The Early Iron Age collective tomb LCG-1 at Dibbā al-Bayah, Sultanate of Oman: Long-distance exchange and cross-cultural interaction
- 1. Department of History and Cultures, University of Bologna, Italy
- 2. Department of Environmental Biology, Sapienza—University of Rome, Italy
- 3. Centre Français d'Archéologie et de Sciences Sociales, Kuwait City, Kuwait
- 4. Ministry of Heritage and Tourism, Oman
Description
The Iron Age (c. 1300–600 BC) of South-eastern Arabia is characterised by rapid expansion of settlement. Social structures formed over the previous millennia, however, persisted and were reinforced through the development of collective funerary monuments. A recently discovered tomb of Late Bronze to Early Iron Age date at Dibbā al-Bayah in the Sultanate of Oman has yielded a range of artefacts that illuminate the nature and extent of the long-distance contacts of the local community. Seemingly selected not only for their exotic appeal, but also for their apotropaic function, these objects testify to a deep cross-cultural knowledge extending across the wider region during this crucial period in Arabian prehistory.
Files
2021 Frenez et al _ ANT _ Dibba LCG1.pdf
Files
(23.1 MB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:6276d9f51d8c6fc26c26cbe38c7fec06
|
23.1 MB | Preview Download |