Ozieri culture

A statuette of the Mediterranean mother goddess, found at Senorbì.

The Ozieri culture (or San Michele culture) was a prehistoric pre-Nuragic culture that occupied Sardinia from c. 3200 to 2800 BC.[1] The Ozieri was the culmination of the island's Neolithic culture and takes its name from the locality where early findings connected with it have been found, the cave of San Michele near Ozieri, in northern Sardinia.[2] The Ozieri existed contemporaneously with the Arzachena culture, sharing some similarities, and its influence also extended to nearby Corsica.[3]

History

Archeological excavations have identified some 200 Ozieri sites, located both in plain and mountain areas, but with a preference for low ridges, and largely organized around an economy of Hunter-gatherers mixed with an initial presence of husbandry and agriculture.[2] The settlements consisted of small stone huts, with a circular (rarely rectangular) wall supporting a wooden frame with a ceiling of boughs. One, near Sestu, consisted of 60 huts.[2] Another, near Mogoro, included 267 huts, perhaps also erected on poles driven into the ground, with pavements composed of limestone slabs, basalt cobbles or clay. Su Coddu, the largest known settlement, consisted of more complex structures and multiple room dwellings; located near Selargius, it has been partially built over by modern development, limiting the present understanding of its size.[2] The finding of unique tools and objects in individual huts, and early evidence of metal-working, suggests the Ozieri culture was well organized and specialized.[2]

The villages had no walls, and findings of weapons in the tombs are scarce, indicating the Ozieri civilization was perhaps a peaceful one, very different from the later Nuragic civilization.[2] The tombs consisted of rock-cut hypogeous structures that later became known as domus de janas, which were built underground or in rock faces, with the largest example being the Necropolis of Anghelu Ruju.[4] Some tombs, of more monumental appearance, belonged perhaps to chiefs, in the fashion of those in Crete. The Ozieri burial practices differ from what is found in the region of Gallura (as a feature of the contemporaneous Arzachena culture), where the dead were interred in Megalithic circles.

Ozieri pottery in its characteristic forms

The Ozieri produced finely made ceramic pottery with complex patterns, incisions and surface decoration.[5] Archaeological excavations held in 1914 and 1949 found fine worked vases with geometrical motifs carved in the clay and colored with red ochre. The oldest ones were still rather crude, while the more recent examples were more refined and slender. Such ceramics were a novelty for prehistoric Sardinia, since up to that point they had been considered typical of the Cyclades and Crete. The development of the Ozieri culture, therefore, probably stemmed from contacts with other eastern Mediterranean civilizations, in particular from the area of Neolithic Greece.[6] The Ozieri culture appears to have been much involved in the obsidian trade, due to rich deposits on the island, which may have led to increased trading contact.[2]

Figurines recovered indicate the Ozieri may have worshiped a mother goddess, with the most well known example being an alabaster statuette found at Ponto Ferro Tomb, Senorbì, and sharing some stylistic characteristics with later Cycladic figures.[7] Female statuettes similar to those of the Ozieri culture have also been found in Malta.[6] Bull horns were recovered from tombs and elsewhere, indicating the sacred bull was also an important concept.[2]

The religious center of the Ozieri culture may have been the Monte d'Accoddi, a massive stone structure that was probably an altar, and has been called "the most singular cultic monument in the early Western Mediterranean."[2]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ "Ozieri, Grotta di San Michele". SardegnaCultura (in Italian).
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dyson, Stephen L.; Rowland, Robert J. (2007). Archaeology and History in Sardinia from the Stone Age to the Middle Ages. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. pp. 35–41. ISBN 978-1934536-02-5.
  3. ^ Antona, Angela (2005). Il complesso nuragico di Su Brandali e i monumenti archeologici di Santa Teresa di Gallura (PDF) (in Italian). Sassari: Carlo Delfino. p. 13. ISBN 88-7138-384-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-11-16.
  4. ^ Service, Alastair; Bradbury, Jean (1979). Megaliths and their Mysteries. MacMillan. p. 109. ISBN 978-002609730-7.
  5. ^ Shaw, Ian; Jameson, Robert (2002). A Dictionary of Archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 4523. ISBN 0631235833.
  6. ^ a b Lilliu, Giovanni (1967). "Al tempo dei nuraghi". In AA.VV (ed.). La società in Sardegna nei secoli (in Italian). Torino: ERI. p. 9.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  7. ^ Gimbutas, Marija (2001). The Living Goddesses. University of California Press. p. 22. ISBN 0520229150.

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