Amaury Havé | Université Paris 1 - Panthéon-Sorbonne (original) (raw)
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Papers by Amaury Havé
Paléorient, 2019
Since 2012, the French archaeological mission in the Governorate of Soulaimaniah has been explori... more Since 2012, the French archaeological mission in the Governorate of Soulaimaniah has been exploring the Rania and Peshdar plains in order to understand the evolution of settlement patterns in Northern Mesopotamia from the Palaeolithic to the present day. Newly acquired data from surveys combined with excavations at six prehistoric sites provide the first picture of human settlement patterns in this region from the Palaeolithic to the Chalcolithic. The development of these patterns reveals the presence of a local system that was deeply rooted in the wider Mesopotamian context but was also subject to influence from the Iranian plateau. Résumé. Depuis 2012, la mission archéologique française du Gouvernorat de Soulaimaniah explore les deux plaines de Peshdar et de Rania afin de comprendre l'évolution des systèmes d'habitat en Mésopotamie septentrionale dans la longue durée, du Paléolithique à aujourd'hui. Les données nouvellement acquises lors des prospections, ainsi que les informations issues de sondages effectués sur six sites préhistoriques permettent d'esquisser une première image des modèles d'implantation humaine dans la région, du Paléolithique jusqu'au Chalcolithique. L'évolution des modèles de peuplement montre une dynamique locale ancrée dans le système mésopotamien, mais influencée également par le plateau iranien.
Caractériser et interpréter la disparition de types céramiques : Le cas des “ supports d’offrandes ” de Mésopotamie méridionale au cours du dernier tiers du IIIe millénaire avant notre ère, 2019
Download at https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02054801v1 During the Early Dynastic III Period... more Download at https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02054801v1
During the Early Dynastic III Period, we find in Mesopotamia uncommon ceramic forms with supposedly ritual function, called stemmed dishes and high stands. They are respectively occurring in tombs (for the stemmed dishes) and temples (for the high stands). In the same period, there are rare iconographic mentions and a few metallic examples inside the Ur city royal cemetery. These two categories are therefore grouped under the name of offering stands. We present here a synthesis of the latest testimonies for these potteries and their significant absences in the archaeological reference contexts of the middle and lower Mesopotamia of the last third of the IIIrd millennium BC. The pottery examples had likely disappeared before the Ur III period (2100 BC), but the representations of these objects or equivalents not having reached us (especially in precious metals) are continuing for at least three centuries. We then show how it is possible to both partially fill and interpret the sudden absence of these ceramic forms on a regional scale. This local disappearance is related to the particular constraints posed by these objects on the processing chaîne opératoire and to the evolution of the political systems and their impact on the ceramic production methods.
Books and journals co-edition by Amaury Havé
by Routes de L'Orient, JULIE BESSENAY-PROLONGE, Mathilde Mura, Jean-Jacques Herr, Salvatore Garfi, Karel Nováček, Lucie Robert, Vanessa Rose, Jérémie Schiettecatte, Gaëlle Thévenin, Zoé Vannier, and Amaury Havé
Archaeology of Conflict / Archaeology in Conflict, Jun 30, 2019
Archéologie des Conflits / Archéologie en Conflit - Documenter la Destruction au Moyen-Orient et ... more Archéologie des Conflits / Archéologie en Conflit - Documenter la Destruction au Moyen-Orient et en Asie Centrale
Archaeology of Conflict / Archaeology in Conflict - Documenting Destruction of Cultural Heritage in the Middle-East and Central Asia
Edited by Julie Bessenay-Prolonge, Jean-Jacques Herr, Mathilde Mura
Full HD pdf freely available on : https://rdorient.hypotheses.org/1030
Paléorient, 2019
Since 2012, the French archaeological mission in the Governorate of Soulaimaniah has been explori... more Since 2012, the French archaeological mission in the Governorate of Soulaimaniah has been exploring the Rania and Peshdar plains in order to understand the evolution of settlement patterns in Northern Mesopotamia from the Palaeolithic to the present day. Newly acquired data from surveys combined with excavations at six prehistoric sites provide the first picture of human settlement patterns in this region from the Palaeolithic to the Chalcolithic. The development of these patterns reveals the presence of a local system that was deeply rooted in the wider Mesopotamian context but was also subject to influence from the Iranian plateau. Résumé. Depuis 2012, la mission archéologique française du Gouvernorat de Soulaimaniah explore les deux plaines de Peshdar et de Rania afin de comprendre l'évolution des systèmes d'habitat en Mésopotamie septentrionale dans la longue durée, du Paléolithique à aujourd'hui. Les données nouvellement acquises lors des prospections, ainsi que les informations issues de sondages effectués sur six sites préhistoriques permettent d'esquisser une première image des modèles d'implantation humaine dans la région, du Paléolithique jusqu'au Chalcolithique. L'évolution des modèles de peuplement montre une dynamique locale ancrée dans le système mésopotamien, mais influencée également par le plateau iranien.
Caractériser et interpréter la disparition de types céramiques : Le cas des “ supports d’offrandes ” de Mésopotamie méridionale au cours du dernier tiers du IIIe millénaire avant notre ère, 2019
Download at https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02054801v1 During the Early Dynastic III Period... more Download at https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02054801v1
During the Early Dynastic III Period, we find in Mesopotamia uncommon ceramic forms with supposedly ritual function, called stemmed dishes and high stands. They are respectively occurring in tombs (for the stemmed dishes) and temples (for the high stands). In the same period, there are rare iconographic mentions and a few metallic examples inside the Ur city royal cemetery. These two categories are therefore grouped under the name of offering stands. We present here a synthesis of the latest testimonies for these potteries and their significant absences in the archaeological reference contexts of the middle and lower Mesopotamia of the last third of the IIIrd millennium BC. The pottery examples had likely disappeared before the Ur III period (2100 BC), but the representations of these objects or equivalents not having reached us (especially in precious metals) are continuing for at least three centuries. We then show how it is possible to both partially fill and interpret the sudden absence of these ceramic forms on a regional scale. This local disappearance is related to the particular constraints posed by these objects on the processing chaîne opératoire and to the evolution of the political systems and their impact on the ceramic production methods.
by Routes de L'Orient, JULIE BESSENAY-PROLONGE, Mathilde Mura, Jean-Jacques Herr, Salvatore Garfi, Karel Nováček, Lucie Robert, Vanessa Rose, Jérémie Schiettecatte, Gaëlle Thévenin, Zoé Vannier, and Amaury Havé
Archaeology of Conflict / Archaeology in Conflict, Jun 30, 2019
Archéologie des Conflits / Archéologie en Conflit - Documenter la Destruction au Moyen-Orient et ... more Archéologie des Conflits / Archéologie en Conflit - Documenter la Destruction au Moyen-Orient et en Asie Centrale
Archaeology of Conflict / Archaeology in Conflict - Documenting Destruction of Cultural Heritage in the Middle-East and Central Asia
Edited by Julie Bessenay-Prolonge, Jean-Jacques Herr, Mathilde Mura
Full HD pdf freely available on : https://rdorient.hypotheses.org/1030