Cultural Relationship beyond the Iranian Plateau: the Helmand Civilization, Baluchistan and the Indus Valley in the Hellenisti Age
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2008
abstract:
This paper presents a systematic review of the archaeological evidence for cultural interaction between the Helmand
and the Indus during the 3rd millennium BCE. A series of artefacts found at Shahr-i Sokhta and nearby sites (Iranian Seistan)
that were presumably imported from Baluchistan and the Indus domain are discussed, together with finds from the French excavations
at Mundigak (Kandahar, Afghanistan) that might have the same origin. Other artefacts and the involved technologies
bear witness to the local adaptation of south-eastern manufactures and practices in the protohistoric Sistan culture. While the objects
datable to the fi rst centuries of the 3rd millennium BCE fall in the so called "domestic universe" and reflect common household
activities, in the centuries that follow we see a shift to the sharing of luxury objects and activities concerning the display of a superior
social status; but this might be fruit of a general transformation of the archaeological record of Shahr-i Sokhta and its formation
processes.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Helmand; Baluchistan; Archeologia; Ellenismo
List of contributors:
Lazzari, Alessandra
Published in: