Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-45l2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T15:02:08.788Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Libyan landscapes in history and prehistory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2019

Abstract

As a contribution to the Society for Libyan Studies’ 50th anniversary, the paper discusses three projects in which the author has been involved, with a focus on their different contributions to our understanding of Libya's landscape prehistory and history. The deep stratigraphy of the Haua Fteah cave in three projects are described in chronological order, but they contribute in reverse order to our understanding of how Libyans have changed and been changed by their landscapes. The deep stratigraphy of the Haua Fteah cave in Cyrenaica represents an intermittent history of landscape use, and the way people dealt with climate change impacts, from some 150,000 years ago to the Graeco-Roman period. The faunal assemblage from Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi, provides insights into how Graeco-Roman city-dwellers interacted with the people of the countryside. The UNESCO Libyan Valleys Survey changes the perspective, showing how tribal people in the pre-desert were drawn into the ambit of the coastal cities and the economy of imperial Rome, before returning to semi-mobile pastoral/arable lifeways not so dissimilar to the lives of many Libyans before the oil revolution. The principal linking finding is that there are no simple stories from the past in terms of people's relations to their landscape: the mix of structure and agency embodied in the archaeological record can be a record of failures, misguided decisions, bad luck etc. as much as of successful responses and adaptations to opportunities and challenges.

كمساهمة في الذكرى الخمسين لجمعية الدراسات الليبية، تناقش الورقة ثلاثة مشاريع شارك فيها المؤلف، مع التركيز على مساهماتها المختلفة في فهمنا لما قبل التاريخ والتاريخ في ليبيا. تم وصف المشروعات الثلاثة بترتيب زمني، لكنها تساهم بترتيب عكسي في فهمنا لكيفية تغير الليبيين بمشاهدهم الطبيعية وتغييرهم لها. تمثل الطبقات العميقة لكهف هوافطيح في سيرينايكا (إقليم برقة) تاريخاً متقطعاً لاستخدام المشاهد الطبيعية، والطريقة التي تعامل بها الناس مع آثار تغير المناخ، منذ حوالي 150,000 عام مضت إلى فترة العصر الإغريقي- الروماني. تقدم المجموعة الحيوانية من سيدي خريبيش ببنغازي، نظرة ثاقبة حول كيفية تفاعل سكان المدن اليونانية والرومانية مع سكان الريف. و يغير مشروع مسح الأودية الليبية لليونسكو المنظور، حيث يوضح كيف تم جذب الناس القبليين بمنطقة ما قبل الصحراء إلى نطاق المدن الساحلية واقتصاد روما الإمبراطورية، قبل أن يعودوا إلى حياة شبة-الرحل الرعوية/الزراعية، والتي لا تختلف عن حياة العديد من الليبيين قبل الثورة النفطية. النتيجة الرئيسية الرابطة والتي توصلنا إليها هي أنه لا توجد قصص بسيطة من الماضي فيما يتعلق بعلاقات الناس بمشاهدهم الطبيعية: يمكن أن يكون مزيج البنية (structure) العامل النشط (agency) المجسدين في السجل الأثري بمثابة سجل من حالات الفشل والقرارات المضللة والحظ السيئ وما إلى ذلك، بقدر ما هو سجل للاستجابات الناجحة والتكيف مع الفرص والتحديات.

Type
Part 1: 50th Anniversary Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for Libyan Studies 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barker, G. 1981. Early agriculture and economic change in North Africa. In Allan, J. A. (ed.) Sahara: Ecological Change and Early Economic History: 131145. Menas Press, London.Google Scholar
Barker, G. 1982. Economic life in Berenice: the animal and fish remains, marine molluscs and plant remains. In Lloyd, J.A. (ed.), Excavations at Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi (Berenice): the Animal Bones and Coarse Pottery. Department of Antiquities, Tripoli, Supplement to Libya Antiqua: 149.Google Scholar
Barker, G. (ed.). 1996. A Mediterranean Valley. Landscape Archaeology and Annales History in the Biferno Valley, Italy. Leicester University Press, Leicester.Google Scholar
Barker, G. (ed.). 2013. Rainforest Foraging and Farming in Island Southeast Asia: the Archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, McDonald Institute Monographs, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Barker, G. and Farr, L. (eds). 2016. Archaeological Investigations in the Niah Caves, Sarawak. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, McDonald Institute Monographs, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Gilbertson, D., Jones, G.D.B., and Mattingly, D.J. (ed. Barker, G.). 1996a. Farming the Desert: the UNESCO Libyan Valleys Archaeological Survey: Volume One: Synthesis. UNESCO, Paris; Department of Antiquities, Tripoli; Society for Libyan Studies, London.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Gilbertson, D., Jones, G.D.B., and Mattingly, D.J. (ed. Mattingly, D.). 1996b. Farming the Desert: the UNESCO Libyan Valleys Archaeological Survey: Volume Two: Gazetteer and Pottery. UNESCO, Paris; Department of Antiquities, Tripoli; Society for Libyan Studies, London.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Gilbertson, D., and Mattingly, D.J. (eds.). 2007a. Archaeology and Desertification: the Wadi Faynan Landscape Survey, Southern Jordan. Council for British Research in the Levant, London.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Hunt, C., and Reynolds, T. 2007b. The Haua Fteah, Cyrenaica (northeast Libya): renewed investigations of the cave and its landscape, 2007. Libyan Studies 38: 93114.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Basell, L., Brooks, I., Burn, L., Cartwright, C., Cole, F., Davison, J., Farr, L., Hamilton, R., Hunt, C., Inglis, R., Jacobs, Z., Leitch, V., Morales, J., Morley, I., Morley, M., Pawley, S., Pryor, A., Rabett, R., Reynolds, T., Roberts, R., Simpson, D., Stimpson, C., Touati, M., and der Veen, M. 2008. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2008: the second season of investigations of the Haua Fteah cave and its landscape, and further results from the initial 2007 fieldwork. Libyan Studies 39: 175222.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Antoniadou, A., Barton, H., Brooks, I., Candy, I., Drake, N., Farr, L., Hunt, C., Ibrahim, A.A., Inglis, R., Jones, S., Morales, J., Morley, I., Mutri, G., Rabett, R., Reynolds, T., Simpson, D., Twati, M., and White, K.. 2009. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2009: the third season of investigations of the Haua Fteah cave and its landscape, and further results from the 2007–2008 fieldwork. Libyan Studies 40: 141.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Antoniadou, A., Armitage, S., Brooks, I., Candy, I., Connell, K., Douka, K., Drake, N., Farr, L., Hill, E., Hunt, C., Inglis, R., Jones, S., Lane, C., Lucarini, G., Meneely, J., Morales, J., Mutri, G., Prendergast, A., Rabett, R., Reade, H., Reynolds, T., Russell, N., Simpson, D., Smith, B., Stimpson, C., Twati, M., and White, K. 2010. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2010: the fourth season of investigations of the Haua Fteah cave and its landscape, and further results from the 2007–2000 fieldwork. Libyan Studies 41: 6388.Google Scholar
Barker, G., Bennett, P., Farr, L., Hill, E., Hunt, C., Lucarini, G., Morales, J., Mutri, G., Prendergast, A., Pryor, A., Rabett, R., Reynolds, T., and Twati, M., 2012. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2012: the fifth season of investigations of the Haua Fteah cave. Libyan Studies 43: 115136.Google Scholar
Barth, H., 1857. Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa. Longman, London.Google Scholar
Barton, H., Mutri, G., Hill, E., Farr, L., and Barker, G. 2018. Use of grass seed resources c.31 ka by modern humans at the Haua Fteah cave, northeast Libya. Journal of Archaeological Science 99: 99111.Google Scholar
Behnke, R. H., 1980. The Herders of Cyrenaica: Ecology, Economy and Kinship among the Bedouin of Eastern Libya. University of Illinois Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Bregman, A.J., 1983. Synesius of Cyrene: Philosopher-Bishop. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Brogan, O., 1964. The Roman remains in the Wadi el-Amud. Libya Antiqua 1: 4756.Google Scholar
Buzaian, A., 2019. Olive Presses and Oil Production in Cyrenaica (North-East Libya). Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Leicester .Google Scholar
Douka, K., Jacobs, Z., Lane, C., Grün, R., Farr, L., Hunt, C., Inglis, R.H., Reynolds, T., Albert, P., Aubert, M., Cullen, V., Hill, E., Kinsley, L., Roberts, R.G., Tomlinson, E.L., Wulf, S., and Barker, G. 2014. The chronostratigraphy of the Haua Fteah cave (Cyrenaica, Northeast Libya). Journal of Human Evolution 66: 3963.Google Scholar
Drake, N.A., Breeze, P.S., and Parker, A.G. 2013. Paleoclimate in the Saharan and Arabian deserts during the Middle Palaeolithic and the potential for human dispersals. Quaternary International 300: 4861.Google Scholar
Farr, L., and Jones, S. 2014. Spatial and temporal variation in North African and Southwest Asian palaoenvironmental and archaeological records during Marine Isotope Stage 4. In Boyle, K., Rabett, R., and Hunt, C. (eds.) Living in the Landscape: Essays in Honour of Graeme Barker. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge: 5981.Google Scholar
Farr, L., Lane, R., Abdulazeez, F., Bennett, P., Holman, J., Marasi, A., Prendergast, A., Al-zweyi, M. and Barker, G. 2014. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2013: the seventh season of excavations in the Haua Fteah cave. Libyan Studies 45: 163173.Google Scholar
Goodchild, RG. 1951. Roman sites on the Tarhuna plateau of Tripolitania. Papers of the British School at Rome 19: 4365.Google Scholar
Goodchild, R.G., and Ward-Perkins, J.B. 1949. The Limes Tripolitanus in the light of recent discoveries. Journal of Roman Studies 39: 8195.Google Scholar
Hill, E.A., 2016. The Radiocarbon Dating of Terrestrial Molluscs in North East Libya. Unpublished PhD thesis, Queens University Belfast.Google Scholar
Hublin, J.-J., 2000. Modern-non-modern hominid interactions: a Mediterranean perspective. In Bar-Yosef, O. and Pilbeam, D. (eds.), The Geography of Neandertals and Modern Humans in Europe and the Greater Mediterranean. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard, Peabody Museum Bulletin 8: 157182.Google Scholar
Hunt, C., Davison, J., Inglis, R., Farr, L., Simpson, D., el-Rishi, H., and Barker, G. 2010. Site formation processes in caves: the Holocene sediments of the Haua Fteah, Cyrenaica, Libya. Journal of Archaeological Science 37: 16001611.Google Scholar
Hunt, C.O., Reynolds, T.G., El-Rishi, H., Buzaian, A., Hill, E., and Barker, G. 2011a. Resource pressure and environmental change on the North African littoral: Epipalaeolithic to Roman gastropods from Cyrenaica, Libya. Quaternary International 244: 1526.Google Scholar
Hunt, C.O., Brooks, I., Meneely, J., Brown, D., Buzaian, A., and Barker, G. 2011b. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2011b: Late Holocene environments and human activity from a cave fill in Cyrenaica, Libya. Libyan Studies 42: 7787.Google Scholar
Hurst, H., 1975. Excavations at Carthage. First interim report. The Antiquaries Journal 55: 1140.Google Scholar
Inglis, R.H., French, C., Farr, L., Hunt, C.O., Jones, S.C., Reynolds, T. and Barker, G. 2017. Sediment micromorphology and site formation processes during the Middle to Later Stone Ages at the Haua Fteah Cave, Cyrenaica, Libya. Geoarchaeology 33: 328348.Google Scholar
Jacobs, Z., Li, B., Farr, L., Hill, E., Hunt, C., Jones, S., Rabett, R., Reynolds, T., Roberts, R.G., Simpson, D., and Barker, G. 2017. The chronostratigraphy of the Haua Fteah cave (Cyrenaica, northeast Libya) II — optical dating of early human occupation during Marine Isotope Stages 4, 5 and 6. Journal of Human Evolution 105: 6988.Google Scholar
Johnson, D., 1973. Jabal al-Akhdar, Cyrenaica: an Historical Geography of Settlement and Livelihood. University of Chicago Department of Geography Research Papers, Chicago.Google Scholar
Jones, S, Antoniadou, A., Barton, H., Drake, N., Farr, L., Hunt, C., Inglis, R., Reynolds, T., White, K., and Barker, G. 2016. Patterns of hominin occupation and cultural diversity across the Gebel Akhdar of Northern Libya over the last 200 ka. In Jones, S. and Stewart, B. (eds), Africa from MIS 6–2: Population Dynamics and Palaeoenvironments. Springer, Dordrecht: 7799.Google Scholar
Lloyd, J.A. (ed.). 1977. Excavations at Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi (Berenice): Buildings, Coins, Inscriptions, Architectural Decoration. Department of Antiquities, Tripoli: Supplement to Libya Antiqua.Google Scholar
Lloyd, J.A. (ed.). 1979. Excavations at Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi (Berenice): the Excavations. Department of Antiquities, Tripoli: Supplement to Libya Antiqua.Google Scholar
Lloyd, J.A. (ed.). 1982. Excavations at Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi (Berenice): the Animal Bones and Coarse Pottery. Department of Antiquities, Tripoli: Supplement to Libya Antiqua.Google Scholar
Lloyd, J.A. (ed.). 1985. Excavations at Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi (Berenice): the Fine Pottery. Department of Antiquities, Tripoli: Supplement to Libya Antiqua.Google Scholar
Lucarini, G., & Mutri, G. 2014. Microlithism and landscape exploitation along the Cyrenaican coast between the Late Pleistocene and the Holocene: a matter of continuity. In Boyle, K., Rabett, R. and Hunt, C. (eds.), Living in the Landscape. Essays in Honour of Graeme Barker. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge: 109120.Google Scholar
Lucarini, G., Radini, A., Barton, H., and Barker, G. 2016. The exploitation of wild plants in Neolithic North Africa: a functional analysis of ground stone tools from the Haua Fteah cave, Cyrenaica, Libya. Quaternary International 410: 7792.Google Scholar
McBurney, C.B.M., 1960. The Stone Age of Northern Africa. Penguin Books, London.Google Scholar
McBurney, C.B.M., 1967. The Haua Fteah in Cyrenaica and the Stone Age of the South-East Mediterranean. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
McBurney, C.B.M., Trevor, J.C., and Wells, L.H. 1953. A fossil human mandible from a Levalloiso-Mousterian horizon in Cyrenaica. Nature 192: 685687.Google Scholar
Morales, J. (2010). The macrobotanical remains. In Barker et al. 2010: 7678.Google Scholar
Nachtigal, G., 1879. Sahara und Sahel. Graz: Akademische Druck u Verlagsaustalt.Google Scholar
Prendergast, A.L., Stevens, R.E., O'Connell, T.E., Fadlalak, A., Touati, M., Al Muzeni, A., Schone, B.R., Hunt, C., and Barker, G. 2016a. Changing patterns of eastern Mediterranean shellfish exploitation in the Late Glacial and Early Holocene: oxygen isotope evidence from gastropods in Epipalaeolithic to Neolithic human occupation layers at the Haua Fteah, Libya. Quaternary International 407: 8093.Google Scholar
Prendergast, A.L., Stevens, R.E., O'Connell, T.C., Hill, E., Hunt, C., and Barker, G. 2016b. A late Pleistocene refugium in Mediterranean North Africa? Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction from stable isotope analysis of land snail shells (Haua Fteah, Libya). Quaternary Science Reviews 139: 94109.Google Scholar
Prendergast, A.L., Stevens, R.E., Hill, E.A., Barker, G., Hunt, C., and O'Connell, T.C. 2017. Carbon isotope signatures from land snail shells: implications for palaeovegetation reconstruction in the eastern Mediterranean. Quaternary International doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2014.12.053.Google Scholar
Rabett, R., Farr, l., Hill, E., Hunt, C., Lane, R., Moseley, H., Stimpson, C. and Barker, G. 2013. The Cyrenaican Prehistory Project 2012: the sixth season of excavations in the Haua Fteah cave. Libyan Studies 44: 113125.Google Scholar
Reynolds, JM. (ed.). 1976. Libyan Studies: Select Papers of the Late R.G. Goodchild. London: Elek.Google Scholar
Reynolds, T. 2014. Possible population histories in North Cyrenaica during the MSA/Early Upper Palaeolithic. In Boyle, K., Rabett, R. and Hunt, C. (eds.), Living in the Landscape: Essays in Honour of Graeme Barker. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research: 4958.Google Scholar