TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond culture history at Maski
T2 - Land use, settlement and social differences in Neolithic through Medieval South India
AU - Johansen, Peter G.
AU - Bauer, Andrew M.
N1 - We would like to thank the Archaeological Survey of India for the privilege and permission to work at Maski ( F.1/8/2009-EE ). We are grateful for the financial support of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada ( 756-2010-0322 ), DePauw University , and the University of Illinois at Urbana—Champaign ( 13193 ). We would also like to extend our thanks to the American Institute of Indian Studies for their kind assistance and continuous support for the project, and particularly Dr. Pradeep Mehendiratta, Purnima Metha and Vandana Sinha. Special thanks are due to the Karnataka Department of Archaeology, Museums and Heritage, particularly our long standing friends, colleagues and project co-directors T.S. Gangadhar, and R. Gopal for their collaboration, collegiality and constant support.
PY - 2015/1/1
Y1 - 2015/1/1
N2 - The multicomponent site of Maski in northern Karnataka has long held a central position in the culture-historic narratives of archaeologists and historians alike. Yet since B.K. Thapar's correlation of archaeological deposits at Maski with Wheeler's culture history sequence in the 1950s, archaeological research at Maski has been largely absent. Our research at Maski has sought to build upon this important chronological foundation, expanding our understanding of late prehistoric social life by asking questions and collecting data that explore the entanglements of settlement, social life, land use and craft production during the South Indian Iron Age and Early Historic Periods. To date we have completed three seasons of archaeological survey in a 64 km2 area centered on the site of Maski and recoded 153 sites and numerous concentrations of "off-site" artifacts that are revealing temporally sensitive material patterning from which we can begin to address these objectives. Here we present preliminary patterns for Neolithic (3000-1200 BC), Iron Age (1200-300 BC), Early Historic (300 BC-AD 500), and Medieval (AD 500-1600) period materials in the region. The results of the survey so far have documented significant temporally sensitive changes in the size, location, and distribution of settlement, metal production activities, agro-pastoral land use, and mortuary interments that point towards historical developments in regional land-use and socio-political practices.
AB - The multicomponent site of Maski in northern Karnataka has long held a central position in the culture-historic narratives of archaeologists and historians alike. Yet since B.K. Thapar's correlation of archaeological deposits at Maski with Wheeler's culture history sequence in the 1950s, archaeological research at Maski has been largely absent. Our research at Maski has sought to build upon this important chronological foundation, expanding our understanding of late prehistoric social life by asking questions and collecting data that explore the entanglements of settlement, social life, land use and craft production during the South Indian Iron Age and Early Historic Periods. To date we have completed three seasons of archaeological survey in a 64 km2 area centered on the site of Maski and recoded 153 sites and numerous concentrations of "off-site" artifacts that are revealing temporally sensitive material patterning from which we can begin to address these objectives. Here we present preliminary patterns for Neolithic (3000-1200 BC), Iron Age (1200-300 BC), Early Historic (300 BC-AD 500), and Medieval (AD 500-1600) period materials in the region. The results of the survey so far have documented significant temporally sensitive changes in the size, location, and distribution of settlement, metal production activities, agro-pastoral land use, and mortuary interments that point towards historical developments in regional land-use and socio-political practices.
KW - Agro-pastoral land use
KW - Archaeological survey
KW - Metal production
KW - Settlement
KW - Social distinctions
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84929919769
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84929919769#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1016/j.ara.2014.12.001
DO - 10.1016/j.ara.2014.12.001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84929919769
SN - 2352-2267
VL - 1
SP - 6
EP - 16
JO - Archaeological Research in Asia
JF - Archaeological Research in Asia
ER -