2008
DOI: 10.1179/009346908791071358
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Arson or Accident? The Burning of a Neolithic House at Çatalhöyük, Turkey

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Cited by 48 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Similar to observations at other PPNB villages (Bovin, 2000;Twiss et al, 2008), PPNB household members at Tell Halula regularly rebuilt their houses. Some of this was probably related to routine household maintenance and cleaning.…”
Section: Tell Halula House Lifecycles and Burial Practicessupporting
confidence: 66%
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“…Similar to observations at other PPNB villages (Bovin, 2000;Twiss et al, 2008), PPNB household members at Tell Halula regularly rebuilt their houses. Some of this was probably related to routine household maintenance and cleaning.…”
Section: Tell Halula House Lifecycles and Burial Practicessupporting
confidence: 66%
“…Ethnographic research (David and Kramer, 2000) has demonstrated that household maintenance is a major challenge. As outlined at Çatal-höyük (Bovin, 2000;Twiss et al, 2008), examination of storage areas has revealed significant evidence for rodent infestations. Nevertheless, it is not clear that these would have resulted in the urgent need to burn or rebuild.…”
Section: Tell Halula House Lifecycles and Burial Practicesmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Figurines are consistently found in external midden and 30% of buildings contain no figurines at all (see Table 3 in Meskell et al 2008). Contra Mellaart, we have not found a correlation between elaborate buildings and the presence of figurines (e.g., building 52; see Twiss et al 2008). Secondary deposition is a general pattern seen across the site for all materials; however, certain things such as shell, bone, and obsidian were periodically cached within houses at Çatalhöyük.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…One important indication that these hunts were primarily of ritual or social significance is the fact that the wild animals depicted were not essential to the community's subsistence, or played only a secondary role as a source of food. Thus far, there is no evidence in Çatal Höyük for the ritual cremation of buildings, a topic often debated in research (Twiss et al 2008).…”
Section: Central Anatoliamentioning
confidence: 99%