This paper synthesises the data and results of the Konya Regional Archaeological Survey Project (2016-2020) in order to address the earliest evidence for cities and states on the Konya and Karaman plains, central Turkey. A nested and integrative approach is developed that draws on a wide range of spatially extensive datasets to outline meaningful trends in settlement, water management and regional defensive systems during the Bronze and Iron Ages. The significance of the regional centre of Türkmen-Karahöyük for a reconstruction of early state polities between the 13th and eighth centuries BCE is addressed. In light of this regional analysis, it is tentatively suggested that, during the Late Bronze Age, Türkmen-Karahöyük was the location of the city of Tará untašša, briefly the Hittite capital during the reign of Muwatalli II. More assuredly, based on the analysis of the newly discovered Middle Iron Age TÜRKMEN-KARAHÖYÜK 1 inscription, it is proposed that Türkmen-Karahöyük was the seat of a kingdom during the eighth century BCE that likely encompassed the Konya and Karaman plains.
CITATION STYLE
Massa, M., Bachhuber, C., Şahin, F., Erpehlivan, H., Osborne, J., & Lauricella, A. J. (2020). A landscape-oriented approach to urbanisation and early state formation on the Konya and Karaman plains, Turkey. Anatolian Studies, 70, 45–75. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0066154620000034
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