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Featured researches published by Glenn M. Schwartz.


Current Anthropology | 1994

The Structure and Dynamics of Dry-Farming States in Upper Mesopotamia [and Comments and Reply]

T. J. Wilkinson; John Bintliff; Hans H. Curvers; Paul Halstead; Phillip L. Kohl; Mario Liverani; Joy McCorriston; Joan Oates; Glenn M. Schwartz; Ingolf Thuesen; Harvey Weiss; Marie-Agnès Courty

A model describing the layout of Early Bronze Age Mesopotamian states is synthesized using a range of off-site and on-site data from Syria, Iraq, and Turkey. These allow the description of the basic settlement patterns, land use, and exchange systems of an early state system. The hypothesis is tested that Bronze Age settlements in this zone of rain-fed farming tended not to exceed IOO hectares, an area which was capable of accommodating between io,ooo and 2o,ooo people. Detailed off-site surveys and landscape archaeology suggest that these settlements were provisioned by intensively farmed zones of cultivation that surrounded the central settlement and by tributary secondary or satellite communities. This main production zone was just capable of supporting the population of the prime site, but the constraint of labour and the frictional effect of distance meant that food produced farther away than some io-is km made only a minor contribution to the main settlement. As a result, settlements tended not to expand beyond a certain size. Even then, the maximizing effect of intensive crop production in such areas of highly variable rainfall and episodic major droughts made these communities very vulnerable to collapse.


American Journal of Archaeology | 2000

A survey in the Jabbul Plain

Glenn M. Schwartz; Hans H. Curvers; F.A. Gerritsen; Jennifer A Maccormack; Naomi F Miller; Jill A. Weber

The 1996 and 1997 seasons of the Hopkins-Amsterdam project in the Jabbul plain, western Syria, have generated new results on Bronze Age urbanism at Tell Umm el Marra and elucidated longer-term settlement patterns in the Jabbul region. Excavation results have documented the foundation of Umm el-Marra as a regional center in the Early Bronze Age, provided new data on a period of decentralization in Middle Bronze I, and supplied evidence of the regeneration of urbanism in MB II. Faunal and archaeobotanical analysis broaden our understanding of these developments, attesting to an economy overwhelmingly dependent on the steppe environment, with an emphasis on large-scale onager hunting in MB II, Finally, a regional survey provides data on long-term demographic and socioeconomic trends, furnishing an expansive time range and spatial context for our understanding of developmental patterns in the region. The survey results supply new information on the limits of the Uruk expansion, cycles of Bronze Age urbanization, changing patterns of steppe exploitation, and demographic and agricultural extensification in the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods.The 1996 and 1997 seasons of the Hopkins-Amsterdam project in the Jabbul plain, western Syria, have generated new results on Bronze Age urbanism at Tell Umm elMarra and elucidated longer-term settlement patterns in theJabbul region. Excavation results have documented the foundation of Umm el-Marra as a regional center in the Early Bronze Age, provided new data on a period of decentralization in Middle Bronze I, and supplied evidence of the regeneration of urbanism in MB II. Faunal and archaeobotanical analysis broaden our understanding of these developments, attesting to an economy overwhelmingly dependent on the steppe environment, with an emphasis on large-scale onager hunting in MB II. Finally, a regional survey provides data on long-term demographic and socioeconomic trends, furnishing an expansive time range and spatial context for our understanding of developmental patterns in the region. The survey results supply new information on the limits of the Uruk expansion, cycles of Bronze Age urbanization, changing patterns of steppe exploitation, and demographic and agricultural extensification in the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods.*


American Journal of Archaeology | 1997

Umm el-Marra, a Bronze Age Urban Center in the Jabbul Plain, Western Syria

Hans H. Curvers; Glenn M. Schwartz; Sally Dunham

A team from the Johns Hopkins University and the University of Amsterdam has initiated a multistage program of excavation and regional analysis based at Tell Umm el-Marra in the Jabbul plain east of Aleppo. Archaeological and textual evidence from Ebla and elsewhere has demonstrated that the Aleppo region was an important center of early complex society in western Syria, and the joint project will focus on tracing its developmental trajectory. As the first stage of this project, excavations at Umm el-Marra, a major Bronze Age center of the Jabbul, were conducted in 1994 and 1995. Deposits from Roman and Hellenistic occupations were identified above an extensive Late Bronze Age settlement with evidence of a site-wide destruction in the early Late Bronze Age, while Middle Bronze Age remains indicated the apparent importance of the town in the period of the Yamhad state.


Antiquity | 2017

Haagen D. Klaus & J. Marla Toyne (ed.). Ritual violence in the ancient Andes: reconstructing sacrifice on the north coast of Peru. 2016. xvi+468 pages, 130 bw 978-1-4773-0963-6 paperback

Glenn M. Schwartz

The coverage of the monastic phase itself in Chapter 5 is a masterclass in archaeological reconstruction that succeeds in maximising the interpretive potential of a rich array of evidence derived from the inner liturgical core of the settlement as well as outer zones associated with highly specialised craftworking. In some cases (e.g. the detailed appraisal of archaeological evidence pertaining to vellum production), the conclusions have implications that extend well beyond the confines of Portmahomack itself and indeed of Pictish archaeology. The results of scientific analysis of the human and other remains help to enrich the reconstruction while at the same time offering a critical perspective on the identification of ‘monastic signatures’. For example, isotope analysis of contemporaneous human burials reveals that the religious community practised a typical terrestrialbased diet with no evidence for the consumption of marine fish at a significant level, underlining the impression that the dietary regimes of some pre-Viking monastic institutions could deviate significantly from medieval norms and expectations.


Archive | 2006

34.95.

Glenn M. Schwartz; John J. Nichols


American Journal of Archaeology | 1995

After Collapse: The Regeneration of Complex Societies

E. B. Banning; Glenn M. Schwartz; Steven E. Falconer


American Journal of Archaeology | 2006

Archaeological Views from the Countryside. Village Communities in Early Complex Societies

Glenn M. Schwartz; Hans H. Curvers; Sally Dunham; Barbara Stuart; Jill A. Weber


American Journal of Archaeology | 1999

A Third-Millennium B.C. Elite Mortuary Complex at Umm el-Marra, Syria: 2002 and 2004 Excavations

J. N. Postgate; Jerrold S. Cooper; Glenn M. Schwartz


American Journal of Archaeology | 1992

The Study of the Ancient Near East in the Twenty-First Century. The William Foxwell Albright Centennial Conference

Glenn M. Schwartz; Hans H. Curvers


American Journal of Archaeology | 1990

Tell al-Raqā'i 1989 and 1990: Further Investigations at a Small Rural Site of Early Urban Northern Mesopotamia@@@Tell al-Raqa'i 1989 and 1990: Further Investigations at a Small Rural Site of Early Urban Northern Mesopotamia

Hans H. Curvers; Glenn M. Schwartz

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Naomi F Miller

University of Pennsylvania

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Steven E. Falconer

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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