Knowledge, analysis and review of rise and fall of civilizations are one of the equivocal and tremendous topics with which the experts have dealt. Those factors that may influence in collapse of human communities are as follows: Human, economic, social, cultural and environmental factors. In some cases, natural disasters such as tsunami, earthquake, wide fire, and climatic changes and also on some occasions other factors including military invasion, attacks by barbarian and wild tribes, oppression of owners of power as well as civil revolts and ethnic-tribal problems may lead to civilization collapse. Iron Age covers time period (1500-500BC) in Iranian archeology when human could extract iron metal and use it from more production, the sites in Iron Age have been formed by production of grey potteries and use of iron-made tools. The present essay is intended to give answer to this effective question by means of descriptive- analytical method that at what scale the influential factors have occurred and how collapse and destruction took place in areas of Azerbaijan during Iron Age (Northwest of Iran and Eastern Anatolia). The results of this study show that the large areas such as Hasanlu, Dinkha Tepe, and Bastam and even regions of monarchical government of Urartian Empire in Eastern Turkey (Ayanis, Norshun-Tepe, Kayalıdere, Altıntepe, Yoncatepe and so on) have been demolished due to sudden accident and conflagration during this period and they have been diminished from scene of time.
Published in | International Journal of Archaeology (Volume 4, Issue 5) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12 |
Page(s) | 61-66 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2016. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Azerbaijan, Iron Age, Collapse, Fire and Destruction
[1] | Akhavan Kazemi, Bahram, 1995, The Social Philosophy of Ibn Khaldun, in Gaston Bouthoul View, Din Va Ertebatat (Religion and Communications) Journal, N1, PP 171-209, (In Persian). |
[2] | Bosseneck, Joachim, von den Driesch, Angele, 1974, The Excavations at Korucutepe, Turkey, 1968-1970: Preliminary Report. Part IX: The Animal Remains, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 33, No. 1, pp 109-112. |
[3] | Carol G. Thomas and Craig Conant, 1999, Citadel to City-State: The Transformation of Greece, 1200–700 B. C. E. |
[4] | Danti, Michel, Hasanlu V: The Late Bronze and Iron I Periods, Archaeological Survey and Reconnaissance of Ušnu-Solduz, with contributions by Megan Cifarelli, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology by the University of Pennsylvania Press. |
[5] | Diamond, Jared M., 2005. Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. New York: Viking. |
[6] | Drews, 1977, Quotes Fernand Braudel's Assessment That the Eastern Mediterranean Cultures Returned Almost To a Starting-Point ("Plan Zéro"), "L'aube", In Braudel, F. (Ed) (1977), La Mediterranee: L'espace ET L'histoire (Paris). |
[7] | Drews, Robert. 1993, The End of the Bronze Age: Changes in Warfare and the Catastrophe ca. 1200 B. C. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. |
[8] | Dyson, R and Muscarella, 1989, O. W, Constructing the Chronology and Historical Implications of Hassanlu IV, Iran, V. XXVII. P. P 1-28. |
[9] | Dyson, H. Robert, 2010 a, The Death of City, Researches about Hasanlu ancient city, Translated by Samad Elliyun and Ali Sadraei, Ganjine Honar and Miras pub, Volume II, Tehran and Urmia. |
[10] | Dyson, H. Robert, 2010 b, The People of West Iran in 9 BC., Researches about Hasanlu ancient city, Translated by Samad Elliyun and Ali Sadraei, Ganjine Honar and Miras pub, Volume I, Tehran and Urmia. |
[11] | Frangipane, Marcella, 2009, Rise and Collapse of the late Uruk centres in upper Mesopotamia and Eastern Anatolia, Scienze dell’antichità storia archeologia antropologia 15, Università degli studi di Roma «La Sapienza», Rome. |
[12] | Karaosmanoğlu, Mehmet and Korucu, Halim, 2012, The Apadana of Altıntepe in the light of the second season excavations In: Anatolian Iron Ages 7, edited by Altan Çilingiroğlu and Antonio Sagona, Leuven, Paris, Walpole, p. 131-147. |
[13] | Kleiss, Wolfram, 1969, Ausgrabungen in der Urartaischen fesyung Bastam (rusahinili), AMI. |
[14] | Köroğlu, Kemallettin and Konyar, Erkan, 2008, “Comments on the Early/Middle Iron Age Chronology of Lake Van Basin”, A Re-Assessment of Iron Ages Chronology in Anatolia and Neighboring Regions. Proceedings of a Symposium held at Ege University, İzmir, Turkey, 25-27 May 2005. Ancient Near Eastern Studies, V. 45, p. 123-146. |
[15] | Lippert, A, 1979, Die Osterreichischen ausgrabungen am Kordlar-tepe in persisch-westaserbeidschan (1971-1978), AMI, band 12, pp 103-137. |
[16] | Magee, peter, 2008, Deconstructing the destruction of Hasanlu: Archaeology, Imperialism and the chronology of the Iranian Iron Age, Iranica Antiqua, Vol. XLIII, PP 89-106. |
[17] | Mayer, Walter, 1983, Sargons Fledzug Gegen Urartu-714 v. Chr. Text und Übersetzung, Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft 115, 65-132. |
[18] | Medvedeskaya, I., 1988, Who destroyed Hasanlu IV?, Iran 26: 1–15. |
[19] | Morgan, Lewis Henry, 1877, Ancient Society, Harvard University. |
[20] | Muscarella, O white, 2007, Hasanlu fight in the late ninth century BC., Hasanlu fortress, Edited by Robert Dyson & Mary M. Voigt, Translated by Samad Elliyun and Ali Sadraei, Ganjine Honar and Miras pub, Tehran and Urmia. |
[21] | Muscarella, Oscar white, 2013, Archaeology, Artifacts and Antiquities of the ancient Near East, sites, cultures and proveniences, Chapter Five, Excavation at Agrab Tepe, Iran, BRIL, Boston. |
[22] | Rahbani, Morteza, 1998, Toynbee and History of civilization, Jahane Ketab, Third year, N. 19&20, PP 18-19, (In Persian). |
[23] | Renfrew, Colin, Bahn, Paul, 2005, Archaeology; The Key Concepts, Routledge, London. |
[24] | Sadori, L., Susanna, F., Balossi Restelli, F., 2004, Collapsed beams and wooden remains from a 3200 BC temple and palace at Arslantepe (Malatya, Turkey), Charcoals from the Past: Cultural and Palaeo environmental Implications Proceedings of the Third International Meeting of Anthracology, Cavallino - Lecce (Italy), June 28th - July 1st. |
[25] | Solmaz, Tuğba, Oybak Dönmez, Emel, 2013, Archaeobotanical studies at the Urartian site of Ayanis in Van province, Eastern Turkey, Turkish Journal of Botany, 37, pp 282-296. |
[26] | Tainter, Joseph A., 1988, The Collapse of Complex Societies, Cambridge University Press, New York. |
[27] | Toynbee, Arnold J., 1934–1961, Oxford University, London. |
[28] | Tsonis, A. A., K. L. Swanson, G. Sugihara, And P. A. Tsonis, 2010, Climate Change And The Demise Of Minoan Civilization, Climate Of The Past, 6, 525–530. |
[29] | Weiss, Harvey, 1982, ""The Decline of Late Bronze Age Civilization as a Possible Response to Climatic Change"". Climatic Change 4 (2): 173–198. |
[30] | Weiss, H., Courty, M. A., Wetterstorm W., Guichard, L., Senior, L., Medow, R. and Curnow, A. 1993. The Genesis and the Collapse of Third Millennium North Mesopotamian Civilization. Science 261: 995‒1004. |
[31] | Young, T. Cyler, 1965, a Comparatives Ceramic Chronology for Western Iran, Iran, No. III, P. P 53-58. |
APA Style
Mohammad Mirzaei, Reza Ataei, Nasrin Alizadeh, Peyman Rahmani. (2016). The Archaeology of Collapse in Azerbaijan and Eastern Anatolia at During the Iron Age. International Journal of Archaeology, 4(5), 61-66. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12
ACS Style
Mohammad Mirzaei; Reza Ataei; Nasrin Alizadeh; Peyman Rahmani. The Archaeology of Collapse in Azerbaijan and Eastern Anatolia at During the Iron Age. Int. J. Archaeol. 2016, 4(5), 61-66. doi: 10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12
AMA Style
Mohammad Mirzaei, Reza Ataei, Nasrin Alizadeh, Peyman Rahmani. The Archaeology of Collapse in Azerbaijan and Eastern Anatolia at During the Iron Age. Int J Archaeol. 2016;4(5):61-66. doi: 10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12
@article{10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12, author = {Mohammad Mirzaei and Reza Ataei and Nasrin Alizadeh and Peyman Rahmani}, title = {The Archaeology of Collapse in Azerbaijan and Eastern Anatolia at During the Iron Age}, journal = {International Journal of Archaeology}, volume = {4}, number = {5}, pages = {61-66}, doi = {10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ija.20160405.12}, abstract = {Knowledge, analysis and review of rise and fall of civilizations are one of the equivocal and tremendous topics with which the experts have dealt. Those factors that may influence in collapse of human communities are as follows: Human, economic, social, cultural and environmental factors. In some cases, natural disasters such as tsunami, earthquake, wide fire, and climatic changes and also on some occasions other factors including military invasion, attacks by barbarian and wild tribes, oppression of owners of power as well as civil revolts and ethnic-tribal problems may lead to civilization collapse. Iron Age covers time period (1500-500BC) in Iranian archeology when human could extract iron metal and use it from more production, the sites in Iron Age have been formed by production of grey potteries and use of iron-made tools. The present essay is intended to give answer to this effective question by means of descriptive- analytical method that at what scale the influential factors have occurred and how collapse and destruction took place in areas of Azerbaijan during Iron Age (Northwest of Iran and Eastern Anatolia). The results of this study show that the large areas such as Hasanlu, Dinkha Tepe, and Bastam and even regions of monarchical government of Urartian Empire in Eastern Turkey (Ayanis, Norshun-Tepe, Kayalıdere, Altıntepe, Yoncatepe and so on) have been demolished due to sudden accident and conflagration during this period and they have been diminished from scene of time.}, year = {2016} }
TY - JOUR T1 - The Archaeology of Collapse in Azerbaijan and Eastern Anatolia at During the Iron Age AU - Mohammad Mirzaei AU - Reza Ataei AU - Nasrin Alizadeh AU - Peyman Rahmani Y1 - 2016/08/12 PY - 2016 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12 DO - 10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12 T2 - International Journal of Archaeology JF - International Journal of Archaeology JO - International Journal of Archaeology SP - 61 EP - 66 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-7595 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ija.20160405.12 AB - Knowledge, analysis and review of rise and fall of civilizations are one of the equivocal and tremendous topics with which the experts have dealt. Those factors that may influence in collapse of human communities are as follows: Human, economic, social, cultural and environmental factors. In some cases, natural disasters such as tsunami, earthquake, wide fire, and climatic changes and also on some occasions other factors including military invasion, attacks by barbarian and wild tribes, oppression of owners of power as well as civil revolts and ethnic-tribal problems may lead to civilization collapse. Iron Age covers time period (1500-500BC) in Iranian archeology when human could extract iron metal and use it from more production, the sites in Iron Age have been formed by production of grey potteries and use of iron-made tools. The present essay is intended to give answer to this effective question by means of descriptive- analytical method that at what scale the influential factors have occurred and how collapse and destruction took place in areas of Azerbaijan during Iron Age (Northwest of Iran and Eastern Anatolia). The results of this study show that the large areas such as Hasanlu, Dinkha Tepe, and Bastam and even regions of monarchical government of Urartian Empire in Eastern Turkey (Ayanis, Norshun-Tepe, Kayalıdere, Altıntepe, Yoncatepe and so on) have been demolished due to sudden accident and conflagration during this period and they have been diminished from scene of time. VL - 4 IS - 5 ER -