Document

The Early Iron Age collective tomb LCG-1 at Dibbā al-Bayah, Oman : long-distance exchange and cross-cultural interaction.

Identifier
DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2020.224
Source
Antiquity. v. 95, 379, p. 104-124
Contributors
Country
United Kingdom.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press.
Gregorian
2021-02-01
Language
English
English abstract
The Iron Age (c. 1300-600 BC) of South-eastern Arabia is characterised by rapid expansion of settlement. Social structures formed over the previous millennia, however, persisted and were reinforced through the development of collective funerary monuments. A recently discovered tomb of Late Bronze to Early Iron Age date at Dibbā al-Bayah in the Sultanate of Oman has yielded a range of artefacts that illuminate the nature and extent of the long-distance contacts of the local community. Seemingly selected not only for their exotic appeal, but also for their apotropaic function, these objects testify to a deep cross-cultural knowledge extending across the wider region during this crucial period in Arabian prehistory.
ISSN
0003-598X
Category
Journal articles

Same Subject