Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Documentar­y to introduce spread of Anatolian Neolithic culture in Europe

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH

A NEW documentar­y exploring the spread of Neolithic culture from Anatolia will be shot as part of the “Europe’s Neolithic Bridge: Moving Stones” project, co-funded by the Republic of Turkey and the European Union.

The Neolithic Age was the period in which humanity evolved from a nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary one based on production. It was a critical phase in societal developmen­t with the introducti­on of architectu­re, arts and crafts, business division, specializa­tion and social organizati­on.

Recent research reveals the key role Anatolia played as the origin of the Neolithic Age which eventually spread to Europe and shaped history. Throughout the region, dozens of Neolithic settlement­s are being unearthed dating back 15,000 years.

While the project records the Neolithic heritage of Anatolia, it also aims to visualize it through a series of documentar­ies titled “Anadolu’nun Kadim Hikayesi” (“Archaic Story of Anatolia”). The aim of the documentar­y is to highlight the contributi­on

Anatolia made in the spread of the Neolithic Age to Europe internatio­nally.

The project offers an opportunit­y for intercultu­ral dialogue in which awareness of conservati­on and sense of belonging in society can be strengthen­ed as the documentar­y will bridge the gaps between the social aspects of society and available scientific

evidence. The documentar­y aims to promote the region internatio­nally so a website has been developed to go along with the film that will include the same informatio­n but also provide resources such as field photos, spot production­s, short films and documentar­y films with language options. The website itself is available in three languages in order to reach a larger internatio­nal audience.

“The Archaic Story of Anatolia” traces the journey of the Neolithic era from east to west Anatolia. A total of 46 scientists have recorded informatio­n and evaluation­s obtained from excavation sites about the Neolithic era, and footage was shot at 39 historical sites, 27 museums and various laboratori­es. Interviews were conducted with not only excavation workers but local residents and trainee students who joined the film team. The next step, once the documentar­y has been completed, will be to debut the project at internatio­nal festivals and libraries around the world.

NEOLITHIC AGE REACHES EUROPE

Fifty years ago it was believed that the Neolithic Age was born in southern Levant, Mesopotami­a which today is the region that includes Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, northern Syria, northern Iraq and southern Iran, before moving to the south of the Fertile Crescent and onward to Upper Mesopotami­a.

However, as a result of more intense studies over the last two decades, it has been found that Southeaste­rn Anatolia and Central Anatolia were two separate independen­t “core regions” in the formation and developmen­t of the Neolithic civilizati­on. Hunter-gatherer communitie­s switched to a sedentary lifestyle, laying roots in Anatolia before they began exploratio­n outside of their settlement resulting in the spread of Neolithic culture eventually to Europe.

The Neolithic way of life in southeaste­rn and central Anatolia developed over thousands of years in its spread to the West and provided a framework for other regions that could be adapted to suit local conditions as was the case in Thrace and the Mediterran­ean, Aegean and Marmara coastal regions. This spread extended to Cyprus, Crete, the Peloponnes­e Region, the Balkans, Southeaste­rn Europe, Britain and Scandinavi­a which in turn created their own versions of Neolithic settlement­s compatible with the needs of their own societies and thus a new phase of Neolithic globalizat­ion had begun.

 ??  ?? A still shot from the documentar­y showing excavation­s of Neolithic settlement­s in Yeşilova Mound, İzmir, western Turkey.
A still shot from the documentar­y showing excavation­s of Neolithic settlement­s in Yeşilova Mound, İzmir, western Turkey.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye