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Çatalhöyük was a city in Anatolia that existed from 7500 to 5700 BCE, with an estimated 10,000 people.[1] The earliest known city, Çatalhöyük is notable for gender equality, economic equality, the absence of a State, an absence of war, and an apparent ecological orientation. Ian Hodder, a Stanford archeologist who has led the excavation of the site since the 1990s, explains:
“People lived with the principle of equality in Çatalhöyük, especially considering the hierarchy that appeared in other settlements in the Middle East. This makes Çatalhöyük different. There was no leader, government or administrative building; men and women were equal.[2]
Çatalhöyük was part of a broader "Sesklo culture" which, according to Marija Gimbutas, had an "absence of outstanding central buildings which could suggest a hierarchy."[3] Citing the archeologist James Mellaart's work in the 1950s and 1960s Murray Bookchin writes:
Its tool kit and highly naturalistic artistry suggest an ecologically oriented community of late Paleolithic hunters and gatherers rather than an early Neolithic community of food cultivators. The culture is marked by a very sophisticated stone and bone technics, by markedly collective dwellings adorned with images of animals and shamanlike figures amidst paintings of reindeer, leopards, and bow-carrying hunters [... ] Nor do hierarchy and warfare seem to be features of the city's social life. Judging from the size of Çatal's dwellings and the implements found in burial remains, the city was fairly egalitarian despite minor differences that are observable. There are no 'obvious signs of violence or deliberate signs of destruction', Mellart observes for the original city and its nearby successor, both of which were simply abandoned for no apparent reason after centuries of occupancy. Cases of violent death among the hundreds of skeletons examined on the sites are notable for their absence.[4]
Çatalhöyük resisted domesticating cattle until around around 6000 BCE, even though the Fertile crescent had domesticated them around 8000 BCE and societies in Çatalhöyük's region kept cattle by 6500 BCE.[5] It therefore seems Çatalhöyük's rejection of cattle domestication was a conscious choice. Although David Graeber and David Wengrow posit that they rejected cattle domestication in order to preserve men's prestige for hunting wild cattle,[6] another reason might be that they wished to preserve gender egalitarianism. Using cattle for ploughing has in many cultures been considered men's work and has been linked with patrirachal attitudes.[7] Anthropologist Lionel Sims noted that in cattle-herding societies, men could 'purchase' a wife with a single payment of cattle. The bride's family "who once always stood in solidarity with her, now had an interest in disowning her to keep the cattle."[8]
Indeed, the eventual transition from hunting to cattle herding appears to have coincided with a decline in egalitarianism and with environmental problems caused by deforestation and overgrazing. In Discover Magazine, Jennifer Hattam writes, "Ongoing research may link the arrival of domesticated cattle with emerging inequality between households, and increasingly individualistic behavior among Çatalhöyük residents."[9]
As Catalhoyuk became less egalitarian, people abandoned the site. Archeologist Henry Wright summarizes:
Transmission of material wealth through time would have also been a key threshold in the entrenchment of inequality. Çatalhöyük ... seems not to have reached that threshold. In sum, the data from Çatalhöyük ... hint at a society trying to maintain egalitarian principles even as it was slowly changing into something else. Mechanisms for maintaining egalitarianism may have encountered problems as the site grew large, leading to abandonment.[10]
Culture
With no elite class or gender hierarchy, the whole population experienced lives full of feasts, music, dance, and mural painting. Houses stood wall to wall with no space between them, forming what Mellaart called a "honeycomb structure." People moved between houses by walking across the rooftops. While people lived in nearly identical houses and were buried with roughly the same quality and quantity of goods, the wide diversity of these goods suggests to Bernhard Brosius that Çatalhöyük's society respected people's individuality.[11]
Egalitarianism
Women and men were equal. As Hodder explains, "Thanks to modern scientific techniques, we have seen that women and men were eating very similar foods, lived similar lives and worked in similar works. The same social stature was given to both men and women. We have learned that men and women were equally approached".[12]
Older houses had a somewhat greater density of prestigous objects such as hunting trophies and a volcanic glass called obsidian. This suggests to Graeber and Wengrow that "elders, and perhaps elder women in particular, held positions of influence. But the more prestigious households are distributed among the less and do not coalesce into elite neighborhoods."[13]
Religion
The religion appears to have been non-hierarchical and based on a Goddesses-centered cosmology. Of 41 excavated sculptures of deities, 33 were of a goddess and only 8 depicted of a masculine god. Although there were priestesses, there was "no evidence of a hierarchical organization."[14] Temples are distributed among regular houses, suggesting of religion with everyday life.[15]
Çatalhöyük's Goddess was apparently in a symbol of life as well of death. Symbolizing her powers of life, she was often depicted with wild animals, plants, and piles of grain. Symbolizing her powers of death, she was often accompanied by a bird of prey, perhaps a vulture. The care of corpses suggested that the people of Çatalhöyük believed in an afterlife. Artwork portraying life was often on the west side of buildings and associated with the color red, while scenes portraying death were on the east and contained black.[16]
David Lewis-Williams and David Pierce speculate that the people of Çatalhöyük believed in a tiered cosmos and modeled their city after it. The houses' ladders and pillars represented contact between worlds. Bull heads were often plastered on pillars, signifying the bull's role in the interaction between the everyday and spirit worlds. Lewis-Williams and Pierce also suggest that the ubiquitous handprints signified contact with the spirit world and that the burials of bodies beneath the residential floors allowed the dead into an underworld.[17]
Recreation
Feasts and festivals appear to have been frequent. Almost half of the adult skeletons showed signs of alteration that may have resulted from frequent dancing.[18]
Economy
Economic equality can be deduced from the facts that dwellings were all roughly the same size, and burial goods were of roughly the same quantity and quality.[19] There is no evidence that Çatalhöyük had an internal market economy.[20] Residents practiced flood-retreat farming which required minimal labor or central management and no deforestation.[21]
Researchers estimate that less than half of people's labor time focused on meeting people's basic needs, and the other half focused on cultural production such as organizing feasts, dances, rituals, education, and the painting of murals.[22]
At 29.8 years, women's life expectancy in Çatalhöyük was 1.6 years longer than women's life expectancy had been in the European and Mediterranean regions during the Upper Paleolithic period. Women's slightly lower life expectancy than men's resulted from the rate of death at childbirth.[23] Çatalhöyük's lifespan surpassed the lifespan of exploited populations for subsequent millennia until around 1750. A small portion of the population lived to the ages of 60 to 70.[24]
Environment
Paintings of animals may have suggested a reverence for non-human life. The combination of small farming, hunting, and gathering fed the society that lasted about two millennia.[25]
According to Lewis-Williams and Pierce, Catalhoyuk had a “backwards-and-forwards (dialectic) process between the ‘wild’ and humanity.” As examples, they point to images show women giving birth to wild bulls and associate women and leopards.[26]
Crime
Çatalhöyük residents were generally peaceful with each other, but they had mechanisms for responding when crowded conditions encouraged antisocial behavior. There were no signs of violent death among the many hundreds of skeletons excavated by James Mellaart.[27] But more recently, excavation of skulls with nonfatal cranial fractures led some archeologists in 2019 to conclude that "intragroup violence was present among the inhabitants of the site, sporadically but continually."[28]
Although there are many of images of hunting, Çatalhöyük's paintings do not contain images of crime against humans. While people were buried with goods, there is no evidence of grave robbery. Brosius speculates:
Taken as a whole, these facts today seem as the archaeology of an utopia. However, we must understand that 10,000 people without central power could never have lived together in such density for such a long time if they had not possessed nonviolent methods for solving conflicts in the first place. If use of force had been part of the repertoire of strategies for conflict resolution, settlements such as Çatalhöyük would not have been able to survive for such a long time - no one could have prevented the settlement from dissolving. Another argument in favour of the absence of violence a priori is the above mentioned complete absence of destruction in the cultic area: people had developed images of the beyond which were just as peaceful as they themselves were.[29]
Neighboring Societies
Bernhard Brosius argues that Çatalhöyük existed in a context of widespread non-patriarchal "neolithic communism" lasting for three thousand years and spreading to all of Anatolia. There is evidence of a social revolution in the city of Cayonu in the year 7200 BCE that overthrew a violent class society and installed an apparently egalitarian society more similar to Çatalhöyük.
However, Çatalhöyük's buildings and artifacts remained exceptionally well-preserved compared to the neighboring cities and towns.[30]
- ↑ Brandon Miller, "Catal Huyuk: Origins of Civilizations," Alternative Archeology, http://alternativearchaeology.jigsy.com/catal-huyuk
- ↑ "Çatalhöyük excavations reveal gender equality in ancient settled life", Daily News, http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/Default.aspx?PageID=238&NID=72411&NewsCatID=375
- ↑ Marija Gimbutas, The Civilization of the Goddess: The World of Old Europe (San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1991), 325.
- ↑ Murray Bookchin, The Rise of Urbanization and the Decline of Citizenship (San Fransisco: Sierra Club Books, 1987), 18-19.
- ↑ Jennifer Hattam, "What Happened to Turkey's Ancient Utopia?", Discover Magazine, 27 July 2016, https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/what-happened-to-turkeys-ancient-utopia.
- ↑ David Graeber and David Wengrow, The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021), 225.
- ↑ Samuel Bowles and Mattia Fochesato, "The Origins of Enduring Economic Inequality," American Economic Association, 31 January 2024.
- ↑ Lionel Sims, "Anthropology: Reclaiming the Dragon," Anarchist Library, 2013 https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/lionel-sims-anthropology-reclaiming-the-dragon.
- ↑ Hattam, "What Happened."
- ↑ Bowles and Fochesato, "The Origins."
- ↑ Bernhard Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük: Emergence and development of an egalitarian society", urkommunismus.de, 2005, http://www.urkommunismus.de/catalhueyuek_en.html.
- ↑ Çatalhöyük excavations reveal gender equality in ancient settled life", Daily News, http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/Default.aspx?PageID=238&NID=72411&NewsCatID=375
- ↑ Graeber and Wengrow, The Dawn of Everything, 222.
- ↑ Erich Fromm, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (New York: Henry Holy and Company, 1973), 180, 182.
- ↑ Gimbutas, The Civilization of the Goddess, 326.
- ↑ Joan Cichon, Matriarchy in Bronze Age Crete: A Perspective from Archaeomythology and Modern Matriarchal Studies (Archaeopress Publishing, 2022), 60-61.
- ↑ David Lewis-Williams and David Pierce, Inside the Neolithic Mind: Consciousness, Cosmos and the Realm of the Gods (Thames and Hudson, 2005), ch. 4.
- ↑ Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük.
- ↑ Fromm, Anatomy, 179. Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük.
- ↑ Bookchin, 22.
- ↑ Graeber and Wengrow, The Dawn of Everything, 235.
- ↑ Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük.
- ↑ J. Lawrence Angel, "Early Neolithic Skeletons from Çatal Hüyük: Demography and Pathology", Anatolian Studies 21 (1971): 80.
- ↑ Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük.
- ↑ Bookchin, The Rise of Urbanization, 18-19.
- ↑ Lewis-Williams and Pierce, Inside the Neolithic Mind, ch. 5.
- ↑ Fromm, Anatomy, 180.
- ↑ C. J. Knüsel, B. Glencross, and M. Milella, "Violent Injuries in the Neolithic," in ed. Ian Hodder Violence and the Sacred in the Ancient Near East: Girardian Conversation at Çatalhöyük (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019), 88.
- ↑ Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük.
- ↑ Brosius, "From Çayönü to Çatalhöyük.