Shomu-tepe (Şomutəpə) is an ancient settlement in the Agstafa District of Azerbaijan. The Neolithic Shulaveri-Shomu culture that formed in the Southern Caucasus is connected with the name of this monument.

Shomu-tepe
Şomutəpə
A female statuette from Gargalar tepesi. Shomu Tepe culture. National Museum of History of Azerbaijan
Shomu-tepe is located in Azerbaijan
Shomu-tepe
Shown within Azerbaijan
Alternative nameShomutepe
LocationAzerbaijan
RegionAgstafa District
Coordinates41°07′28″N 45°27′30″E / 41.124440°N 45.458330°E / 41.124440; 45.458330
History
PeriodsNeolithic
CulturesShulaveri-Shomu culture

The settlement is located in the northern suburb of the modern city of Agstafa.

Research

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During the 1960s, I. G. Narimanov, was the first to recognize a new culture that he named 'Shomu', after he excavated this site on the outskirts of Agstafa. This is now known as Shulaveri-Shomu culture.[1] In 1961–1964, he carried out research in the area of 400 square meters in the residential area of Agstafa.

Settlement

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The thickness of the cultural level at the settlement varies from 1 to 2.5 m.[2]

The inhabitants of Shomutape lived in small round houses built of unbaked plano-convex bricks. The ceiling of the house was supported by a pole buried in the floor. Houses had one and sometimes two entrances. The maximum diameter of these residential buildings was 3.7 m. Later, Narimanov identified two types of circular buildings here, small with a diameter around 2 m, and large with a diameter around 3.5 m.[3]

 
Copper amulet from Gargalar tepesi belonging to Shomutepe culture. Gargalar is located in the same neighbourhood as Shomu-tepe. Ganja History-Ethnography Museum

The fireplaces used to heat the houses were placed near the walls. Some stoves were also located outside. The farm buildings of Shomutape had a circular plan like the residential houses.

Cereal grains, tools made of stone and bone, including grinding stones and bone sickles, were discovered in the Shomutape settlement. The lithic industry of the inhabitants was almost exclusively based on obsidian, consisting mainly of blades, but sometimes also using microliths.

A female figure made of bone was also found.

Ceramics were made of clay mixed with sand, and sometimes covered with red paint. They are mostly grit-tempered but sometimes also vegetal-tempered.[4]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Bertille LYONNET, Farhad GULIYEV (2010), Recent discoveries on the Neolithic and Chalcolithic of Western Azerbaijan. TUBA-AR, TURKISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY 13, 219-228
  2. ^ R. M. MUNCHAEV, Shomutepe - article in "The Great Soviet Encyclopedia" (1979)
  3. ^ Baudouin, Emmanuel (2019-06-01). "Rethinking architectural techniques of the Southern Caucasus in the 6th millennium BC: A re-examination of former data and new insights". Paléorient (45–1): 115–150. doi:10.4000/paleorient.602. ISSN 0153-9345.
  4. ^ Bertille LYONNET, Farhad GULIYEV (2010), Recent discoveries on the Neolithic and Chalcolithic of Western Azerbaijan. TUBA-AR, TURKISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY 13, 219-228

Bibliography

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  • Baudouin, Emmanuel (2019-06-01). "Rethinking architectural techniques of the Southern Caucasus in the 6th millennium BC: A re-examination of former data and new insights". Paléorient (45–1): 115–150. doi:10.4000/paleorient.602. ISSN 0153-9345.
  • R. M. MUNCHAEV, Shomutepe - article in "The Great Soviet Encyclopedia" (1979)