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Remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hama


In the research project Ordinary Lives in Extraordinary Times: A New View of the Earliest Urban Societies in Bronze Age Syria we investigate remnants from everyday life in Bronze Age (3rd millennium BC) Hama in Syria.

We investigate the many thousands of pots that were excavated in the city, and which can inform us on both their function and contents, but also their origin, which may throw new light on the trade connections in the Bronze Age. We look at the many pot marks scratched onto the surfaces of vessels, which may relate to aspects of production. Identification of plant remains and animal bones, as well as organic residues from the bottom of cooking pots and drinking vessels, tell us about ordinary meals and drinks. Finds of toys give us new information about children in the past, and analysis of pigments show us which colours were used on statues and other objects. 3D scans of figurines and fingerprint analysis on pots will help us understand, both how they were made, and whether they might have been produced by children or adults. AMS dating of organic remains will help us secure the chronology of the city.



Research of remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hamain Syria
3D scans of figurines from Hama. 3D scans may help us understand how the figurines were made, and by whom.
Research of remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hamain Syria
Chemical analysis of pot sherds shows which type of clay the pots were made from and can help us identify their geographical origin.
Research of remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hamain Syria
Pot marks from Hama. We investigate whether the marks are related to the production of the pots, or to their function and contents.
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Goblet from Hama. Analysis of organic remains may be able to tell us what people in Bronze Age Hama liked to drink.
Research of remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hamain Syria
Cylinder seal impressions on the rims of cooking pots from Hama. We investigate whether there is a connection between decoration and pot function.
Research of remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hamain Syria
GIS-based modelling of houses from a Bronze Age neighborhood in Hama.

Participants:


Agnese Vacca, Statale University of Milan, Italy – GIS, stratigraphic reconstruction

Akiva Sanders, University of Chicago, USA – fingerprint analysis

Amaury Havé, Sorbonne Université, France – chemical analysis

Anders Pihl, National Museum – network analysis

Anne Hazel Brink, University of Southern Denmark – chemical analysis

Barbara Huber, Max Planck Institute, Jena, Germany - chemical analysis

Caroline Sauvage, Loyola Marymount University, USA – textile tool analysis

Filippo Trogi, Statale University of Milan, Italy – GIS, stratigraphic reconstruction

Freerk Oldenburg, Museum Vestsjælland - artist

Georges Mouamar, National Museum/CNRS, France – provenience of ceramics

Haris Procopiou, Sorbonne Université, France – use-wear analysis of stone tools

Marta D’Andrea, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy – ceramic analysis

Martin N. Mortensen, National Museum – organic residue analysis

Mette Marie Hald, National Museum – PI, archaeobotanical analysis

Michelle Taube, National Museum – chemical analysis

Pernille Bangsgaard, Copenhagen University – archaeozoological analysis

Sabine Sorin, CNRS, France – 3D scanning

Stephen Lumsden, National Museum – digitalization, ceramic analysis

Valentina Tumolo, University of California Berkeley, USA – ceramic and cylinder seal analysis

Yves Gallet, CNRS/Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (IPGP), France – archaeomagnetic analysis



Publications from the project:


Burchill, A.T., Sanders, A., Morgan, J.H.T. 2023. Inferring the age and sex of ancient potters from fingerprint ridge densities: A data-driven, Bayesian mixture modelling approach. MethodsX 11, 102292.

Gallet, Y., Mouamar, G., Lumsden, S., Hald, M.M. 2023. An archaeomagnetic intensity-based search for order in the chaos of the destruction of Hama (Syria) dated to 720 BCE. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 51: 104138

Lumsden, S., Mouamar, G., Hansen, A.H., Hald, M.M. 2023. Hama on the Rebel River. A Syrian town in the 1930s through the Eyes of Danish Archaeologists. Aarhus: University Press

Sanders, A., Lumsden, S., Burchill, A.T., Mouamar, G. 2023. Transformations in the roles of men, women, and children in the ceramic industry at Early Bronze Age Hama, Syria and contemporary sites. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 70: 101501

Tumolo, V. 2022. Pot sealing practice in the late fourth and third millennia BC: the Northern Levant between connectivity and regionalism. Origini XLVI: 57-86


Research of remains from daily life in Bronze Age Hamain Syria
(Publication from the project: Hama on the Rebel River A Syrian Town in the 1930s through the Eyes of Danish Archaeologists).