Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T09:22:02.518Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Konya region in the Iron Age and its relations with Cilicia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Hasan Bahar
Affiliation:
Selçuk University, Konya

Extract

Located in the central region of the Anatolian mainland, Konya has played an important role in east-west and north-south cultural interactions since prehistoric times. In order to investigate the cultural geography of this region from prehistoric times to the Classical period surveys and museum work have been carried out since 1987 (Bahar 1991; Bahar et al 1996). In the course of this work some observations have been made on the Iron Age, which is a problematic subject for the central Anatolian region as well as for Anatolia as a whole. During the Iron Age the grey pottery known as Phrygian ware occurs over a wide region from the basin of the Meander in the west into central Anatolia (Mellaart 1955: 117; Dupré 1983: 82; Summers 1994: 241-52). We have previously suggested that this ware should be renamed ‘inner-west Anatolian ware’ or ‘Luwian ware’ (Bahar et al 1996: 65-7). It is significant that this pottery is encountered especially around Sarayönü and Kadınhanı where Luwian peoples were intensively settled in the second millennium BC.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute at Ankara 1999

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

Akurgal, E 1955: Phrygische Kunst. AnkaraGoogle Scholar
Bahar, H 1991: İsauria Bölgesi Tarihi. KonyaGoogle Scholar
Bahar, H 1995: ‘Konya Çevresi Tarih Araştırmaları - 1: Hititler'den Romalılar'a Kadar İsauria Bölgesi’ Selçuk Üniversitesi Fen-Edebiyat Fakültesi Edebiyat Dergisi 19941995: 910Google Scholar
Bahar, H, Karauǧuz, G, Koçak, Ö 1996: Eskiçaǧ Konya Araştırmaları 1. İstanbulGoogle Scholar
Bazın, M 1994: ‘Orta Toros Yörüklerinden Sarıkeçili AşiretiAnkara Üniversitesi Türkiye Coǧrafyası Araştırma ve Uygulama Merkezi Dergisi 3: 141–61Google Scholar
Bing, J 1982: A History of Cilicia during the Assyrian Period (Indiana University PhD dissertation 1969). Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Dupré, S 1983: La céramique de l'age du bronze et de l'age du fer. ParisGoogle Scholar
Erol, O 1984: ‘Geomorphology and neotectonics of the pluvial lake basins in the Taurus belt and south central Anatolia’ in Tekeli, O and Göncüoǧlu, M Cemal (eds), International Symposium of Taurus. Ankara: 119–20Google Scholar
Esin, U 1979: İlk Üretimciliǧe Geçiş Evresinde Anadolu ve Güneydoǧu Avrupa (G.Ö. 10 500-7000). Doǧal Çevre Sorunu. İstanbulGoogle Scholar
Fischer, F 1963: Hethitische Keramik von Boǧazköy. BerlinGoogle Scholar
French, D H 1965: ‘Prehistoric sites in the Göksu valleyAnatolian Studies 15: 117201CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldman, H 1956: Excavations at Gözlü Kule, Tarsus. II. From the Neolithic through the Bronze Age. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Goldman, H 1963: Excavations at Gözlü Kule, Tarsus. III. The Iron Age. PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Haspels, C H E 1951: Phyrgie, tome III. La cité de Midas. Céramique et trouvailles diverses. ParisGoogle Scholar
Houwink ten Cate, Ph H J 1961: The Luwian Population Groups of Lycia and Cilicia Aspera during the Hellenistic Period. LeidenGoogle Scholar
Korbel, G 1987: Tarsus (Grabung H Goldman). Materialheft Spätbronzeitliche Keramik. HannoverGoogle Scholar
Mellaart, J 1954: ‘Preliminary report on a survey of preclassical remains in southern TurkeyAnatolian Studies 4: 175240CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellaart, J 1955: ‘Iron Age pottery from southern AnatoliaBelleten 19: 115–36Google Scholar
Mellaart, J 1963: ‘Early cultures of the south Anatolian plateau, IIAnatolian Studies 13: 199236CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osten, H H von der 1937: The Alishar Hüyük Seasons of 1930–32 (OIP 29). ChicagoGoogle Scholar
Özgüç, T 1971: Demir Devrinde Kültepe ve Civarı. Kültepe and its Vicinity in the Iron Age. AnkaraGoogle Scholar
Özgüç, T 1982: Maşat Höyük II. AnkaraGoogle Scholar
Pelon, O 1994: ‘The site of Porsuk and the beginning of the Iron Age in southern Cappadocia’ in Çilingiroǧlu, A and French, D H (eds), Anatolian Iron Ages 3 (British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph 16) Ankara: 157–62Google Scholar
Postgate, J N 1996: ‘Kilise Tepe 1995: a summary of the principal resultsKazı Sonuçları Toplantısı 18:1: 441–57Google Scholar
Sams, G K 1971: The Phrygian Painted Pottery of Early Iron Age Gordion and its Anatolian Setting. Ann ArborGoogle Scholar
Sams, G K 1974: ‘Phrygian painted animals: Anatolian orientalizing artAnatolian Studies 24: 169–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sams, G K 1994: The Early Phrygian Pottery. Illustrations (University Museum Monograph 79). PhiladelphiaGoogle Scholar
Saraçoǧlu, H 1989: Akdeniz Bölgesi. İstanbulGoogle Scholar
Solecki, R S 1964: ‘An archaeological reconnaissance in the Beyşehir-Suǧla area of south western TurkeyTürk Arkeoloji Dergisi 13:1: 129–53Google Scholar
Summers, G D 1994: ‘Grey ware and the eastern limits of Phrygia’ in Çilingiroǧlu, A and French, D H (eds), Anatolian Iron Ages 3 (British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph 16). Ankara: 241–52Google Scholar
Wiseman, D J 1956: Chronicles of Chaldean Kings (625–556 BC) in the British Museum. LondonGoogle Scholar
Zoroǧlu, L 1991: ‘The Iron Age finds from Kıcıkışla near Karapınar’ in Çilingiroǧlu, A and French, D H (eds), Anatolian Iron Ages 2 (British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph 13). Ankara: 149–53Google Scholar
Zoroǧlu, L 1994: ‘Cilicia Tracheia in the Iron Age: the Khilakku problem’ in Çilingiroǧlu, A and French, D H (eds), Anatolian Iron Ages 3 (British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph 16). Ankara: 301–9Google Scholar