Documents
eHRAF is comprised of thousands of ethnographic sources including monographs, journal articles, dissertations and manuscripts. Use this page to find relevant documents by searching or filtering. Each document in eHRAF also contains a Publication Information page with added metadata including brief abstracts written by HRAF analysts who have subject-indexed the file.
Non-religious residential settlement patterning in the late Early Dynastic of the Diyala regionarticle 1981 • Henrickson, Elizabeth F.
Early Dynastic Mesopotamia • Middle East > Middle East
Henrickson examines the house data ('non-religious settlement units') from excavations at Khafajah and Asmar. Individual houses were examined to determine where domestic activities took place. One surprising conclusion is that some central rooms may ...Bibliographyessay 1989 • Henrickson, Elizabeth F. et al.
Ubaid • Middle East > Middle East
This work consists of bibliographical citations relevant to eHRAF documents 15-34 in this collection....Introductionessay 1989 • Henrickson, Elizabeth F. et al.
Ubaid • Middle East > Middle East
This article presents a brief summary of field work done in Greater Mesopotamia, especially in regard to the 'Ubaid period, and details on the establishment of a symposium of scholars at Ellsinore, Denmark in 1988, for the discussion of the current s...Ceramic evidence for cultural interaction between the 'Ubaid tradition and the central Zagros highlands, western Iranessay 1989 • Henrickson, Elizabeth F. & Ubaid Symposium (1988 : Helsingør, Denmark)
Ubaid • Middle East > Middle East
A number of pottery assemblages characterized by dark painted buff wares are associated with Mesopotamian and adjacent Zagros highland villages and early towns dating to the Middle Chalcolithic period (ca. 5100-4000 calibrated BC). These assemblages ...Concluding summaryessay 1989 • Henrickson, Elizabeth F. et al.
Ubaid • Middle East > Middle East
In this brief paper Henrickson and Thuesen present their general impressions of the results of the Elsinore 'Ubaid symposium, discussing in turn some of the drawbacks of the presented papers and suggesting new directions for future 'Ubaid research....