ANCIENT TIMELINE OF CONCORDANCES: Proposal for a new chronology of ancient history
4c - Current Turn Away From Galactic Center: Gemini Age
Floods, last 5500. Dispersals continue. 6,000 years of obsidian-trading, use of boats (continues). Neolithic spreads to an empty Europe.
Universal language? And this must be when the rivers etc got their names. ?Civilizations later buried by flooding? Writing (signs). (Proto-IE?)

Back
  /  Forward

    ++++++++++ Converted to BCE ++++++++++    
    LAST TURN AWAY FROM GALACTIC CENTER    





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7434 or 7207 - Gemini became the constellation that rose in the east just before the sun (rose heliacally) on March 21

Graves: "original" zodiac: Fish at winter solstice, ram, bull, twins at spring equinox, crab, lion, virgin at summer solstice, scales, scorpion, bowman at fall equinox, goat, waterman (page 380-381)

7260 - 5620 rice, pottery, adzes Sakai Cave, Malay Peninsula - first large-scale rice-growing? (Oppenheimer)

7200 - Cayonu: 250 miles WNW of Shanidar cave, 37 miles N of Diyarbakir (E central Turkey): copper: two pins, one bent fish-hook and a reamer or awl. Later other copper items, including oval-shaped beads. Trade spread to other sites in Kurdistan.

7250 - 5000 - 'Ain Ghazal, North-Eastern Jordan, on the outskirts of Amman. Neolithic site. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/'Ain_Ghazal
Einkom wheat, emmer wheat and two-row barley were domesticated during the 8th and 7th millennia in settlements
between southeast Europe and Afghanistan. (Gimbutas)


before 7000 - Sheep were domesticated in the hilly flanks of the Zagros Mountains (Iran, Iraq) and in the Taurus Mountains (Turkey) where they had previously been hunted in the wild. (Gimbutas)


7000 - agriculture: Pakistan, first farming villages Asia Minor, first pots in Near East.

Afghanistan: Excavations of prehistoric sites by Louis Dupree, the University of Pennsylvania, the Smithsonian Institution, and others suggest that the region around Kandahar is one of the oldest human settlements known so far. Dupree writes:
...Early peasant farming villages came into existence in Afghanistan ca. 5000 B.C., or 7000 years ago. Deh Morasi Ghundai, the first prehistoric site to be excavated in Afghanistan, lies 27 km (17 mi.) southwest of Kandahar (Dupree, 1951). Another Bronze Age village mound site with multiroomed mud-brick buildings dating from the same period sits nearby at Said Qala (J. Shaffer, 1970). Second millennium B.C. Bronze Age pottery, copper and bronze horse trappings and stone seals were found in the lowermost levels in the nearby cave called Shamshir Ghar (Dupree, 1950). In the Seistan, southwest of these Kandahar sites, two teams of American archaeologists discovered sites relating to the 2nd millennium B.C. (G. Dales, University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 1969, 1971; W, Trousdale, Smithsonian Institution, 1971 – 76). Stylistically the finds from Deh Morasi and Said Qala tie in with those of pre-Indus Valley sites and with those of comparable age on the Iranian Plateau and in Central Asia, indicating cultural contacts during this very early age...[9] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kandahar


By 7000 - root crops such as taro grown in New Guinea Highlands, using ditches to drain swamps for crop-growing. (Op)
7000 - first evidence of agriculture in New Guinea (Met Museum)
7,000 - A mixed fermented wine of rice, honey and fruit was being drunk in Northern China.
http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/chronology.html


By 7000 - crop cultivation started in North, Central and South America. (Oppenheimer: Eden in the East, Intro to Part 1)

By 7000 - Barley cultivation was developed in the Indus Valley. (Oppenheimer: Eden in the East, Intro to Part 1)
Early Neolithic people on the western side of India started agriculture as early as the seventh millennium BC, planting six-row barley, and herding cattle, sheep and goats. This could have been the precursor to the early Indus Valley civilisations. Farming started a little later in the central and eastern areas of India, as a separate development, with rice the staple rather than wheat and barley. The earliest remains of this development come from central India in the Vindhya Hills, possibly as long ago as the fifth to sixth millennia BC. Megalithic remains abound in this particular region, as they do further east in Burma. Pots with cord markings and paddle impressions provide a ceramic link with Southeast Asia. The latter, which date from the early Neolithic periods, suggest a prolonged contact between India and the maritime sand-bar cultures of Southeast Asia. Moreover, the sites of early rice cultivation in India have the same general distribution as the present-day Austro-Asiaric-speaking Mundaic tribes in the north- central and northeastern areas. (Oppenheimer; Eden in the East, page 84)

West India/Pakistan:
7000 - 5500 India Neolithic: The aceramic Neolithic (Mehrgarh I,Baluchistan, Pakistan). One of the earliest Neolithic sites in India is Lahuradewa, at Middle Ganges region, C14 dated around 7th millennium BC.[5]. Recently another site near the confluence of Ganges and Yamuna rivers called Jhusi yielded a C14 dating of 7100 BC for its Neolithic levels.[6]

Mehrgarh, one of the most important Neolithic (7000 to c. 2500 BC) sites, lies on what is now the "Kachi plain" of today's Balochistan, Pakistan. One of the earliest sites with evidence of farming (wheat and barley) and herding (cattle, sheep and goats) in South Asia. Early residents lived in mud brick houses, stored their grain in granaries,
fashioned tools with local copper ore, and lined their large basket containers with bitumen. They cultivated six-row barley, einkorn and emmer wheat, jujubes and dates, and herded sheep, goats and cattle. Located near the Bolan Pass, to the west of the Indus River valley. Was a small farming village dated between 7000–5500 BCE. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehrgarh [THIS IS ON COAST.]

Northeast India, the Ganges River valley: Lahuradewa provides evidence for occupation on a lake edge back to the seventh millennium BC. Already in this period, or certainly by sometime in the end of the fifth millennium, ceramics had begun to be produced, and rice was part of the diet. (eastern part of Uttar Predesh, north of the Ganges valley and in the lower Son river basin (e.g. Lahuradewa, Senuwar) - Agricultural Origins and Frontiers in South Asia: A Working Synthesis - Dorian Q. Fuller (2006)

One of the earliest Neolithic sites in India is Lahuradewa, at Middle Ganges region, C14 dated around 7th millennium BCE. Recently another site near the confluence of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers called Jhusi yielded a C14 dating of 7100 BCE for its Neolithic levels. A new 2009 report by archaeologist Rakesh Tewari on Lahuradewa shows new C14 datings that range between 8000 BCE and 9000 BCE associated with rice, making Lahuradewa the earliest Neolithic site in entire South Asia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neolithic


7000 - 4000 warm and wet "Moist Phase' / much human activity at Nabta Playa, Egypt (Wendorf excavations) [= RETURN]
7,000 - High and wild stage of the Nile peaks through the reduction of rainfall at the two key river sources. http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/chronology.html

7000 - Cayonu, Turkey: Old World's earliest known piece of cloth, wrapped around an antler, linen? woven from local flax? - http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg13918831.300-strands-from-the-dawn-of-time-.html
7000 - first evidence of the Neolithic on the island of Crete (ceramics) - http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/History/Minoans.html
7000 - Abu Hureyra: large cockleshell with traces of powdered malachite (not native), used in predynastic Egypt as eye shadow.
(N Syria)


(7000–5700) Jiahu - Yellow River basin of Henan Province, central China -
            houses, kilns, pottery, turquoise carvings, tools made from stone and bone, bone flutes (Met Museum)


7500-5700 / 7000 - Çatalhöyük / Çatal Höyük: first evidence of activity - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Çatalhöyük
7,000 - Oldest dated remains on the 13-hectacre Catalhoyuk (Catal hoyuk/Çatal Hüyük) site in Southern Turkey, containing hundreds of buildings packed tightly together with common walls, and with entrances through the roofs. British archaeologist James Mellaart, then at the British Institute of Archaeology in Ankara, estimated that it was home for 10,000 people. Christian O'Brien identified fruit fly chromosomes drawn on the walls of one of the key buildings. . . . similar Stone Age towns or cities, such as Mureybet in Syria, started to turn up all over the eastern Mediterranean. . . . http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/chronology.html
Obsidian tools were probably both used and traded for items such as Mediterranean sea shells and flint from Syria.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Çatal_Hüyük
The finest Anatolian obsidian was mined at the base of Hasan Dag. Catal Huyuk, located near rivers in a flat, game-filled plain, was an ideal trading site for the obsidian. http://www.telesterion.com/catal2.htm
Çatalhöyük / Çatal Höyük (~6000 BC) features native copper artifacts and smelted lead beads, but no smelted copper. http://www.copper.co.za/education/history.htm

7000 Metsamor Armenia (Anatolia) - ancient city complex with a large metallurgical and astronomical centre (- 17th c. CE). http://www.ancient-wisdom.co.uk/turkeymetsamor.htm

7040 - Hacilar - southwestern Turkey (25 km southwest of Burdur). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacilar

7000 - 6500 In the Final PPNB period (in which pottery was in use in some areas) the coastal parts of the northern Levant, previously showing no evidence of Neolithic occupation (and probably occupied by forest foragers) now show impressive amounts of Cappadocian obsidian in Neolithic contexts. This probably indicates a new trade route to the Levant via Cilicia and the coast. This supplemented the earlier central-Euphrates route, and reduced the role of the Levantine super-sites such as Ain Ghazal, which had previously enjoyed a near-monopoly. Obsidian now reached a greater diversity of sites by a variety of routes. http://www.archatlas.dept.shef.ac.uk/ObsidianRoutes/ObsidianRoutes.php


Cattle and pigs were domesticated between 7500 and 6500 B.C. in Anatolia. (Gimbutas)

The earliest traces of human activity in the Cyclades date to the 7th millennium BC and come from Melos, which seems to have been visited by people from mainland Greece in search of high-quality obsidian. This hard volcanic rock was extensively used throughout the Aegean in the Neolithic period but also in the Bronze Age for the manufacture of cutting tools and weapons. http://www.cycladic.gr/frontoffice/portal.asp?cpage=NODE&cnode=36

Neolithic Jarmo, settled around 7000 BC. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Ancient_Mesopotamia
6750 - Jarmo village, on a tributary of the Lesser Zab river in foothills of Iraqi Kurdistan: copper items, as well as a single bead made of smelted lead, oldest metallurgy in Old World. (Kurdistan mountains teem with ore deposits.)
6750-5750 Jarmo figures with heads with almond-shaped eyes.

 








Third copper


Other? domestications
of barley in both the Mideasst and India




















Language: Austronesian
(Agglutinative)

??? [no cite]

India: Was earlier 7500 BCE city in Cambay Bay buried by flood water, and this is a RE-start?

Very first megaliths?








Language: related to AustroNesian, Mundaic?


Fourth copper




























Çatal Hüyük
Obsidian trading

Language: ?























Cyclades: obsidian continues




Fifth copper


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MEANWHILE: NEOLITHIC MOVES INTO SOUTHEAST EUROPE:
By 7000-6500 B.C., the Near East and southeast Europe were sharing a full agrarian complex wherein all communities were dependent upon a rich variety of cereals, legumes (peas and lentils), sheep, goats, pigs, and cattle. It was in this period that the production of ceramics was discovered. (Gimbutas)

7000 - oldest neolithic inhabitant of the Balkans, in a position that is typical for the neolithic burials, left side down in a contracted position with the knees reaching up to the head level and with the arms clenched. Grncarica, Macedonia. http://www.makfax.com.mk [ full cite]
Grncarica, the oldest neolithic settlement in Macedonia (discovered 2007?) + skeleton of a human dating from 7,000 B.C., suspected of being the oldest neolithic inhabitant on the Balkans. At the Stip's nearby village of Krupiste. The body was laid with the left side down in a contracted position with the knees reaching up to the head level and with the arms clenched. Typical for the neolithic era burials. http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=18676

7000 - First human presence in the locality of Lepenski Vir - Mesolithic - Serbia, central Balkan peninsula - wikipedia

SEPARATE MOVEMENT ALONG MEDITERRANEAN COAST:
7000 - another type of ceramic flow sailed west along the north coast of the Mediterranean from the Italian and Sicilian coastlines to the Mediterranean coasts of France and Spain. Attractive dotted and dashed lines created by making impressions on the wet clay with the edge of a cockle (Cardium) shell. Cardial Impressed Ware or just Cardial Ware. None of the early Cardial Ware sites show evidence of a full farming lifestyle (e.g. cereals and animal domestication) apart, possibly, from some sheep. (OB, 202)


7000 - Stonehenge car park: A set of post-holes, held three very large pine trunks each nearly a metre in diameter. (OB, 162)

 

Second return to Europe since last cold period, carrying Neolithic
- from the Middle East
(see below)


mtDNA N > U, &/or J, T








First movement
along coast into Spain -
pre-farming
mtDNA N > RO, HV, H, V

Contemporary with
Goddess traditions
& shrines in Anatolia


floods

+

cold
400
years
  6600 - sea levels reach maximum after 300 year increase, floods peak at 12 meters below present; then recede a bit during the next 1600? years (OB, 158) / 6000 - 5500 floods 3 = final dramatic rise - migrations Op
6500 - Land bridge between Europe and Britain disappears (OB 2)
6000 separation of Britain from Europe (Oppenheimer)

6500 - minor freeze-up (OB, 154)
6400 - 6000 shorter cold spell

6200 - abrupt cooling event across the Northern Hemisphere and which is documented by multiple types of paleoclimate records as lasting several decades to a few centuries. http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/briefs/legrande_01/

  Did these floods cover 6000 years of history,
i.e. in Southeast Asia ?


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MEANWHILE: NEOLITHIC MOVES INTO CENTRAL EUROPE:
6,800 -- 4000 BC Agriculture spread rapidly across Europe -
Analysis of ancient Middle Eastern pig remains across Europe reveals that although cultural exchange did happen, Europe was definitely colonised by Middle Eastern farmers.
(But within 500 years after the local domestication of the European wild boar, the new domestics completely replaced the Middle Eastern pigs that had arrived in Europe as part of the 'farming package'.) http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/09/070903204822.htm
6500 to 5500 B.C - Domestication of cattle and pigs was continued locally in Europe. (Gimbutas)
6500 - 3500 Neolithic in east-central and southeast Europe (Gimbutas, 331): E Adriatic & W Yugoslavia; Greece & Thessaly; Central Balkans, E Balkans; S Romania, & Thrace; Transylvania; Moldavia & W Ukraine; Middle Danube; Tisza.
6500 - 3000 Neolithic in western and central Mediterranean (Gimbutas, 331): Iberia; S France & Brittany; Sardinia & Corsica; Malta; Italy.

Apparently related with the Anatolian culture of Hacilar [why?],Thessalia [E central Greece] is the first place in Europe known to have developed agriculture, cattle-herding and pottery. [Many pregnant female figures.] Evolves into Sesklo (c. 6000 B.C.), which is the origin of the main branches of Neolithic expansion in Europe. Practically all the Balkans Peninsula is colonized in the 6th millennium from there. Reaches the easternmost Tardenoisian outposts of the upper Tisza. Gives birth to the proto-Linear Pottery culture, a significant modification of the Balkan Neolithic that will be in the origin of one of the most important branches of European Neolithic: the Danubian group of cultures.
In parallel, the coasts of the Adriatic and southern Italy witness the expansion of another Neolithic current of less clear origins. Settling initially in Dalmatia, the bearers of the Cardium Pottery culture may have come from Thessalia (some of the pre-Sesklo settlements show related traits) or even from Lebanon (Byblos). They are sailors, fishermen and sheep and goat herders, and the archaeological findings show that they mixed with natives in most places.
Other early Neolithic cultures: Ukraine and Southern Russia, where the epi-Gravettian locals assimilated cultural influxes from beyond the Caucasus (culture of Dniepr-Don and related)
and:
Andalusia (Spain), where rare La Almagra Pottery appears without known origins very early (c. 5800 B.C.). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Europe

AND IN ASIA:
6,600 - 6,200 - 11 separate symbols inscribed on the tortoise shells, buried with human remains in 24 Neolithic graves unearthed at Jiahu in Henan province, western China. Aggregations of small pebbles were found close to several of the tortoise shells. The Jiahu researchers propose that the shells once contained the pebbles and were used as musical rattles in shamanistic rituals. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2956925.stm
The archaeologists say they bear similarities to written characters used thousands of years later during the Shang dynasty, which lasted from 1700-1100 BC.


6500-5800 - earliest sign of rice in China is further up the Yangtze at Pengtoushan, but it is not clear if the grains were from wild or domesticated plants. (Oppenheimer)


 
Language: ?














When the Danube got its name?

Non-farmers along coast




First foothold in Spain / Iberia


First writing (signs)
in China
Language: ?



 
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6500-3100 - oldest known place of worship dedicated to the dugong, or sea cow, on an island just north of Dubai, Arabia
http://www.physorg.com/news173036950.html


6400 - 4900 Orion in the position at summer solstice that appears to be reflected in Nabta Playa structures (Origin Map)
and this is the other extreme of the tilt angle of Orion from 16,500 BCE
6000 - 5000 Nabta Playa, Egypt - (The Origin Map: oriented to Pole Star Vega) -
"earliest Neolithic settlement in Egypt". Pottery and grain (barley) (Wendorf/Schild 1980: 277),
but hunting of hares and gazelles was still important - http://www.digitalegypt.ucl.ac.uk/paleo/nabtaplaya.html

6000 - 5000? Egypt: Fayum, Qarunian Mesolithic knives and scrapers - http://www.digitalegypt.ucl.ac.uk/fayum/fayumb.html
6000 - 4000 BC. - Egypt: Faiyum culture had flint arrowheads and stone tools. Crude pottery without decoration. Sickle blades of wood and stone. Mixed hunter/farmer society. - http://www.nemo.nu/ibisportal/0egyptintro/2aegypt/index.htm


Hassuna or Tell Hassuna is an ancient Mesopotamian site situated in Iraq, south of Mosul. By around 6000 BC people had moved into the foothills (piedmont) of northernmost Mesopotamia where there was enough rainfall to allow for "dry" agriculture in some places. These were the first farmers in northernmost Mesopotamia (the region known as Assyria). They made Hassuna style pottery[1] (cream slip with reddish paint in linear designs). Hassuna people lived in small villages or hamlets ranging from 2 to 8 acres (32,000 m2). Even the largest Hassuna sites were smaller than PPNA Jericho had been 1000 years before and much smaller than Çatal Hüyük, which was still occupied in Anatolia. Probably few if any Hassuna villages exceeded 500 people.
At Tell Hassuna, adobe dwellings built around open central courts with fine painted pottery replace earlier levels with crude pottery. Hand axes, sickles, grinding stones, bins, baking ovens and numerous bones of domesticated animals reflect settled agricultural life. Female figurines have been related to worship and jar burials within which food was placed related to belief in afterlife.
The relationship of Hassuna pottery to that of Jericho suggests that village culture was becoming widespread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hassuna
(The most neolithic site in Assyria is at Tell Hassuna, the center of the Hassuna culture.) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assyria


6000 - Strikingly large houses uncovered during excavations at Tell el-Oueili (a few kilometres east of [later] Uruk). Occupation of a well planned 20ha Neolithic village at Sha'ar Hagolan, with paved streets, monumental courtyard size houses, sophisticated social organisation and one of the richest collections of pre-historic art ever found. [near later Sumer] http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/chronology.html

 


Egypt: earliest
 
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6000 - Southeast Asia: obsidian started being moved greater distances + first Austronesian dispersal (Oppenheimer)

Except for Africa, China, and Semitic areas, most of the world spoke agglutinative languages:
Austronesian (Southeast Asia), many Tibeto-Burman languages, the Dravidian languages (India),
Georgian, the Northeast, Northwest and South Caucasian languages,
the Altaic languages (Turkish,Tatar, Turkic, Mongolian & Manchu/Tungus), Ainu,
many Uralic languages (the largest are Hungarian, Finnish and Estonian),
Korean (sometimes grouped with Altaic), Japanese (sometimes grouped with Altaic), Inuktitut,
North America: Salish, Blackfoot / Mesoamerica: Nahuatl, Huastec / South America: Quechua, Aymara,
Much of the Near East: Sumerian, Elamite, Hurrian, Urartian, Hattic, Gutian, Lullubi, Kassite,
Indo-European: Persian.

In central Africa, the only agglutinative language is Bantu (Luganda).
But in North Africa, theoretically an agglutinative mother-language called Saharan eventually gave birth to:
Vasconic, the name being given to the ancestor of Basque.

Vennemann argues for an ancient post-glacial European language sub-stratum on the basis of river-names.
He calls this language family Vasconic (i.e. linguistically like the Basque and as with their re-expansion,
originating in the Basque refuge and spreading north, west and east). (OB, 248)

POSSIBLE RESULT OF DISPERSION FROM SOUTHEAST ASIA:
6000s - Early Neolithic people on the western side of India started agriculture, planting six-row barley, and herding cattle, sheep and goats. (Oppenheimer)
6000 - Indus Valley civilization (Harrappan culture) has its earliest roots in Mehrgarh. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harapa
One of the earliest sites with evidence of farming (wheat and barley) and herding (cattle, sheep and goats) in South Asia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehrgarh


  Southeast Asia: obsidian & dispersal due to flooding
(Austronesian) (Agglutinative)

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The Vinča culture was an early culture of neolithic Europe between the 6th and the 3rd millennium BC, stretching around the course of Danube [River] in what today is Serbia, Hungary, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Romania, Bulgaria and Macedonia, although traces of it can be found all around the Balkans, parts of Central Europe and Asia Minor.

Beside agriculture and the breeding of domestic animals, the Neolithic settlers of Vinča also went hunting and fishing. The most frequent domestic animals were cattle, although smaller goats, sheep and pigs were also bred. The settlers of Vinča cultivated grain (einkorn and emmer, some barley). A surplus of products led to the development of trade with neighboring regions which supplied salt, obsidian, or ornamental shells (spondylus). The local production of ceramics reached a high artistic and technological level. Objects fashioned out of bones, horns and stone indicate great skill and dexterity of the craftsmen who produced tools for all branches of Vinča economy. At Bele Vode and Rudna Glava in Eastern Serbia copper ore was mined which they began fashioning with fire, initially only for ornamental objects (beads and bracelets).
Anthropomorphic figurines (over 1000 examples at Vinča alone) exceeds the total number of figurines discovered in the Greek Aegean. Shrines were discovered in Parṭa Transylvania with complex architectural designs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinča_culture


Evidence of the early introduction of copper metallurgy - high quantity of malachite, mostly as amorphous lumps and rather less as beads and pendants, recorded at some Vinča culture sites. [MALACHITE FINDS IN VINČA CULTURE: EVIDENCE
OF EARLY COPPER METALLURGY IN SERBIA - DRAGANA ANTONOVIĆ]


The Vinča signs, also known as the Vinča alphabet, Vinča-Turdaş script, or Old European script, are a set of symbols found on prehistoric artifacts from southeastern Europe. Some believe they constitute a writing system of the Vinča culture, which inhabited the region around 6000-4000 BC. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinča_signs [similarities to later Sumeria]

The Samara culture - early 5th millennium BC at the Samara bend region of the middle Volga [River] (Syezzheye, Russia).
Marija Gimbutas was the first to regard it as the Urheimat (homeland) of the Proto-Indo-European language.
[and included in her list of "Kurgan" cultures]

6000 - 4000 - proposed: that a Proto-Indo-European existed as a living language, in the plains to the north of the Black Sea.

5750-ish - Canaries found (SunGod) [just off the northwest coast of mainland Africa] (28 degrees N latitude)
[Later found to be occupied by the Guanches, related to the Berbers.]

5750 - 4500 Halaf culture, originally noted above Khabur river near Ras al'Ain on Syrian-Turkish border
(glazed pottery). Spread all over Kurdistan - thought of have been the prime movers of obsidian trade.
Obsidian was obtained from extinct volcano Nemrut Dag on SW shores of Lake Van. (Gods of Eden)
Halaf period: Tell Arpachiyah near Mosul in foothills of Iraqi Kurdistan: painted polychrome pottery of exceptional quality.
Had cobbled streets, rectangular buildings, and round buildings with domed vaults (cf Mycenaea tholoi burial houses).
Steatite pendants and small discs marked with incised designs (> stamp seals of Akkad, Sumer, Assyria, Babylonia.)
Halaf:
Copper was also known, but was not used for tools. Glazed pottery painted with geometric and animal designs. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halaf
- 5,000 - Sabi-Abyad (30 acres) polished obsidian, copper smelting, metal working, electro plating and the superb quality Halaf ceramics. http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/chronology.html

  Basically in the heartland of previous Neolithic Eastern Europe settlements.





Sixth copper





Seventh copper



6000 - Romania Tartaria Vinca writing (signs)


Movement north along the rivers.









Halaf, Syria:
obsidian trading



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mid 6th millennium - inundation of the Black Sea > start of Proto-Indo-European dispersion (Fredrik T. Hiebert hypothesis)
5500 - final over-topping 'flood' of the Black Sea (OB, 155) (floods)
Signs of human habitation hundreds of feet below the Black Sea where a catastrophic flood occurred 5500 BC,''rectangular structure,'' possibly that of a building, about 310 feet below the sea's surface. The rectangular structure measures about 12-feet in width and is 45-feet long, with carved wooden beams, wooden branches and stone tools collapsed among the mud matrix. "It's architecture and artifacts were of the Neolithic bronze age, which is from about 5000 BC,'' said Ballard. The team's chief archeologist, Fredrik Hiebert, said it was typical of the wattle and daub homes seen on land. "This looks to me, as an archeologist familiar with this region, like the typical architecture of the people who lived around the Black Sea,'' he said.
Explorer Finds Evidence of Life Before Great Flood - September 13, 2000 http://www.sullivan-county.com/z/black_sea.htm - Robert Ballard


5600 - Neolithic beginnings in Central Europe (Upper Danube): LBK pottery
Danubian culture - the first agrarian society in central and eastern Europe. Covers the Linear Pottery culture (Linearbandkeramik, LBK), stroked pottery and Rössen cultures. The beginning of the Linear Pottery culture dates to around 5500 BC. It appears to have spread westwards along the valley of the river Danube and interacted with the cultures of Atlantic Europe when they reached the Paris Basin. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danubian_culture

5500 - DNA from the mitochondria of 24 skeletons of early farmers from 16 locations in Germany, Austria and Hungary, belonging to well known cultures that can be identified by the decorations on their pottery -- the Linearbandkeramik (LBK) and the Alföldi Vonaldiszes Kerámia (AVK). Six of these 24 skeletons contain genetic signatures that are extremely rare in modern European populations. Based on this discovery, the researchers conclude that early farmers did not leave much of a genetic mark on modern European populations. (2005) http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/11/051112125213.htm


5500 - Europe began milk drinking - region between the central Balkans and central Europe. [cite]

5500 – 4800 Chalcolithic Samarran Culture identified at Tell Sawwan, where evidence of irrigation—including flax—
establishes the presence of a prosperous settled culture with a highly organized social structure.
Fine pottery: dark-fired backgrounds with stylized figures of animals, birds, geometric designs.
Widely-exported, one of the first widespread, relatively uniform pottery styles in the Ancient Near East.
The Samarran Culture was the precursor to the Mesopotamian culture of the Ubaid period.
Iraq, on the east bank of the Tigris [River] - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samarra


The Ubaid pottery of southern Mesopotamia has been connected via Choga Mami Transitional ware to the pottery of the Samarra period culture (c. 5700-4900 BC C-14) in the north, who were the first to practice a primitive form of irrigation agriculture along the middle Tigris River and its tributaries. The connection is most clearly seen at Tell Awayli (Oueilli, Oueili) near Larsa, excavated by the French in the 1980s, where 8 levels yielded pre-Ubaid pottery resembling Samarran ware. Farming peoples spread down into southern Mesopotamia because they had developed a temple-centered social organization for mobilizing labor and technology for water control, enabling them to survive and prosper in a difficult environment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumer


India: Mehrgarh residents of 5500 - 2600 put much effort into crafts, including flint knapping, tanning, bead production, and metal working. The site was occupied continuously until about 2600. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehrgarh

5500 - Copper mining/trade at Gaza - Later early Egyptian Dynasty's require payment for Sinai copper in gold.
http://www.goldenageproject.org.uk/chronology.html


5500 - Pre-Sumerian temple of Eridu, by mouth of Euphrates, established. Lots of fish bones.
5500 - 4750 - Jarmo in Iraqi Kurdistan: able to perforate hard stones: harder tip drills?? [techniques reappear]
5400 - Eridu, earliest city in southern Mesopotamia, founded. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eridu ? = ? Samarra?
5400 - 5000 - Hajji Firuz Tepe in Zagros mountains of Iranian Kurdistan: first alcoholic beverage - wine similar to the retsina.


  And suddenly, a lot of change.






Movement continues north up the Danube River









Cow herding
    Lepenski Vir - Mesolithic - Serbia, central Balkan peninsula. It consists of one large settlement with around ten satellite villages 5300 - 4800 BC- culture reaching its peak - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lepenski_Vir
"A rocky terrace . . . on the banks of the Danube in Yugoslavia is the site of Europe's oldest known settlement. The meticulously proportioned houses, spaced evenly with paved alleyways running behind them, were laid out in an odd trapezoidal shape. Each had a floor made of a sophisticated concretelike substance - baked limestone mixed with water, sand, and gravel. Embedded in it were post-hole support, threshold stones, a hearth, and a spherical boulder working the center of the house. Curious stone triangles were set around the hearth - possibly as some form of ancestor worship - and also occasional sandstone figures . . . The roof structures, angled upward at the entrance to allow smoke to escape, was probably covered with skins.

"Some experts believe that the people who lived at Lepenski Vir were speakers of the original Indo-European tongue.
Nourished by a plentiful supply of fish, game, and wild fruits, many of them lived well into their seventies and eighties, free from hunger and disease." [Mysteries of the Past, 1977, 277]

275, 278 "evidence in favor of a Danubian origin for the Indo-Europeans, rather than one farther south. The Danube basin, for climatic reasons, would have been only moderately attractive to immigrant Mediterranean farmers, as compared with regions to the west, such as the Adriatic coast and southern Italy. Near the Mediterranean (including most of the Vardar Valley), winters are mild and moist, with summers hot and dry, so that crops are typically sown in winter or early spring in order to be harvested before the dry heat of summer sets in. North of the Balkans and adjacent mountain ranges, however, the climate changes rather abruptly from one like that of central California to one more like that of Iowa - rainfall throughout the year, and much colder winters. Crops must therefore be sown either in the fall, and allowed to winter over (thus, "winter wheat"), or in late spring, when the danger of frost is past. This amounts to saying that farmers from Greece could not simply have moved into the Danube basin; they would have needed to develop new agricultural techniques and probably also new strains of crop plants. It may well be for this reason that it took nearly a thousand years for agriculture to spread from Greece to the Danube." [Mysteries of the Past]
[BUT NOTE:] "British paleoclimatologist H. H. Lamb: no dry season in the Mediterranean even as late as A.D. 200. "
[Mysteries of the Past, 251]

 



[Not Neolithic. They resemble Anatolian
hunter-gatherers.]
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  ------------ Later settlements (after Samarran) in southern Mesopotamia required complicated irrigation methods. ------------
The first of these was Eridu, settled during the Ubaid period culture by farmers who bought with them the Samarran culture from the north. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Ancient_Mesopotamia
5300 - Cities of Sumer were the first to practice intensive, year-round agriculture. (Wikipedia)
5900 - 4000 / 5300 - 4100 Ubaid period of Sumer.

began before 5300 BC - c. 4100 BC. The Ubaid culture. Earliest settlement on the alluvial plain of southern Mesopotamia: the tell (mound) of Ubaid near Ur in southern Iraq has given its name to the prehistoric Pottery Neolithic to Chalcolithic culture.The invention of the wheel and the beginning of the Chalcolithic period. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubaid_period

During the 6th and 5th millennium BC the peoples of Ubaid Mesopotamia and the Arabian Neolithic interacted. Numerous sites identified in the Central Gulf region which contained pottery in the Ubaid style. Mostly coastal, and mainly found in NE Saudi Arabia, though also in Bahrain and Qatar. The majority were small and ephemeral, but a handful were large, with deep deposits and abundant pottery. (Abu Khamis, Dosariyah and Ain Qannas). Also smaller Ubaid sites in Bahrain and Qatar. Masry concluded that this part of Arabia had enjoyed a close and integral relationship with Southern Mesopotamia. More controversially, he suggested that the Mesopotamian and Ubaid-related Arabian sites should be regarded as part of the same social and economic system, and that the origins of Mesopotamian civilization lie as much in the Arabian Peninsula as in Mesopotamia. Meanwhile, Joan Oates and her collaborators proved through petrographic and compositional analysis that the Ubaid-style painted pottery from the Gulf states originated in Southern Mesopotamia (Oates et al. 1977). She had a simpler explanation than Masry, suggesting that Ubaid visitors travelled down the Gulf in search of fish and perhaps pearls, trading their pottery with local communities along the way. Since the 1970's, sites with small amounts of Ubaid pottery have been found further and further east, along the coast of the United Arab Emirates as far as Ra's al-Khaimah, and on certain islands in the Gulf. Recent excavations at Dalma have revealed postholes showing circular house structures, Ubaid pottery, plentiful fish remains and ancient date stones (Beech et al. 2000). There is evidence that the inhabitants of Dalma attempted to imitate Ubaid pottery using local materials, in this case, painted plaster. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/kuwait/backgrnd.htm

   
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NEOLITHIC MOVES NORTH AND WEST INTO CENTRAL EUROPE:
5500 - rapid spread of the Lincarbandkeramik (LBK) 'ceramics (pots) with linear bands' style, apparently up the Danube from its homeland in Hungary. Reached Austria, and then Frankfurt in Germany, almost before it left Hungary, covering 800 km within 100 years. After reaching the Central and North European plains up the Dnestr and Danube Rivers, LBK then spread rapidly north down the Vistula, Oder and Elbe. It did not, however, move right up to the Baltic or Atlantic coasts (so avoiding the settled coastal Mesolithic communities), but instead swung west and southwest through the Netherlands and Belgium, arriving in northern France by 5000 BC and finally reaching Normandy and its coast by 4500 BC. An eastward movement of LBK went round the Carpathians to Poland and on to the Ukraine at the same time, but pots had already appeared among Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in Poland and western Russia and the lower Volga long before, around 7000 BC. (OB, 201)

5500 - La Hoguette pottery, found mainly in France, also seems to bridge the transition from the Late Mesolithic to the full Neolithic with ceramics, small-scale pastoralism and horticulture with cereal agriculture. The La Hoguette also fills in the geographical gap between the growing pincer movements of Cardial Ware in the south of France and LBK in the north. La Hoguette style was first found in Limburg, in the Netherlands, but is defined by bone-tempered pottery found at a site near La Hoguette in central Normandy. Although mainly found in the upper Rhone Valley, northern France, Switzerland and south-west Germany, in style La Hoguette resembles Cardial Ware farther south. Consistent with this south—north direction, a species of poppy, Papaver segiterum, originally from the south of France, was carried north as well. La Hoguette probably antedates LBK around the middle Rhine region where the styles overlap and even hybridize. (OB, 202-203)

5500 - Neolithic communities were well established in the middle Danube Valley and the Hungarian Plain . . .The forests of the loess were dense, and over very large areas supported insufficient biodiversity to attract hunter-gatherers. For horticulturists ready to ring-bark ancient trees and to bum undergrowth, allowing the ash to fertilize the soil, the old forest was a congenial zone to colonize. By 5000 BC huge tracts of Europe from the Vistula to the Seine had been settled. (OB, 210-211 - Cunliffe)


5500 - 4500 - Cereals make their appearance at Cardial Ware sites.

5500 - 4500 - Settlements on the Atlantic coasts of France and the Iberian Peninsula. Their distribution indicates that they probably took both of the same two routes that would be used by Phoenician and Greek tin traders much later on, through the Straits of Gibraltar and inland via Carcassonne across the Aude—Garonne corridor. (OB, 202)

By 5300 - Separate spread into NW mainland Europe up the Danube from the Black Sea, arriving in the Netherlands. . . .
hallmarked by the spread of . . . pottery, known as Linearbandkeramik. (OB, page 16)


Scandinavia: The Ertebølle culture (ca 5300 BC-3950 BC) is the name of a hunter-gatherer and fisher culture dating to the end of the Mesolithic period. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandinavian_prehistory

5900 Neolithic beginnings in Northern Europe, Scandinavia, E Baltic: Maglemose & Kunda [this was way earlier / and not Neolithic] (Gimbutas: Language of the Goddess, 335)

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Peiligang Site (5500 BC-4900 BC) Earliest China Neolithic. Xinzheng, Henan Province. Central plains, relationships with the Yangshao Culture of the central plains. Stone saddle-quern and stone roller for grinding grains. Red pottery pot.
- http://www.chinaculture.org/cnstatic/doc/exhibition/20e.doc

5500 - 3800 - rice first grown as a domestic crop Asia - Pengtoushan

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SUMMARY: Resettlement of Europe, possibly up the Danube river, to to northern Europe.
Neolithic from the Mideast spread to SE Europe, then spread to central Europe.
Along the Mediterranean coast, a separate movement spread to western coastal Europe.
But not Britain, which was now separated from mainland by water. However, there were people in Britain.
Meanwhile, at Sumer, agriculture intensified to year-round, irrigated.
Black Sea floods > further neolithic expansion.

 

























Movement continues along Mediterranean coast.
   

ON TO TAURUS AGE