Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T07:08:46.787Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Tell al-Hawa Project: Archaeological Investigations in the North Jazira 1986–87

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2014

Extract

Members of the British Archaeological Expedition to Iraq first visited Tell al-Hawa in January 1986 from the Saddam Dam. The site appears as a massive, solitary giant, dominating the landscape and dwarfing all other sites in the region (Plate Ia). From the summit, 30 m high, there is an impressive view over a vast plain covered with mounds in all directions. A walk over the main mound revealed a particularly wide range of pottery types representing most known periods. The size, scope and archaeological potential of Tell al-Hawa and the surrounding plain led us to decide on further investigation.

A first season of survey and excavations was conducted from October 1986 to April 1987 inclusive. The aim of the project was to carry out a single, integrated study of a major site in its context.

We would like to thank specially Dr Mu'ayyad Sa'id Damerji, the Director-General of Antiquities and Heritage, and Dr Abd as-Sittar Azzawi, then Director of the Antiquities Office in the North, without whose help the Hawa Project would not have been possible. For the duration of the 1987 season we were allowed use of Antiquities Office housing and working facilities in the citadel at Tel'afar, for which we are very grateful. Mr Salem Yunis, then Inspector at Tel'afar, was of considerable assistance to us at all times, as were our representatives in the field, Mr Mohammed Zaki Abdul Kerim and Mr Meti Barbar al-Tumm.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute for the Study of Iraq 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abu al-Soof, B. A., 1968. Distribution of Uruk, Jamdat Nasr and Ninevite V pottery as revealed by field survey work in Iraq. Iraq 30, 7486.Google Scholar
Buckingham, R. McC, 1981. The Heartland of Cities. Chicago.Google Scholar
Bergamini, J. S., 1827. Travels in Mesopotamia 2 vols. London.Google Scholar
Buringh, P., 1960. Soils and soil conditions in Iraq. BaghdadGoogle Scholar
Chisholm, M., 1979. Rural settlement and land use. London.Google Scholar
Curtis, J., 1984. Nush-i Jan III. The Small Finds. London.Google Scholar
Directorate General of Antiquities 1970. Archaeological Sites in Iraq. Baghdad.Google Scholar
Directorate General of Antiquities 1976. Atlas of the Archaeological Sites in Iraq. Baghdad.Google Scholar
Donbaz, V. & Grayson, A. K., 1985. Royal inscriptions on clay cones from Ashur now in Istanbul. Toronto.Google Scholar
Donner, F. M., 1986. Xenophon's Arabia. Iraq 48, 114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiey, J. M., 1964. The Iraqi section of the Abbassid Road. Iraq 26, 107–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guest, E., 1966. The flora of Iraq. Vol. 1. Baghdad.Google Scholar
Jacob-Rost, L., 1982. Die Tonnagel-Inschriften aus Assur. In Forschungen und Berichle 22, 137–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Strange, G., 1905. The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate. London.Google Scholar
van Liere, W.J. & Lauffray, J., 1954. Nouvelle prospection archeologique dans la haute Jezireh syrienne. Les Annates Archeologiques de Syrie 4, 129–48.Google Scholar
Lloyd, S., 1938. Some ancient sites in the Sinjar district. Iraq 5, 123–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mallowan, M. E. L., 1947. Excavations at Brak and Chagar Bazar. Iraq 9, 1259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marfoe, L. (ed.), 1986. The Chicago Euphrates Archaeological Project 1980-1984: An Interim Report. Anatolica 13.Google Scholar
Meijer, D.J., 1986. A Survey of Northeastern Syria. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Oates, D., 1968. Studies in the Ancient History of Northern Iraq. London.Google Scholar
Postgate, J. N., 1976. Nomads and sedentaries in Middle Assyrian sources. In: Nomads and Sedentary Peoples. XXX International Congress of Human Sciences in Asia and North Africa, ed. Castillo, 4756.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reade, J. E., 1968. Tell Taya 1967: A summary report. Iraq 30, 234–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reade, J. E., 1982. Tell Taya. Fifty years of Mesopotamian discovery (ed. Curtis), 72–8.Google Scholar
Roaf, M. & Killick, R., 1987. A mysterious affair of styles: The Ninevite 5 Pottery of Northern Mesopotamia. Iraq 49, 199230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saggs, H. W. F., 1984. The Might that was Assyria. London.Google Scholar
Speiser, E. A., 1935. Excavations at Tepe Gawra. Vol. I: Levels I-VIII. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Starr, R. S. F., 1937. Nuzi. Vol. II. Harvard.Google Scholar
Stein, M. A., 1985. Limes Report. In: S. Gregory & D. Kennedy (eds). 2 vols. Oxford.Google Scholar
Stronach, D., 1959. The development of the fibula in the Near East, Iraq 21, 181206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tobler, A. J., 1950. Excavations at Tepe Gawra. Vol. II: Levels IX-XX. Philadelphia.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
Wallen, C. C., 1967. Aridity definitions and their applicability. Geografiska Annaler 49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallen, C. C., 1968. Agroclimatological studies in the Levant. In: Agroclimatological Methods, Proceedings of the Reading Symposium. UNESCO, Paris.Google Scholar
Weiss, H., 1983. Excavations at Tell Leilan and the origin of north Mesopotamian cities in the third millennium B.C. Paleorient 9/2, 3952.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkinson, T.J., 1976. Tell Sweyhat: physical geography and the agricultural region. Unpublished report.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T. J., 1982. The definition of ancient manured zones by means of extensive sherd sampling techniques. Journal of Field Archaeology 9, 323–33.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T. J., 1986. Environmental change and local settlement history around Kurban Hoyük. In: Marfoe (ed.)Google Scholar
Wright, H. T. & Johnson, G. A., 1975. Population, exchange and early state formation in southwestern Iran. American Anthropologist 77, 267–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar