Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com – Current findings from the Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission have yielded worthwhile insights into the early historical past of Mesopotamia and the Zagros Mountains, shedding gentle on patterns of human occupation spanning hundreds of years.
The undertaking, directed by the Centre for Research in Archaeology, Arts and Heritage Sciences (CEAACP) on the College of Coimbra in collaboration with the College of Cambridge and Suleimanja’s Cultural Heritage authorities, has uncovered a monumental constructing on the Kani Shaie website in Iraqi Kurdistan. This important discovery supplies new insights into human settlement throughout the 4th and third millennia BC, enhancing our understanding of how these areas developed over time.
View of the Kani Shaie excavations. Credit score: Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission
Within the 2025 excavation marketing campaign, “an official constructing of monumental character was recognized on the higher a part of the synthetic hill of Kani Shaie, presumably a cult area, courting from the so-called Uruk interval (c. 3300–3100 BC)—a interval named after the town of Uruk, acknowledged because the world’s first nice metropolis, as a result of clear proof of direct contacts between Southern Mesopotamia, the place this essential metropolis was positioned, and the mountainous areas to the east,” clarify the archaeologists from CEAACP, André Tomé, Maria da Conceição Lopes, and Steve Renette.
“If the monumental nature of the constructing is confirmed, which we at the moment are investigating intimately, this discovery may profoundly alter our understanding of the connection between Uruk and the encompassing areas, revealing that websites like Kani Shaie weren’t marginal, however central actors within the processes of cultural and political diffusion,” the researchers added.
Adorned cup, ca. 3100 BC. Credit score: Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission
The worldwide archaeology workforce additionally managed to seek out two extremely important artifacts: a fraction of a gold pendant, which demonstrates practices of ostentation and entry to treasured metals in an apparently peripheral group; and a cylinder seal from the Uruk interval, an artifact related to administrative practices, management, and the legitimization of energy, the researchers reveal.
“Along with these supplies, wall cones had been additionally recognized—ornamental parts typical of monumental structure and extensively documented in Uruk—which reinforces the interpretation of the constructing as a public or ceremonial construction,” add André Tomé, Maria da Conceição Lopes, and Steve Renette.
Cylinder seal from the Uruk interval. Credit score: Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission
Kani Shaie is taken into account “crucial archaeological website east of the Tigris River for understanding the sequence of human occupation between the 4th and third millennia BC, persevering with to disclose unprecedented information on the early social and political developments of the Fertile Crescent, generally known as the Cradle of Civilization,” emphasize André Tomé, Maria da Conceição Lopes, and Steve Renette.
View of the Kani Shaie website. Credit score: Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission
These and former excavations at Kani Shaie verify the positioning’s lengthy occupation over the centuries: for instance, within the flatter space of the positioning, excavations occurred at ranges from the Hellenistic-Parthian (247 BC–224 AD) and Neo-Assyrian (c. 911–609 BC) durations.
View of the late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age ranges. Credit score: Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission
The Kani Shaie Archaeological Mission has been ongoing since 2013, led by André Tomé, Maria da Conceição Lopes, and Steve Renette, with Michael Lewis, a researcher at CEAACP-UC, serving as assistant director.
See additionally: Extra Archaeology Information
The undertaking workforce consists of different researchers from CEAACP on the College of Coimbra, the College of Algarve, and the College of Cambridge, in addition to technicians from the Iraqi Kurdistan heritage authorities and consultants of varied nationalities. This excavation marketing campaign was primarily funded by the Basis for Science and Know-how (FCT) and the College of Cambridge, and benefited from collaboration with the heritage authorities of Iraqi Kurdistan.
Supply: Universidade D Coimbra
Written by Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com Workers Author








