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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Traditions culturelles dans les premières communautés villageoises du Levant Nord : l’analyse fonctionnelle de l’outillage en silex de Dja’de el-Mughara (Syrie, PPNB ancien, 9ème millénaire) / Cultural traditions in the first village communities of the Northern Levant : functional analysis of the flint tools from Dja’de el-Mughara (Syria, EPPNB, 9e millennium)

Pichon, Fiona 13 December 2017 (has links)
À partir de 12000 BC. se mettent en place au Proche-Orient de profondes mutations sociales, économiques, techniques et culturelles qui, sur près de 5 millénaires, ont conduit à l’émergence de sociétés sédentaires dont l’économie alimentaire va reposer sur l’agriculture et l’élevage. Ce processus, la Néolithisation, s’observe au Levant Nord, notamment dans le village de Dja’de, occupé durant un millénaire par des chasseurs-cueilleurs en passe de devenir agriculteurs et éleveurs. Si l’industrie en silex des niveaux PPNB ancien (9e mill.) a déjà fait l’objet d’études technologiques et typologiques, aucune analyse tracéologique n’a été menée jusqu’à ce jour sur cet assemblage. Dans ce contexte où les rapports entre les hommes et leur environnement ont été profondément bouleversés, l’étude de la fonction des outils en pierre permet d’appréhender la nature de ces changements. Au cours de ce processus, il apparaît que la gestion de l’outillage devient plus complexe : l’intensité d’utilisation des outils s’accroit, le degré de réaffutage augmente, le recyclage est plus fréquent, les modalités de stockage évoluent. Cette analyse de l’outillage en silex de Dja’de a associé une approche fonctionnelle aux aspects habituellement étudiés (technologie et typologie). Pour cette phase encore mal connue du Néolithique précéramique, l’analyse des traces d’utilisation, appuyée sur l’expérimentation, a permis d’obtenir des éléments de réflexion nouveaux sur les activités au sein du village, sur les techniques mises en oeuvre par ses habitants et sur la gestion de l’industrie lithique et ainsi de mieux comprendre le mode de vie et l’organisation des sociétés préagricoles au Levant Nord. / Starting from 12000 BC. deep social, economic, technical and cultural mutations took place that will lead to the emergence of sedentary societies in which the food economy will rely on agriculture and farming. This process –known as Neolithisation – can be observed in Northern Levant, particularly in the village of Dja’de that has been occupied during one millennium by hunters-gatherers who will eventually become farmers. Although the chipped stone industry of the early PPNB (9e millennium) has already been the object of technological and typological studies, no use-wear analysis has yet been done. In the context where relationship between humans and their environment changed, the study of the function of stone tools is primordial to understand the nature of these changes. During this process, it appears that the management of the tools becomes more complex: the use of the tools intensifies, the degree of sharpening increases, the recycling is more frequent, and the storage modalities evolve. This analysis of flint tools from Dja’de combined a functional approach with other aspects usually studied (technology and typology). For this period of the aceramic Neolithic that is still not well documented, the analysis of the traces of use, backed up by experimentation, has brought us new insights about the village activities, the techniques used by its inhabitants and the management of the lithic production, providing us a better understanding of the way of life and the organisation of pre-agricultural societies in Northern Levant.
2

Pour une archéologie des échanges en Méditerranée orientale : la céramique chypriote au Levant nord aux âges du Bronze moyen et du Bronze récent / An archaeology of trade in the Eastern Mediterranean : the MBA and LBA Cypriot pottery in the Northern Levant

Vilain, Sarah 20 November 2015 (has links)
Ce travail de thèse porte sur l’étude typologique et contextuelle de la céramique chypriote importée au Levant nord, et s’inscrit plus largement dans le cadre de l’étude des échanges en Méditerranée orientale. Notre recherche a permis de répertorier la présence de vases chypriotes sur soixante-neuf sites archéologiques nord-levantins. Le corpus ainsi rassemblé présente une importante variété de types et de fabriques, attestant d’échanges ininterrompus entre le Bronze moyen II et la fin du Bronze récent. L’intérêt des populations levantines pour la céramique chypriote est perceptible dans la création d’imitations et le développement de productions locales qui en sont inspirées. Les interactions entre le Levant nord et l’île de Chypre ont mené à l’introduction de nouvelles productions, à l’adoption de certaines pratiques et au partage d’une culture qui devient peu à peu commune. L’étude de la céramique chypriote découverte au Levant nord contribue à la compréhension des liens complexes qui unissent les sociétés de Méditerranée orientale au IIe millénaire av. J.-C. / This dissertation offers a typological and contextual study of the Cypriot pottery imported in the Northern Levant, and more broadly a study of trade in the Eastern Mediterranean. This research put in light the presence of Cypriot imports in sixty-nine archaeological sites, mostly located on the Mediterranean coast. The Cypriot assemblage found in the Northern Levant consists of a large variety of fabrics and types and shows an uninterrupted trade between the two regions from MB II to the end of LBA. The interest of the Levantine peoples for Cypriot productions is attested by attempts at local imitation and the creation of new types influenced by Cypriot shapes and styles. Interactions between the Northern Levant and Cyprus led to the introduction of new productions and the adoption of common cultural practices. The Cypriot pottery discovered in the Northern Levant facilitates understanding of the complex links established between societies of the Eastern Mediterranean in the IInd millennium BC.
3

Running Amuq with Obsidian / A study on supra-regional socio-economic relationships in the Near East as seen through obsidian consumption practices in the Amuq Valley (S.E. Turkey) (ca. 6000-2400 B.C.E.)

Rennie, Lauren 21 October 2019 (has links)
Southern Turkey’s Amuq Valley has been described as a point of convergence bridging distant regions within the ancient Near East. Through an in depth techno-typological and chemical characterization study of 290 obsidian artefacts, this research details changes in deep-time patterns of obsidian use from the Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age (6000 BCE – 2400 BCE), arguing that shifting traditions of consumption reflect socio-economic developments both within and beyond the Northern Levant. These artefacts come from the three sites of Tell al-Judaidah, Tell Dhahab and Tell Kurdu, the material excavated during the 1930’s by the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute. Methodologically raw material sourcing was achieved using energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (EDXRF) in the well-established McMaster XRF Lab [MAX Lab]. With these artefacts’ raw materials all being exotic to the Amuq Valley, originating from various outcrops in Cappadocia, the Lake Van region and Transcaucasia (Turkey and Armenia), over 1000km away, this study not only offers new insight into how Amuq Valley communities engaged in long-distance relations, but also contributes to a larger, deep-time regional study of obsidian consumption as a proxy for understanding significant shifts in Near Eastern socio-economics, from hunter-gatherers to the earliest states. In turn, this study, by employing an Annales school framework to consider practice over deep time at the local and supra-regional level further contributes to an ‘archaeology of the long-term’. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA) / This research involved the chemical analysis of 290 artefacts of archaeological obsidian – a naturally occurring substance made of crystallized lava - as a means of studying ancient exchange systems in the Near East. More specifically, this study covers archaeological periods from 6000 B.C.E. (Late Neolithic) to 2400 B.C.E. (Early Bronze Age) in the Amuq Valley region of southern Turkey. These artefacts were procured during excavations under the Oriental Institute Museum (University of Chicago) beginning in the 1930s. All artefacts are exotic to the Amuq Valley from several known obsidian outcrops in Anatolia (Turkey), some over 1000km away. Analysis was conducted using X-ray fluorescence (XRF) to match each artefact to its geological origin thereby identifying the range of exotic materials were exchanged across long-distances. The goal of this research was to uncover social and/or economic dynamics of the Amuq Valley through deep-time with regards to the greater obsidian trade network of the Near East.

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