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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 863

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Some of the earliest evidence for nomadic pastoralism in the region comes from the central Zagros Mountains in modern-day Iran.. Moreover, historical texts from early urban centers in th

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Some of the earliest evidence for nomadic pastoralism

in the region comes from the central Zagros Mountains (in

modern-day Iran) Archaeological fi nds of temporary

camp-sites in marginal ecological zones unsuitable for agriculture

and of isolated cemeteries along seasonal migratory routes far

from permanent settlements are examples of such evidence

Moreover, historical texts from early urban centers in the

general vicinity attest to social, economic, and political

re-lations—and sometimes battle—with nomadic groups in the

Zagros by the mid-fourth millennium b.c.e

Much research has focused on explaining how nomadic

pastoralism emerged as a new way of living out of

village-based herding in the Zagros region Traditional views on this

subject theorized a direct transition from agropastoralism to

highly mobile nomadic pastoralism However, recent

investi-gations have demonstrated that the shift occurred in several

intermediate stages before arriving at an economy

emphasiz-ing nomadic pastoralism by the fourth millennium b.c.e

Be-sides the spread of seasonal camps and isolated cemeteries like

those already mentioned, the archaeological evidence includes

a reduction in the number of permanent settlements and the

broad distribution of small quantities of distinctive pottery at

sites throughout the west-central Zagros, perhaps refl ecting

far-fl ung trade associated with increasing mobility

Th e archaeological evidence also indicates growing

inter-action between the west-central Zagros and the lowlands to

the west and southwest in the late fi ft h and fourth millennia

b.c.e As pastoral groups moved down to the lowlands in the

winter months, they would have come into contact with

set-tled farming communities and formed trading relationships

Archaeologists believe that economic exchange was a signifi

-cant and mutually benefi cial aspect of nomad-villager

rela-tions Villagers received animal products and raw materials

from the mountains in exchange for agricultural goods that

the nomads lacked owing to their highly specialized economy

Manufactured items, especially pottery, also would have been

exchanged—as would ideas, styles, and other cultural

infor-mation Nomadic pastoralists may have served as

intermedi-aries in longer-distance trade connecting diff erent regions

Th e economic ties forged between highland pastoralists

and settled villagers may have contributed to the

develop-ment of social complexity on a regional scale During the late

fi ft h and fourth millennia b.c.e a number of sites in southern

Mesopotamia and southwestern Iran began to exhibit signs

of increasing socioeconomic and political complexity (for

ex-ample, monumental architecture, urban planning, and the use

of seals to regulate certain economic activities) that eventually

led to the rise of early states Mobile pastoralist populations in

the Zagros may have helped to urbanize their neighbors to the

southwest by, among other things, stimulating local economies

through surplus production and trade Th e rising urban

de-mand for animal products and raw materials would have

en-couraged pastoralists to intensify production and exchange,

strengthening economic ties between both groups Th e

grow-ing economic interdependence between nomadic pastoral

so-cieties and early towns may have infl uenced such sociopolitical developments of the following millennia as the control of pro-duction and distribution of goods by centralized institutions, the emergence of inequalities in wealth and status, and the formation of a shared social identity among nomadic groups Meanwhile, the construction of forts along the foothills of the Zagros by early Mesopotamian state societies indicates that re-lations with the nomads were not always amicable

Far southwest of the Zagros, nomadic pastoralism may have also appeared in the “marginal” environments of the Negev and Sinai and nearby desert/steppe zones of what are today Jordan, Syria, western Iraq, and northwestern Saudi Arabia However, scholars disagree as to whether prehistoric nomadic pastoralism could have existed in this region, and

if so, when it began Some argue that nomadic pastoralism arose in the mid-seventh millennium b.c.e.; they point to the spread of new forms of material culture beyond areas favor-able for intensive agriculture and into marginal zones during this time Archaeological evidence of this migration includes distinctive stone tools, architectural remains such as stone circles and circle complexes, rock art, and a rise in sheep and goat herding, possibly in response to the declining numbers

of wild gazelles Moreover, the growing numbers and size of sites in desert/steppe areas appear to refl ect close symbiotic relations between nomadic groups and their settled neigh-bors in the agricultural zone Aft er their fi rst incursions into these marginal lands the nomadic pastoralists spread rapidly throughout the region over the next few millennia, culminat-ing in the conquest of southern Mesopotamia by the Akkadi-ans in the late third millennium b.c.e

Other researchers doubt that pure nomadic pastoralism

in this region dates to the mid-seventh millennium b.c.e Some argue that a nomadic pastoral economy could have arisen only aft er milk and wool began to be systematically exploited in the fourth millennium b.c.e Some suggest that earlier systems could have been cases of transhumant, rather than purely nomadic, pastoralism (However, archaeologists also diverge in their estimates of when transhumant pasto-ralism began.) Finally, some scholars question whether these marginal lands could have sustained a pastoral nomadic sys-tem in prehistory In historical times nomadic groups who migrated into the region from other areas usually shift ed to other forms of pastoralism to diversify their economy Ac-cording to this viewpoint, pure nomadic pastoralism was possible only aft er dromedaries were domesticated in Arabia

in the late third millennium b.c.e and spread across the des-ert environments of the Near East by the early fi rst millen-nium b.c.e

Historical texts and archaeological materials from an-cient Near Eastern empires attest to the presence of nomadic groups both within and on their borders When the Romans began their conquest of the Near East, they faced a long-established network of interaction and interdependence among settled and nomad populations Th ese nomadic groups practiced diff erent types of mobile pastoralism,

790 nomadic and pastoral societies: The Middle East

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