Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Hassuna culture

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Geographical range
  
Mesopotamia

Dates
  
circa 6000 BC

Major sites
  
Tell Shemshara

Period
  
Neolithic

Type site
  
Tell Hassuna

Hassuna culture - Wikiwand

Preceded by
  
Pre-Pottery Neolithic B, Halaf culture

Similar
  
Zarzian culture, Acheulo Yabrudian complex, Mayroubian

The Hassuna culture is a Neolithic archaeological culture in northern Mesopotamia dating to the early sixth millennium BC. It is named after the type site of Tell Hassuna in Iraq. Other sites where Hassuna material has been found include Tell Shemshara.

By around 6000 BC people had moved into the foothills (piedmont) of northernmost Mesopotamia where there was enough rainfall to allow for "dry" agriculture in some places. These were the first farmers in northernmost Mesopotamia. They made Hassuna-style pottery (cream slip with reddish paint in linear designs). Hassuna people lived in small villages or hamlets ranging from 2 to 8 acres (3.2 ha).

At Tell Hassuna, adobe dwellings built around open central courts with fine painted pottery replace earlier levels with crude pottery. Hand axes, sickles, grinding stones, bins, baking ovens and numerous bones of domesticated animals reflect settled agricultural life. Female figurines have been related to worship and jar burials within which food was placed related to belief in afterlife. The relationship of Hassuna pottery to that of Jericho suggests that village culture was becoming widespread.

References

Hassuna culture Wikipedia