National Geographic (CRE 7614-04)
Azoria Project 2004
The Azoria Project is a case study of urbanization in the Mediterranean
in the first millennium B.C. The method is the excavation of the Early
Iron Age and Archaic town of Azoria (ca. 1200-500 B.C.) on the island of
Crete in the Greek Aegean. The goal is to examine the changing dynamics
of regional exchange, crop and livestock processing, and food storage and
consumption practices on this site, and to relate these changes to social
processes involved in the formation of small-scale polities in the eastern
Mediterranean during the first millennium B.C. In 2003, the project
completed the second of five seasons of work. The present proposal
seeks support for the third season in 2004. The broad aims of the excavation
are to recover evidence for the structure and organization of the Archaic
city (700-600 B.C.), studying stratigraphic changes in the formal development
of the urban center throughout the Early Iron Age (1200-700 B.C.); to assess
changes in the ways in which the landscape was exploited for agricultural
and pastoral production; and then finally to use this evidence as a framework
for analyzing the changing sociopolitical structure of the urban center.
Problem Orientation and Significance of Proposed
Work. Excavation at Azoria addresses two primary problems. One
is to explore the nature of Archaic settlement on Crete, by focusing on a
significant period of culture change, ca. 600 B.C., for which few sites are
known and none extensively explored. While the Early Iron Age (ca. 1200-700)
and Orientalizing (ca. 700-600) periods on the island exhibit an unusual
density of habitation sites and a dynamic reception and mixing of indigenous,
mainland Greek and Near Eastern influences (Sjögren 2001; Nowicki 2000;
Hoffman 1997: 255-260; Prent 1996-1997; S. Morris 1992: 151-194; Whitley
1991: 181-198), a puzzling discontinuity is apparent in the sixth century
B.C., a period considered by historians to be a critical chronological gap,
a veritable "period of silence" or even second "dark age" during which Crete
was isolated from the wider Mediterranean world (Coldstream and Huxley 1999;
Morris 1998: 65-66; Perlman 1993: 202-203; S. Morris 1992: 169; Coldstream
1991: 298; Stambolides 1990). Even though recent scholarship has postulated
historical models for political and demographic changes in Crete ca. 600
B.C., archaeological investigation and a theoretical framework are required
to approach the problem of this hiatus in the archaeological record (Erickson
2002: 86; Coldstream and Huxley 1999; Prent 1996-1997; Huxley 1994:128-129;
S. Morris 1992: 169-172; I. Morris 1998: 65-66). The Azoria project
seeks to reassess this mysterious sixth century B.C. discontinuity by excavating
a site that demonstrates urban characteristics, a nucleated structure, continuous
occupation from the Early Iron Age into the fifth century B.C., and imports
from Attica, the east Aegean. The purpose is to reevaluate the validity
of a Cretan economic recession or “dark age” in the sixth and early fifth
centuries B.C., considering the seventh century as a formative period leading
to a threshold of reorganization, and rebuilding of power relationships on
the island around 600 B.C.
The other goal of excavation is to study urbanization
by examining changes in the economy and formal structure of the settlement
through time, from the twelfth through the sixth centuries B.C., by collecting
data that might help to shape conceptual links between subsistence and production
behavior, on the one hand, and changing social structure and economic organization,
on the other, as the settlement of Azoria becomes the center of an integrated
territory, and part of complex exchange systems in the wider Aegean and Mediterranean.
Previous Work and Relevance to Present Plan.
The first two seasons of excavation in 2002 and 2003 demonstrated that by
600 B.C., the site of Azoria had become a city. The settlement was
substantially rebuilt, the inhabitants apparently disregarding and even destroying
earlier Early Iron Age (1200-700 B.C.) buildings in order to establish new
foundations. This radical renovation at the end of the seventh century
significantly transformed the plan of the site, its architectural form and
spatial organization. New buildings suggest an increase in site size
and population, and an equally new conceptualization of urban and domestic
space. The elements of urban planning are (1) formal repetition of
house types; (2) the construction of concentric circuit walls, organizing
and restructuring space; (3) foundation deposits indicating systematic rebuilding
at the beginning of the sixth century; and (4) a civic complex, consisting
of a communal dining hall (andreion)—for the common mess for kinship-based
corporate groups—with multiple storerooms and kitchens, suggesting the centralization
and control of resources. A burnt destruction level at the end of the
sixth century B.C. at Azoria has preserved carbonized plant remains (such
as weeds, wheat and barley seeds, olive pits, and grape pips), as well as
a variety of animal bones, providing much-needed data for assessing land
use and food processing. These data are at the core of our problem
orientation, which is to assess the establishment of cities as cultural or
economic responses to the opposing tendencies of local agrarian and kinship
structures and extra-regional and extra-insular exchange systems.
Plan of Work for 2004. Excavation in 2002-2003
concentrated on the hilltop of the South Acropolis, where we recovered evidence
of centralized storage and food processing associated with a cluster of large
houses and a large public dining building, linked by a megalithic circuit
wall. In 2004, the excavation sample will include the lower slopes
of the South Acropolis, outside of the uppermost circuit wall, where trial
trenches in 2003 indicated substantial deposition, and in one trench, an
Archaic building utilizing Early Iron Age levels for its foundations.
Excavation on this lower western terrace of the South Acropolis affords us
the opportunity to compare center and periphery within the settlement, examining
differences in domestic architecture, the type and volume of food storage,
the character and volume of exogenous artifacts (such as fine pottery, metals,
and transport amphora), and methods of food production and consumption.
The main objective of the 2004 season is to explore differentiation in domestic
and civic contexts, comparing the center and outlying slopes, and examining
the notion that a spatial hierarchy was established at the end of the seventh
century, with the center of the site containing centralized storage of olives,
grapes, and wheat, and processing areas (kitchens) for meat (marine animals
and mammals) consumed in the syssitia—the common meal of the urban elite
within the andreion complex (Aristotle, Pol. 1272a; Athenaeus 4.143; Strabo
10.480). The hypothesis is that the surrounding slopes were used as
habitation space, perhaps with houses for the elite located closest to the
andreion complex itself. In 2004 we will continue to explore the differentiation
of houses around the periphery of the South Acropolis and their relationship
to the civic buildings on the hilltop.
Another objective in 2004 is to evaluate varying
patterns of diachronic change in the architectural renovation of the hilltop
at the end of the seventh century B.C.—differential responses of the habitants
to their Early Iron Age past. Are the Early Iron Age buildings on the
lower slopes obliterated at the expense of new Archaic structures (as is
clearly the case with the large buildings on the hilltop), or is there continuity
in the use of earlier buildings and foundations—demonstrating a recognition
of links to an earlier community of place, or continuity of occupation through
the first half of the first millennium B.C.?
Methods and Methodology. Recent studies of
early state-level polities in various contexts, including the Aegean, tend
to examine the function of political economies as opposed to the implications
of developmental models. Nevertheless, the emphasis of work on urbanization,
urban-rural interaction, and agropastoral systems presents useful diachronic
contexts and models for studying changes in social organization and power
relations in emergent state societies. A focus on agricultural specialization
and exchange systems as operable mechanisms of elite appropriation, control,
and consumption of agricultural surplus underscores the changing nature of
urban-rural relationships and provides a broad methodological framework for
Azoria as a case study of urbanization in the Early Iron Age and Archaic
Aegean.
The area of exposed and visible contiguous architecture
exceeds 8.0 ha. We estimate conservatively a total area of about 15.0
ha. for the site. The target area is the top of the hill, about 6.0
ha., covering both north and south hills (or acropoleis). We have acquired
for excavation the hilltop and immediate slopes, and will concentrate samples
within areas comprising 2.0-3.0 ha. total. Five excavation seasons
are planned—each one consisting of seven weeks of fieldwork and three weeks
of study. The primary goal of sampling is to recover contexts that
permit the examination of functional differentiation of architectural and
habitation space across the site, considering the relationship between public
and private space, and habitation, civic, and cultic spheres of activity.
Within these units the excavation and sampling method is consistent.
100 percent of all stratified matrices are dry screened using quarter-inch
sieves, collecting all artifacts, stone tools, bones, and occasional botanicals.
"Intensive sampling loci" are defined as deposits requiring more intensive
sampling for flotation. A total of 40 trenches (sampling units) were
opened in 2002, exposing a total area of 0.24 ha. We estimate an average
annual horizontal exposure of about 0.10-0.20 hectares. The recovery
of carbonized plant remains requires the use of both dry sieving and flotation.
Standard five-liter samples are taken from each excavation unit (locus) for
flotation, while "intensive-sampling loci" are designated areas of primary
or secondary deposition, features, and objects—such as floors, habitation
deposits on or above floors, hearths, storage and waste pits, fill, and vessels--requiring
larger and variable volumes of matrix. The aim of sampling is to document
the total volume of the matrix of these loci, controlling the specific areas
and amounts sampled, thereby allowing for quantitative comparison of the
density, preservation, and species of plants and animals identified across
the site. With each season we diversify the sampling universe by integrating
various functional and chronological contexts, while attempting to reduplicate
types of context to test results of earlier seasons. The identification of
architectural units—houses, civic complexes, and exterior spaces (courtyards,
streets, alleys)—determines the sampling universe, although a multi-scalar
perspective requires the assessment of functional differences across the
site.
The analysis of floral and faunal material under
the direction of Snyder and Scarry, will take place in the field laboratory
at the Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Center for East Crete, and in
the Research Laboratories of Archaeology at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. Comparative study and the analysis of wood carbon
for species identification, will also take place in the Wiener Laboratory
of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, which houses a comparative
collection of Aegean flora and fauna and an extensive specialized library.