A Multi-Directional Bridge? The Geo-Strategic Significance of Nakhchivan during the Late Chalcolithic (4500-3500 BCE)

Title
A Multi-Directional Bridge? The Geo-Strategic Significance of Nakhchivan during the Late Chalcolithic (4500-3500 BCE)
Publication Date
2021
Author(s)
Marro, Catherine
Bakhshaliyev, Veli
Le Bourdonnec, François-Xavier
Orange, Marie
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7344-7597
Email: morange@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:morange
Editor
Editor(s): Liane Giemsch and Svend Hansen
Type of document
Conference Publication
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Verlag Schnell & Steiner GmbH
Place of publication
Regensburg, Germany
Series
Schriften des Archäologischen Museums Frankfurt
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/54005
Abstract
Late Prehistoric Caucasia is located between the incipient urban, agrarian states of 4th Millennium Mesopotamia and the pastoral-based, hierarchical communities of the Eurasian steppes. Renowned for its wealth in natural resources, it has recently been envisaged as a potential bridge transmitting goods and knowledge between Eurasia and the Near-East. This paper summarizes the cultural evolution of the South Caucasus between ca. 6200 and 3500 BCE with a view to emphasizing its geo-strategic position during the Late Chalcolithic period (4500-3500 BCE). From a secluded region bypassed by major circulation routes during the Neolithic, the South Caucasus evolved into a kind of economic hub, as shown by a remarkable increase in the number of settlements belonging to the Chalcolithic, many of which display evident links with Mesopotamia, Iran, or the Black Sea region. This striking evolution probably stems from the rise of extractive metallurgy, which developed in the Caucasus some time during the 5th millennium BCE. Drawing on the evidence that has been collected in Nakhchivan over the past 15 years, in particular on the obsidian circulation networks, we argue that the exchange of goods and knowledge during the Chalcolithic was in the hands of mobile pastoral groups, which resulted into a chain of interconnected networks of varying extents: according to this scenario, the circulation units at the beginning of the larger, interregional networks did not necessarily have any contact with the end-line. From the available evidence, the South Caucasus during the Late Chalcolithic appears to have been a kind of hub, a central place where different communities met and interacted: this is particularly visible in Nakhchivan, where mobile herders from Iran, among other groups, established links between the communities living in Eastern Anatolia and those of the Lesser Caucasus piedmonts.
Link
Citation
The Caucasus: bridge between the urban centres in Mesopotamia and the Pontic steppes in the 4th and 3rd millennium BC: the transfer of knowledge and technologies between East and West in the Bronze Age, p. 15-30
ISBN
9783795434397
Start page
15
End page
30

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