Tell Kashkashok
أخبر كاشكاشوك  | |
![]() Shown within Syria ![]() Tell Kashkashok (Near East)  | |
| Alternative name | Tell Kashkashuk | 
|---|---|
| Location | Al-Hasakah Governorate, Syria | 
| Region | Upper Mesopotamia | 
| Coordinates | 36°38′20″N 40°38′21″E / 36.63880°N 40.63903°E | 
| Type | archaeological site, cluster | 
| Length | 250 metre (Kashkashok III) | 
| Width | 220 metre (Kashkashok III) | 
| Diameter | 50 metre (Kashkashok I) | 
| Height | 2 metre (Kashkashok I), 20 metre (Kashkashok III) | 
| History | |
| Periods | Halaf culture (Kashkashok I) | 
| Site notes | |
| Excavation dates | 1986–1991;[1] 1987–1990[2] | 
| Archaeologists | Antoine Suleiman (Kashkashok III, Kashkashok I) | 
Tell Kashashok (أخبر كاشكاشوك) is an archaeological site in the Khabur River Valley,[3] of Northern Syria.[4] The site is dated by pottery finds to the latter neolithic era,[5] and early Dynastic era.[6] The site was excavated by the Directorate General of Antiquities of Syria in 1987 and 1988.[7][8] The Early Dynastic era includes a destruction layer,[8] and an early adoption of cuneiform. It may have been known in antiquity as Kiš.[8] A few clay numerical tablets from the EB III were found.[9]
References
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1. 
 - ^ Yoshihiro Nishiaki (2018). "The Late Halafian Lithic Industry of Tell Kashkashok I,the Upper Khabur, Syria". Orient: Journal of the Society for Near Eastern Studies in Japan. 53: 1–21. Wikidata Q110235842.
 - ^ Matsutani, Memoirs of the Institute of Oriental Culture (University of Tokyo 1987) vol. 109.
 - ^ Buccellati, Giorgio. "The Floodwaters of Urkesh and the Structural Coherence of the Urkesh Temple Complex" (PDF). Urkesh. Retrieved 11 September 2020..
 - ^ Nishiaki, Yoshihiro (1992). "Preliminary Results of the Prehistoric Survey in the Khabur Basin, Syria: 1990–91 Seasons". Paléorient. 18 (1 (1992)): 97–102. doi:10.3406/paleo.1992.4566.
 - ^ Glassner, Jean-Jacques (2003). The Invention of Cuneiform : Writing in Sumer. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780801873898. OCLC 51041422.
 - ^ Matsutani, Toshio. "Excavation at Tell Kashkashok II, 1987." Tōyō bunka kenkyūsho kiyō 109 (1989): 1–33
 - ^ a b c Frayne, Douglas (2008). Pre-Sargonic Period – 2700–2350 BC. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-9047-9. OCLC 1100706906.
 - ^ Philippe Quenet. “The Diffusion of the Cuneiform Writing System in Northern Mesopotamia: The Earliest Archaeological Evidence.” Iraq, vol. 67, no. 2, 2005, pp. 31–40
 
Further reading
- "Tell Abu Hğaira (Syrian dig)", Syria 72, 1995, pp. 183–190 (= CAAS II); "The Temples of Tell Kashashok and Tell Abu Hujeira", Mr. Al-Maqdissi, M. Abdul Karim, A. Al-Azm & M. Al-Khoury (ed.), The Syrian Jezireh. Cultural Heritage and Interrelations. Proceedings of the International Held Conference at Deir ez-Zor (22–25 April 1996), Damascus, 2002, pp. 45–55 (= DAS I), in Arabic.
 - Tall Kash-Kashok, H. Weiss, Ed., The Origins of North Mesopotamian Civilization: Ninevite Chronology, Economy, Society (Yale Symposium, 1988), Yale, 1988; AT. Suleyman & A. Taraqji, "Tell Kashkashuk at the time of Halaf", S. Cluzan, E. Delpont & J. Mouliérac (dir.), Syria, memory and civilization, Paris, 1993, p. 48; "Tell Kashkashouk", Syria 72, 1995, pp. 170–183 (= CAAS II); "The Temples at Tell Kashashok in the Third Millennium BC", op. cit. not. 3, pp. 321–322; "The Temples of Tell Kashashok and Tell Abu Hujeira", ibid., pp. 45–55.
 

