Anthropology
Related: About this forumFirst Neolithic City Was So Overcrowded People Started Trying to Kill Each Other
By Mindy Weisberger, Senior Writer | June 20, 2019 02:44pm ET
About 9,000 years ago, Neolithic people whose ancestors were once isolated foragers were living packed so tightly together in a bustling town in what is now Turkey that they had to climb into their homes through the roofs.
In part, that's why the violence began.
Archaeologists recently discovered that the transition from foraging to a more communal farming lifestyle raised significant challenges for people who lived at Çatalhöyük, a 32-acre site in southern Turkey that was occupied from 7100 B.C. to 5950 B.C. Çatalhöyük was home to as many as 8,000 people at its peak, and is one of the earliest known cities.
That overcrowding and other factors created a highly stressful environment. And for Çatalhöyük's Neolithic occupants, stress found an outlet in brutal violence, including bashes to the backs of heads with projectiles, scientists reported in a new study. [25 Grisly Archaeological Discoveries]
Recently, archaeologists compiled 25 years of data gathered from the remains of 742 individuals at Çatalhöyük. In the preserved evidence of more than 1,000 years of Neolithic life, the scientists discovered "a compelling record of elevated levels of interpersonal violence" triggered by the stress of city living, the researchers wrote in the study.
More:
https://www.livescience.com/65759-violent-neighbors-ancient-city.html
rampartc
(5,835 posts)where overcrowding rarely leads to sniping with slingshpts.
sanitation must have been horrendous. the reason these early farmers must have kept so close was probably mutual defense (I guess). the city lasted for 1,000 years so they needed a good reason to stay together.
luvMIdog
(2,533 posts)I'll try and read more on that it sounds interesting
customerserviceguy
(25,185 posts)tend to be rather small, only a limited population can be sustained by what can be taken from an environment that is within walking distance. Agricultural societies that have learned how to store surplus can be larger, and thus need more regulation.
The places that had established control through religion tended to survive while those that did not tended to perish.
HeartlandProgressive
(294 posts)The concept of streets wasn't invented and buildings shared walls to an extent that some were completely surrounded