Results 51 to 60 of about 140 (101)
Interpreting the Bucrania of Çatalhöyük: James Mellaart, Dorothy Cameron, and Beyond
ABSTRACTThe bucranium (bull's head and horns) has been recognized as the most prevalent three-dimensional art form found during the excavations of the Neolithic village of Catalhoyuk in central Turkey. James Mellaart interpreted it as the symbol of the son and lover of the Great Mother Goddess, worshipped at Catalhoyuk.
Relke, Joan Rosalind
exaly +3 more sources
James Mellaart and the Luwians: A Culture-(Pre)history
The prehistory of Indo-European is a seemingly intractable problem that continues to attract the interest of mainstream archaeology. This chapter begins by asking why, in particular through the work of James Mellaart and his hypothesis of a Luwian migration across Anatolia in the third millennium BCE.
exaly +3 more sources

