catal Huyuk is thought to started up around 7500BC. It seems there could be some overlap.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Çatalhöyük
Respectfully,
Steve
Evo said:I wish that everyone could watch the Nat Geo special, so we'd all be on the same page.
The secret order of the stone meessons.arildno said:In Norway, we only learn about moose..
Evo said:The secret order of the stone meessons.
Evo said:But Gobekli Tepe predates dakhmas by thousands of years. So to suggest that the later Dakmahs have any rituals passed down by the inhabitants of Gobekli Tepe thousands of years earlier is rather unlikely. More probably they may have seen a ring structure and made some similar structures, but using their current religion.
Welcome to the forum. Yes, I saw that and you may be misreading what he said. He is saying that hypothetically the fixtures at Gopekli Tepe might have served a similar purpose as the modern Dakhmas, but the dakhmas have nothing to do with the structures at Gobekli Tepe. Gobekli Tepe predates dakhmas by many thousand years. This is why there is no mention of any connection between them.SimsStuart said:I recently communicated with Dr Schmidt (he heads up the Gobekli Tepe excavation) on this topic of Dakhmas. Here is the email --
SimsStuart said:Dr Schmidt responded --
"Dear Mr. Sims
thank you for your interesting reference, yes, the hypothesis, that the
Göbekli Tepe enclosures had been neolithic Dakhmas seems highly probable"
This is interesting, since there is no reference to Dakhmas in the NatGeo special. But it would seem Schmidt agrees with the Dakhmas theory.
Intriguingly, in recent excavations at Göbekli Tepe Schmidt’s team have uncovered pieces of human bones in soils which came from the niches behind the stone pillars at the site. Schmidt believes the bones show that corpses were brought into the ritual areas demarcated by the engraved T-shaped stone, where they were then laid out and left to be stripped of their soft tissue by wild animals. Such activity would Göbekli Tepe both a cemetery and a center of a regional death cult.
http://www.ancient.eu.com/article/234/
SimsStuart said:I recently communicated with Dr Schmidt (he heads up the Gobekli Tepe excavation) on this topic of Dakhmas. Here is the email --
Dear Dr. Schmidt,
>
> I have followed with great enthusiasm your excavations in Turkey. It has
> potentially changed my entire conception of the Neolithic Revolution. I
> recently came across a verse in the Zoroastrian text of Zend Avesta
> that you
> may find interesting. It could help explain the cultural purpose of the
> Gobekli Tepe structures:
>
> “With regard to Dakhmas, see Introd. V, 10. 'Nor is the Earth happy at
> that
> place whereon stands a Dakhma with corpses upon it; for that patch of
> ground
> will never be clean again fill the day of p. 25 resurrection' (Gr.
> Rav. 435,
> 437). Although the erection of Dakhmas is enjoined by the law, yet the
> Dakhma
> in itself is as unclean as any spot on the Earth can be, since it is
> always
> in contact with the dead (cf. Farg. VII, 55). The impurity which would
> otherwise be scattered over the whole world, is thus brought together
> to one
> and the same spot. Yet even that spot, in spite of the Ravaet, is not
> to lie
> defiled for ever, as every fifty years the Dakhmas ought to be pulled
> down,
> so that their sites may be restored to their natural purity (V. i.
> Farg. VII,
> 49 seq. and this Farg. § 13).”
>
> I found this compellingly similar to what you have found at Gobekli Tepe.
> Good luck to you. Have a nice day.
>
Dr Schmidt responded --
"Dear Mr. Sims
thank you for your interesting reference, yes, the hypothesis, that the
Göbekli Tepe enclosures had been neolithic Dakhmas seems highly probable"
This is interesting, since there is no reference to Dakhmas in the NatGeo special. But it would seem Schmidt agrees with the Dakhmas theory.