Archaeological site in Iraq From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Girdi Qala and Logardan (a few hundred meters to the north) are adjacent ancient Near East archaeological sites in Sulaymānīyah Governorate in northeast Iraq in the Kurdistan region, parts of a complex that was occupied off and on for at least six millennia. The site lies on the west bank of the Tavuq Cay river, a tributary of the Tigris river. The nearest notable archaeological sites are Jarmo to the north and Tell Kunara to the east. It is thought that Logardan was a political and religious center while Girdi Qala contained residential (North Mound) and craft/industrial (Main Mound) areas. Girdi Qala was occupied from the Late Chacolitic I period until the Islamic period and Logardan from the Halaf period until the Islamic age.[1] The primary occupation was during the Uruk period. The site is important for establishing the form and timing of the Uruk Expansion in a new region. Other Uruk sites in the area include Kani Shaie and Gurga Chiya.[2][3]
Location | Sulaymānīyah Governorate, Iraq |
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Coordinates | 35°30′59″N 44°53′1″E |
Type | settlement |
History | |
Founded | 5th millennium BC |
Periods | Hallaf, Ubaid, Uruk, Early Dynastic, Akkadian, Hellenistic, Sassanian, Islamic |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 2015-2019, 2024 |
Archaeologists | Régis Vallet |
Condition | Ruined |
Ownership | Public |
Public access | Yes |
Excavation at the site began in 2015, after brief surveys in 2014 and early 2015, by a French Archaeological Mission in the Qara Dagh team under the direction of Régis Vallet with the opening of three trenches at each site, later growing to nine trenches in total. Work has included drone-based topographic mapping and a geophysical survey which gave indications of a defensive wall.[4] Work continued in five seasons until 2019 when it went into hiatus due to Covid and security issues before resuming for a sixth season in 2024.[5][6][7][8][9]
The site was occupied beginning in the 5th millennium BC Halaf period, to a greater extent in the 4th millennium BC Ubaid period and Uruk period. Settlement activity at various levels continued through the 3rd millennium BC Early Dynastic and Akkadian periods before dropping to lower levels with periods of abandonment until the Hellenistic and Sassanian periods when it again saw significant occupation. It again saw use in the Islamic period before being fully abandoned in the 17th century BC.[9]
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