Guest guest Posted December 14, 2008 Report Share Posted December 14, 2008 Indo-Eurasian_research , " Juha Savolainen " <juhavs wrote: Dear Jacob, In your reply to Bob, you also mention that " the one wild idea that I have is that Malyan has as extensive archives as Susa, just waiting to be found. I really do expect that " . So, perhaps I may indulge here a little bit of Jacob Dahl & #65533; exegesis & #65533; Am I correct if I view your " wild idea " as connected to the idea that the main moving force behind the Proto-Elamite phenomenon was not Susa but Malyan? And that no matter what the role of Uruk/Susa was in providing the model for the inscriptions, Malyan was the main urban center that tried to revive the trade and other exchange networks after the implosion of Uruk expansion and after a likely depopulation of Susa area? Best regards, Juha --- End forwarded message --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2008 Report Share Posted December 14, 2008 Indo-Eurasian_research , jacob dahl <jacob.dahl wrote: Dear Juha, As far as I understand it is the basic theory that Malyan was the center of the later Elamite states. Who knows for the proto-Elamite period. I don't know enough about Iranian archaeology to judge this (D. T. Potts, The Archaeology of Iran (Cambridge UK: 1999) could be a place to look, but I don't have access to it right now). With Susa, Malyan, Sialk, and Yahya, I would say it is a pretty extensive use of the same writing system. Or, if preferred, mnemo-technic accounting system. It is important to remember that nowhere in the proto-Elamite texts, nor in the Uruk texts, or pre-writing texts (numerical and numero-ideographical texts) do we have evidence of more than a strictly local economy. Of course trade in some form existed (perhaps not profit oriented in a modern sense, etc. etc.), but it is not immediately related to the administration recorded on the proto-Elamite tablets. I am struggling with numerous simultaneous dead-lines, sorry for my brevity in answering these questions. Best wishes, Jacob Juha wrote: >In your reply to Bob, you also mention that " the one wild idea >that I have is that Malyan has as extensive archives as Susa, just >waiting to be found. I really do expect that " . > >So, perhaps I may indulge here a little bit of Jacob Dahl & #65533; >exegesis & #65533; > >Am I correct if I view your " wild idea " as connected to the >idea that the main moving force behind the Proto-Elamite phenomenon >was not Susa but Malyan? And that no matter what the role of Uruk/Susa >was in providing the model for the inscriptions, Malyan was the main >urban center that tried to revive the trade and other exchange >networks after the implosion of Uruk expansion and after a likely >depopulation of Susa area? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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