The study of clay tokens in the Ancient Near East has focused, for the most part,
on their role as antecedents to the cuneiform script. Starting with Pierre Amiet
and Maurice Lambert in the 1960s the theory was put forward that tokens, or
calculi, represent an early cognitive attempt at recording. This theory was
taken up by Denise Schmandt-Besserat who studied a large diachronic corpus of
Near Eastern tokens. Since then little has been written except in response to
Schmandt-Besserat's writings. Most discussions of tokens have generally focused
on the time period between the eighth and fourth millennium bc with the
assumption that token use drops off as writing gains ground in administrative
contexts. Now excavations in southeastern Turkey at the site of Ziyaret Tepe
— the Neo-Assyrian provincial capital Tušhan —
have uncovered a corpus of tokens dating to the first millennium bc. This is a
significant new contribution to the documented material. These tokens are found
in association with a range of other artefacts of administrative culture
— tablets, dockets, sealings and weights — in a manner
which indicates that they had cognitive value concurrent with the cuneiform
writing system and suggests that tokens were an important tool in Neo-Assyrian
imperial administration.
This report describes a pilot study examining aDNA from a skeletal population excavated in the 1990s at the late Early Bronze Age (EBA, c. 2300-2100 BC) urban settlement of Titriş Hö yü k in southeastern Turkey. Typically, late EBA burials at Titriş Hö yü k consisted of periodically reused underground family crypts contained within houses. However, one unique set of remains dated to the latest phase of the late EBA occupation at the site departed from this burial pattern entirely. It consisted of an above ground mortuary installation (B98.87) displaying the skulls and post-cranial bones of 19 individuals, most exhibiting a variety of fatal traumas. In this article, we compare the mtDNA sequences of these individuals with those buried in contemporary traditional late EBA intramural crypts. After successful extraction and amplification of ancient DNA molecules during a double blind study of 13 skeletons selected for the pilot study, our team was able to compare the genetic relatedness of individuals displayed in B98.87 to individuals buried elsewhere on the site. Based on archaeological evidence alone, earlier we had suggested that the occupants of B98.87 were perhaps outsiders, possibly soldiers vanquished in hostilities taking place shortly before the abandonment of the city at the end of the late EBA. However, our pilot study showed no clear genetic difference between the population of B98.87 and the broader population of the late EBA city, contrary to our expectations.
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