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Anatolian Studies

Publication date: 2013-07-01
Volume: 63 Pages: 75 - 95
Publisher: British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara

Author:

Kaptijn, Eva
Poblome, Jeroen ; Vanhaverbeke, Hannelore ; Bakker, Johan ; Waelkens, Marc

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities, Archaeology, History, TAURUS MOUNTAINS, ANCIENT SAGALASSOS, LANDSCAPE, CLIMATE, IMPACT, BASIN, FIRE, VABB-listed journal, 2101 Archaeology, 2103 Historical Studies, 4301 Archaeology

Abstract:

This contribution discusses the Hellenistic, Roman and early Byzantine pottery collected during archaeological survey in the Bereket valley (territory of ancient Sagalassos, southwest Turkey). This collection contains both pottery imported from as yet unknown production centres and wares produced in the Potters' Quarter of Sagalassos. Changes in the proportions of pottery produced at Sagalassos and those produced at other locations become visible in the fourthcentury AD material and reflect the evolving relationship between the peripheral valley of Bereket and the regional centre of Sagalassos. Yet, the undiminished quantity of pottery collected suggests that human activity continued without significant changes in habitation density. However, pollen cores from the same valley show that at more or less the same time crop cultivation diminished and was largely replaced by pastoralism. This shift occured at a time when climatic conditions had become more favourable for crop cultivation. A somewhat similar decrease in crop cultivation is also observed in Gravgaz marsh. In both valleys, this shift occured about 300 years earlier than in the rest of the territory of Sagalassos. Although the reasons for these changes cannot be determined on the basis of the study of survey pottery alone, the results presented show the importance of intensive survey and the study of peripheral areas for understanding inter-regional interaction patterns.