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Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements

Recently, high-resolution magnetometry surveys have led to the discovery of a special category of buildings–so-called ‘mega-structures’–situated in highly visible positions in the public space of Tripolye giant-settlements of the late 5(th) and first half of the 4(th) millennium BCE. In this paper w...

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Autores principales: Hofmann, Robert, Müller, Johannes, Shatilo, Liudmyla, Videiko, Mykhailo, Ohlrau, René, Rud, Vitalii, Burdo, Nataliia, Dal Corso, Marta, Dreibrodt, Stefan, Kirleis, Wiebke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6760824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31553745
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222243
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author Hofmann, Robert
Müller, Johannes
Shatilo, Liudmyla
Videiko, Mykhailo
Ohlrau, René
Rud, Vitalii
Burdo, Nataliia
Dal Corso, Marta
Dreibrodt, Stefan
Kirleis, Wiebke
author_facet Hofmann, Robert
Müller, Johannes
Shatilo, Liudmyla
Videiko, Mykhailo
Ohlrau, René
Rud, Vitalii
Burdo, Nataliia
Dal Corso, Marta
Dreibrodt, Stefan
Kirleis, Wiebke
author_sort Hofmann, Robert
collection PubMed
description Recently, high-resolution magnetometry surveys have led to the discovery of a special category of buildings–so-called ‘mega-structures’–situated in highly visible positions in the public space of Tripolye giant-settlements of the late 5(th) and first half of the 4(th) millennium BCE. In this paper we explore what these buildings actually are and how they can contribute to the understanding of the development of social space in Tripolye giant-settlements. For this investigation, we linked newly obtained excavation data from the giant-settlement Maidanetske, Ukraine, with a much larger sample of such buildings from magnetic plans obtained in the region between the Carpathian foothills and the Dnieper River. Accordingly, Tripolye mega-structures represent a particular kind of integrative building documented in many non-ranked ethnographic contexts. Based on our results we are interpreting that these buildings were used for various ritual and non-ritual activities, joint decision-making, and the storage and consumption of surplus. In Tripolye giant-settlements at least three different categories of mega-structures could be identified which most likely represent different levels of socio-political integration and decision-making. The emergence of this hierarchical system of high-level integrative buildings for the whole community and different low-level integrative architectures for certain segments of local communities was related to the rise of Tripolye mega-sites. The presence of different integrative levels most likely reflects the fusion of different previously independent communities in the giant-settlements. Later in the mega-site development, we observe how low-level integrative buildings increasingly lose their importance indicated by shrinking size and, finally, their disappearance. This observation might indicate that the power which was previously distributed across the community was transferred to a central institution. It is argued that the non-acceptance of this concentration of power and the decline of lower decision-making levels might be a crucial factor for the disintegration of Tripolye giant-settlements around 3600 BCE.
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spelling pubmed-67608242019-10-04 Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements Hofmann, Robert Müller, Johannes Shatilo, Liudmyla Videiko, Mykhailo Ohlrau, René Rud, Vitalii Burdo, Nataliia Dal Corso, Marta Dreibrodt, Stefan Kirleis, Wiebke PLoS One Research Article Recently, high-resolution magnetometry surveys have led to the discovery of a special category of buildings–so-called ‘mega-structures’–situated in highly visible positions in the public space of Tripolye giant-settlements of the late 5(th) and first half of the 4(th) millennium BCE. In this paper we explore what these buildings actually are and how they can contribute to the understanding of the development of social space in Tripolye giant-settlements. For this investigation, we linked newly obtained excavation data from the giant-settlement Maidanetske, Ukraine, with a much larger sample of such buildings from magnetic plans obtained in the region between the Carpathian foothills and the Dnieper River. Accordingly, Tripolye mega-structures represent a particular kind of integrative building documented in many non-ranked ethnographic contexts. Based on our results we are interpreting that these buildings were used for various ritual and non-ritual activities, joint decision-making, and the storage and consumption of surplus. In Tripolye giant-settlements at least three different categories of mega-structures could be identified which most likely represent different levels of socio-political integration and decision-making. The emergence of this hierarchical system of high-level integrative buildings for the whole community and different low-level integrative architectures for certain segments of local communities was related to the rise of Tripolye mega-sites. The presence of different integrative levels most likely reflects the fusion of different previously independent communities in the giant-settlements. Later in the mega-site development, we observe how low-level integrative buildings increasingly lose their importance indicated by shrinking size and, finally, their disappearance. This observation might indicate that the power which was previously distributed across the community was transferred to a central institution. It is argued that the non-acceptance of this concentration of power and the decline of lower decision-making levels might be a crucial factor for the disintegration of Tripolye giant-settlements around 3600 BCE. Public Library of Science 2019-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6760824/ /pubmed/31553745 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222243 Text en © 2019 Hofmann et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hofmann, Robert
Müller, Johannes
Shatilo, Liudmyla
Videiko, Mykhailo
Ohlrau, René
Rud, Vitalii
Burdo, Nataliia
Dal Corso, Marta
Dreibrodt, Stefan
Kirleis, Wiebke
Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements
title Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements
title_full Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements
title_fullStr Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements
title_full_unstemmed Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements
title_short Governing Tripolye: Integrative architecture in Tripolye settlements
title_sort governing tripolye: integrative architecture in tripolye settlements
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6760824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31553745
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222243
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