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Malankari ist eine früheisenzeitliche (ca. 4. Jahrhundert v.Chr.) Fundstelle im Tschadbecken im Nordosten Nigerias. Diese Region wird seit 1989 von Archäologen der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt/Main erforscht, mit dem Schwerpunkt auf dem Übergang der Jäger- und Sammlergruppen zu Pastoralisten und Ackerbauern. Mit der Gajiganna-Kultur des 2. und 1. Jahrtausends v.Chr. wurde dieser Übergang in der Region definiert. Nach einer ökologisch bedingten Krise im frühen 1. Jahrtausends v.Chr. tauchen ab ca. 500 v.Chr. Siedlungen von beträchtlichen Umfang auf. Dazu gehört auch Malankari mit einer geschätzten Grröße von mehr als 30 ha. Diese Magisterarbeit beschreibt die Testgrabungen, die im Frühjahr 2005 durchgeführt wurden, mit besonderem Schwerpunkt auf der Keramikauswertung. Die geomagnetischen Untersuchungen sowie die weiteren Fundkategorien (Archäobotanik, Archäozoologie, Steinartefakte, Tonfiguren) werden ebenfalls besprochen und durch Abbildungen und Tafeln verdeutlicht. Ein aus der Grabung geborgenes Eisenstück ist ein Hinweis darauf, dass die Fundstelle an den Übergang vom Later Stone Age zum Early Iron Age datiert werden kann. Eine regionale Einbindung der Fundstelle wird in den abschließenden Kapiteln vorgenommen. Weitere Grabungen sollten vor allem die umfangreichen, auf den geomagnetischen Bildern zu sehenden Strukturen umfassen.
Since 2009 has the central Nigerian Nok Culture – until then primarily known for its highly artistic terracotta figurines and early evidence of iron working in the first millennium BCE – been the focus of a research project by the Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, Germany. The analysis of Nok sculptures has so far been almost entirely restricted to their stylistic features which show such great similarities that one hypothesis of the Frankfurt project has been the possible central production of these artfully crafted figurines.
This volume, written within the scope of a dissertation project completed in 2015, challenges this hypothesis by using scientific materials analysis. Combining the results of the mineralogical and geochemical analyses as well as geographic and geological observations, an alternative model for the organisation and procedure of the manufacture of the famous Nok terracottas is suggested.
They were – as the domestic pottery that is used for comparison and differentiation in this study – manufactured with locally available raw materials (clay and temper) but in different manufacturing sequences with regard to temper and clay composition. The terracottas’ clay was obviously reserved for their production only, demonstrating – aside from stylistic similarities – the value these figurines had during the Nok Culture.
The Central Nigerian Nok Culture has been well known for its elaborate terracotta sculptures and evidence of iron metallurgy since its discovery by British archaeologist Bernard Fagg in the 1940s. With a date in the first millennium BCE, both, sculptures and ironworking, belong to the earliest of their kind in sub-Saharan Africa. After a period of destruction of Nok sites by looting, scientific research resumed in 2006, when a team of archaeologists from Goethe University in Germany started to explore different Nok Culture aspects, one of which focused on chronology. Establishing a chronology for the Nok Culture employed two approaches: a comprehensive pottery analysis based on decoration and form elements and a wealth of radiocarbon dates from a large number of excavated sites. This volume presents the radiocarbon dates and the methods, data and results of the chronological pottery analysis, conducted within the scope of a dissertation project completed in 2015. Combining the two strands of information, a chronology emerges, dividing the Nok Culture into three phases from the middle of the second millennium BCE to the last centuries BCE and defining seven pottery groups that can be arranged to some extent in a chronological order.
Many Zanjian settlements (8th to 13th centuries AD) on Tanzania’s coast are considered to have collapsed and not regarded as belonging to the formation of the Swahili culture (13th to 16th centuries AD). With this regard, Swahili traditions found on Tanzania’s coast are seldom linked to local Zanjian precursors but to external influence especially from Lamu archipelago on the Kenya coast. Nevertheless, new archaeological evidences from Pangani Bay on the northern coast of Tanzania suggest that the external influences to cultural continuity and change from Zanjian to Swahili periods are overemphasized. This conclusion is grounded on archaeological field works conducted in the surrounding of Pangani Bay in 2010 and 2012, where major Swahili sites directly overlie Zanjian sites without recognizable changes of the cultural materials. The study compares and contrasts cultural materials (in particular pottery) and remains of economy and trade (fauna and glass beads) traditions from both Zanjian and Swahili phases. The aim of this comparative analysis is to trace change and continuity of archaeological traditions for better understanding the origin of Swahili culture in Pangani Bay.
In this endeavour, the analysis of ceramic, faunal remains and glass beads from Pangani Bay proposes negligible differences of materials and economical traditions from the late 1st to 2nd millennia AD. That is, local ceramic styles by Swahilis show only minor differences to those used by their ancestors, while fauna data suggest a similarity in subsistence economy between Zanjian and Swahili periods. Correspondingly, glass bead data indicate that although maritime trade became highly sophisticated during Swahili time, early involvement into oceanic far distance trade contact began in the Zanjian period. Thus, this thesis conveys all issues together. It presents research objectives, field work methods as well as analysis and interpretation of the results, with a main focus on ceramic, fauna and bead data. With the support of archaeological evidences, the current work concludes that there is more continuity than change in most of the Zanjian traditions that facilitated the origin of Swahili culture in Pangani Bay.
Thema der Magisterarbeit ist die Aufarbeitung und Auswertung der Grabungen an der Fundstelle Pangwari in Zentralnigeria. Im Fokus stehen die Nok-zeitlichen Befunde und Funde, um die Struktur des Fundplatzes aufzudecken.
Die Nok-Kultur ist bekannt für die im sub-saharischen Raum ältesten Terrakottafiguren sowohl menschlicher als auch tierischer Darstellungen. Seit 2009 untersuchen die Wissenschaftler der Archäologie und Archäobotanik Afrikas an der Goethe-Universität die Hinterlassenschaften der Nok-Kultur. Zahlreiche 14C-Datierungen aus Fundkontexten belegen eine Dauer der Kultur von etwa 1500 v. Chr. bis zur Zeitenwende. Pangwari ist mit über 2600 m² verteilt auf 10 Grabungsschnitte mit knapp 13.000 Messpunkten die größte Grabung einer Nok-Fundstelle. Die Analyse der 20 identifizierten Befunde erlaubte, unter Berücksichtigung der Funde und Datierungen, Rückschlüsse auf die Chronologie und Funktion des Platzes, die in dieser Arbeit vorgestellt werden.