Back to top: Overview of Unit A20
Physiognomy
The physiognomy of A20 is defined by the unique typology of some of the structural finds, by the modifications that these caused in the overall strategy, and by some of items, in particular the glyptics.
Back to top: Overview of Unit A20
Kabur period grave complex
Another significant change came about as a result of the excavations of A20, namely a new insight into the typology and the urban setting of the graves in the Khabur period. Nowhere else do we have evidence as in A20 for the coalescing of mortuary structures into a coherent urban whole, which appears as a small “city of the dead,” each grave resembling a miniature house with its courtyard.
Back to top: Overview of Unit A20
Impact on strategy
A20 was opened with the specific intent to descend to the level of the stone paved courtyard of the Palace, which had been originally been discovered in A13. The discoveries from the upper levels made in the process caused an important shift in overall strategy.
Until this point in time (2002), substantial structures were found primarily in the northern units (from the west, respectively, A7, A2, A9 and A11), and here we stopped excavations at these levels, without continuing to the level of the Palace. In the southwestern portion, instead, we were in an area which I had defined as “scattered occupation,” by which I meant an open area without any definable structural remains (again from the west: A5, A1, A6, A8, A13, A12, A14). In A15 and A20, on the other hand, we began to find regular structures, as in the northern portion of the area. As a result, these two units were the last ones where excavations progressed vertically to the level of the Palace, and even this not for the entire area of the unit. From this point on, the decisino was made to obtain fist an horizontal exposure for each of the later strata before reaching the level of the Palace.
Back to top: Overview of Unit A20
The Palace courtyard
A20 produced the largest exposure of the Palace courtyard to date (a12). Presumably the courtyard extends for the full extent of the unit, but only half of it had been excavated to this level, for the reasons mentioned above. The courtyard has a beautiful stone pavement which gives us a gleam into the monumentality of the formal wing of the building.
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Back to top: Overview of Unit A20
Glyptics
A small group of seal impressions was found in the layers above the stone paved courtyard. Their style is distinctive within the corpus of Urkesh glyptics, and sheds light onto yet another aspect of the Urkesh art scene.
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