Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-rbxfs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-07T14:05:05.407Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

REVISITING TELL BEGUM: A PREHISTORIC SITE IN THE SHAHRIZOR PLAIN, IRAQI KURDISTAN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2016

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Tell Begum was previously explored by Iraqi archaeologists in the 1960s when excavations revealed a multi-period site. Among the key finds were Halaf period remains that are relatively rare in the region of the Shahrizor plain and included polychrome ceramics suggesting a local variation of the Halaf culture. Recent investigations and excavations in 2011 and 2013 revealed a 5 hectare site inhabited during the Halaf, Ubaid, Late Chalcolithic, and medieval periods. The Halaf site may have had an area of about 3 hectares, making it a relatively large settlement for that period, although its full extent is unclear. Offsite work revealed the area to have been well watered in the past, with likely neighbouring regions of woodland and abundant shrubs. The heavy sedimentation in the region has partially obscured archaeological remains, including possibly Tell Begum's lower mound. The site, nevertheless, shows continuity of settlement, indicating relative stability in settlement over long timespans.

Information

Type
Research Article
Information
IRAQ , Volume 78 , December 2016 , pp. 103 - 135
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 2016 
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Tell Begum August 2013. View on the mound from the southwest

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Map of northern Iraq (Iraqi Kurdistan) showing the location of Tell Begum and the Shahrizor Survey Project

Figure 2

Fig. 3 Map of the Shahrizor Valley showing the location of Tell Begum and other prehistoric sites detected in the Shahrizor Survey project

Figure 3

Fig. 4 The distribution of Halaf sites in the Shahrizor Valley as known by 1980. At the time only two Halaf sites were known: Tell Sragon (site 203) and Tell Begum (site 204) (Hijara 1997: 90 and fig. 99)

Figure 4

Fig. 5 November 17, 2010 QuickBird image showing sedimentary trenched (G31, G34, and G35) and elevation transects

Figure 5

Fig. 6 Section drawing showing G34

Figure 6

Fig. 7 Survey map of Tell Begum (base image: Digital Globe 10.11.2012)

Figure 7

Fig. 8 Proportions of ceramic wares samples in a systematic surface collection. Upper: Upper Mound areas. Below: Lower Mound central transect

Figure 8

Table 1: The archaeological sequence of the Lower Mound according to the 1960's excavations (after Hijjara 1997).

Figure 9

Fig. 9 Tell Begum. Plan of the mound showing the reconstructed locations of the 1960's trenches (light) and the new trenches (dark) (produced by Martin Uildriks)

Figure 10

Fig. 10 Schematic reconstructed history of the 1960's trench through the Lower Mound (not to scale). (a) The Iraqi sounding in 1960 with the backfill put close to the sounding. (b) Some forty years later part of the backfill has washed back into the trench while the baulks are severely eroded. (c) In 2005 a local farmer hires a bulldozer to level the remaining backfill, partially filling the old trench. (d) In 2013 a new sounding is made through the backfill and into the original section

Figure 11

Fig. 11 Lower Trench. The battered, worn east section of the 1960 sounding at the Lower Mound as it looked in 2013. (a) View from above. (b) View from the west

Figure 12

Fig. 12 Lower Trench. Part of the eastern section of the Iraqi sounding of 1960 exposed and partially re-excavated in 2013

Figure 13

Table 2: The archaeological sequence of the Lower Mound according to the 2013 exposures.

Figure 14

Fig. 13 Lower Trench. Superimposed open areas dated to the Halaf period (level IV). (a) Stratum 7. (b) Stratum 13. (c) Stratum 15

Figure 15

Fig. 14 The remains of the old archaeological trench at the Upper Mound prior to our work. View from the south

Figure 16

Fig. 15 UT-1 from the north

Figure 17

Fig. 16 Upper Trench. The western section of the Iraqi sounding in 1960, exposed and re-excavated in 2013

Figure 18

Fig. 17 Upper Trench. The western section and the plan left on the bottom of UT-1 part of the Iraqi sounding in 1960, exposed and re-excavated in 2013

Figure 19

Table 3: The archaeological sequence of the Upper Mound according to the 2013 exposures.

Figure 20

Fig. 18 UT-2 from the southeast

Figure 21

Fig. 19 Trench P7. Fragment of medieval or sub-recent baked brick

Figure 22

Fig. 20 Selection of ground stone tool artefacts from the Lower Trench and the Upper Trench

Figure 23

Fig. 21 Selection of pottery discs from the Lower Trench. Late Chalcolithic and Halaf levels

Figure 24

Table 4: Pottery counts from the Lower Mound trench.

Figure 25

Table 5: Pottery counts from the Upper Mound trench.

Figure 26

Fig. 22 Proportions of pottery groups in the Lower Mound (left) and Upper Mound (right) trenches

Figure 27

Fig. 23 Examples of Halaf Fine Ware (nos. 1–26) and Halaf Coarse Ware (no. 27). Nos. 1–16: polychrome painted. Nos. 17–26: monochrome painted. Nos. 6 and 18 carry a repair

Figure 28

Fig. 24 Examples of polychrome painted Halaf Fine Ware

Figure 29

Fig. 25 Examples of polychrome painted Halaf Fine Ware

Figure 30

Table 6: Decoration techniques associated with Halaf Fine Ware pottery.

Figure 31

Fig. 26 Examples of Chaff-Faced Ware (nos. 1–11) and Fine Mineral Ware (no. 12)

Figure 32

Table 7: Decoration techniques associated with Chaff-Faced Ware pottery.

Figure 33

Fig. 27 Examples of Chaff-Faced Ware