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THE NEW PROJECT STARTED: EARLY URBANISM IN PREHISTORIC EUROPE? |
from: http://www.dur.ac.uk/j.c.chapman/tripillia/ http://www.dur.ac.uk/archaeology/research/projects/?mode=project&id=513
EARLY URBANISM IN PREHISTORIC EUROPE?:THE CASE OF THE TRYPILLIA MEGA-SITESThe Trypillia mega-sites in Ukraine are some of the largest sites in 5th – 4th millennium Eurasia, despite which they have been neglected in research into urban origins. The Project seeks to deliver field data and interpretation on a scale never attempted on mega-sites, whose very size (up to 450 ha) makes them difficult to investigate. The central methodological issue is how to place the 1,000 - 2,000 structures on a mega-site in a sequence, so as to demonstrate how many houses were occupied at the same time and permit the building of an accurate demographic site model. The Project has formulated a novel methodology to solve this problem, which it successfully tested in the field at the mega-site of Nebelivka, in Kirovograd Domain. The Project has also identified a number of wetlands near the mega-site for testing the scale of human impact on its environment. In these ways, the project will make a breakthrough in the understanding of Tripillia mega-sites and our understanding of the origins of complex societies and urban settlement in Eurasia.This AHRC-funded 5-years (2012-2016) research project takes as its starting-point the Trypillia (Russian 'Tripolye') mega-sites of Ukraine – the largest sites in 4th millennium BC Europe, termed 'proto-urban' by local archaeologists, and the only exception to Roland Fletcher's (1995) limits of agrarian settlement growth. The project objective is to understand how and why Trypillia sites expanded in this unprecedented way, In summer 2009, a preliminary season co-directed by Drs. Mikhail Videiko and John Chapman focused on the 220 hectare mega-site of Nebelivka, Kirovograd domain, enabling the production of a 15 hectare geophysics plot with over 50 burnt structures and a small number of unburnt structures, as well as pits and other anomalies. Coring of burnt structures was successful in recovering organically-rich daub for direct 14-C dating. On the basis of these results, the AHRC made a Research Grant for a four-year Project (February 2012–January 2016). The 2012 Season Following the award of an AHRC Research Grant, as well as the award of a National Geographic Society Research Grant for the excavation of alarge burnt structure at Nebelivka, the Project has fixed on a six-week summer season, running from mid-July to the end of August 2012. The objectives of the 2012 seasons are as follows:
Future Plans: Travelling Exhibition and Conferences
The Project will create and disseminate a museum exhibition presenting the principal results of the Project's research, to run in 2015/2016. Five Ukrainian museums have agreed to host the exhibition: the Kyiv Archaeological Museum; the Kyiv Domain Archaeological Museum at Trypillia; the Ivano-Frankivsk Museum; the Archaeological Museum of Institute of Archaeology (Kyiv); and the Kharkov University Museum of Archaeology & Ethnography. In addition, up to eight museums from Eastern and Western Europe have given preliminary consent to hosting the exhibition: the National Museum of Archaeology and History, Chişinau (Moldova); Neamţ County Museums (Romania); the Varna Regional Archaeological Museum (Bulgaria); one of the Budapest Museums (Hungary, under discussion); the Kraków Archaeological Museum (Poland); the Mannheim Museum (Germany); the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, under discussion); and Durham University Museums. Planned Conferences Two international conferences are planned to disseminate the results of the Project research: one in Kyiv in April 2015 and a second in Durham in January 2016.
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