TY - JOUR
T1 - The Pre-Aksumite Period
T2 - indigenous origins and development in the Horn of Africa
AU - Catherine D’Andrea, A.
AU - Welton, Lynn
AU - Manzo, Andrea
AU - Woldekiros, Helina S.
AU - Brandt, Steven A.
AU - Beldados, Alemseged
AU - Peterson, Elizabeth A.
AU - Nixon-Darcus, Laurie A.
AU - Gaudiello, Michela
AU - Wood, Shannon R.
AU - Mekonnen, Habtamu
AU - Batiuk, Stephen
AU - Meresa, Yemane
AU - Ruiz-Giralt, Abel
AU - Lancelotti, Carla
AU - Taffere, Abebe Mengistu
AU - Johnson, Lucas M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - The Pre-Aksumite Period (mid-second to late first millennia BC) witnessed the rise of complex societies in the Horn of Africa. Archaeological survey and excavations in the Gulo Makeda region of Eastern Tigrai by the Eastern Tigrai Archaeological Project (ETAP) have produced new data and insights into this critical juncture in the cultural history of the region. Based on data from Mezber and other archaeological sites, we present a new Pre-Aksumite chronology and discuss the material culture, settlement, political organisation, economy, agricultural history and regional interactions of this period. We recommend the use of the term ‘Pre-Aksumite Period’ to encompass this time when the earliest polities developed in the region. Mezber provides us with a glimpse into the lifeways of indigenous peoples inhabiting the northern Horn of Africa who encountered South Arabian visitors to the region during the early first millennium BC. Data from Mezber shift our focus from external influences to considering the culture and development of autochthonous peoples of the Ethiopian/Eritrean highlands who had an active role in negotiating cultural contacts. This perspective constitutes a missing piece of the puzzle needed to better understand the broader socio-economic, political and cultural dynamics of the Pre-Aksumite Period.
AB - The Pre-Aksumite Period (mid-second to late first millennia BC) witnessed the rise of complex societies in the Horn of Africa. Archaeological survey and excavations in the Gulo Makeda region of Eastern Tigrai by the Eastern Tigrai Archaeological Project (ETAP) have produced new data and insights into this critical juncture in the cultural history of the region. Based on data from Mezber and other archaeological sites, we present a new Pre-Aksumite chronology and discuss the material culture, settlement, political organisation, economy, agricultural history and regional interactions of this period. We recommend the use of the term ‘Pre-Aksumite Period’ to encompass this time when the earliest polities developed in the region. Mezber provides us with a glimpse into the lifeways of indigenous peoples inhabiting the northern Horn of Africa who encountered South Arabian visitors to the region during the early first millennium BC. Data from Mezber shift our focus from external influences to considering the culture and development of autochthonous peoples of the Ethiopian/Eritrean highlands who had an active role in negotiating cultural contacts. This perspective constitutes a missing piece of the puzzle needed to better understand the broader socio-economic, political and cultural dynamics of the Pre-Aksumite Period.
KW - Ethiopia
KW - Pre-Aksumite period
KW - Tigrai
KW - archaeology
KW - social complexity
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85168290841
U2 - 10.1080/0067270X.2023.2236484
DO - 10.1080/0067270X.2023.2236484
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85168290841
SN - 0067-270X
VL - 58
SP - 329
EP - 392
JO - Azania
JF - Azania
IS - 3
ER -