TY - JOUR
T1 - Death and Depths
T2 - Exploring Early Fifth Millennium bce Ritual Performance in Har Sifsof Cave, Upper Galilee (Israel)
AU - Ullman, Micka
AU - May, Hila
AU - Ya'aran, Shemesh
AU - Langford, Boaz
AU - Hershkovitz, Israel
AU - Chavoinik, Liron
AU - Marom, Nimrod
AU - Lokshin Gnezdilov, Dariya
AU - Frumkin, Amos
AU - Davidovich, Uri
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Exploring and using remote segments of complex karst systems represents the incorporation of one of the wildest and most demanding natural environments into the cultural fabric of Neolithic-Chalcolithic village-based communities in the Levant. The unique preservation of an early fifth-millennium bce activity phase in Har Sifsof Cave in northern Israel allows for a detailed investigation of an early case of human interaction with the deep underground in this region. The study of archaeological assemblages, environmental and speleological data and spatial distribution of cultural remains form the basis for interpreting the activity inside the cave in the context of fertility cults. The rituals conducted in Har Sifsof Cave revolve around the agricultural cycle of cereal grains and include the interment of multiple individuals, some of whom were buried in remote cul-de-sac passages. The emergence of complex caves as favourable off-settlement arenas dedicated to ritual activity during the later stages of Neolithization marks a conscious effort of 'domestication' of these unique wildscapes, while sowing the seeds for the enduring connection observed in later Levantine societies between mortuary rituals, fertility and the underground.
AB - Exploring and using remote segments of complex karst systems represents the incorporation of one of the wildest and most demanding natural environments into the cultural fabric of Neolithic-Chalcolithic village-based communities in the Levant. The unique preservation of an early fifth-millennium bce activity phase in Har Sifsof Cave in northern Israel allows for a detailed investigation of an early case of human interaction with the deep underground in this region. The study of archaeological assemblages, environmental and speleological data and spatial distribution of cultural remains form the basis for interpreting the activity inside the cave in the context of fertility cults. The rituals conducted in Har Sifsof Cave revolve around the agricultural cycle of cereal grains and include the interment of multiple individuals, some of whom were buried in remote cul-de-sac passages. The emergence of complex caves as favourable off-settlement arenas dedicated to ritual activity during the later stages of Neolithization marks a conscious effort of 'domestication' of these unique wildscapes, while sowing the seeds for the enduring connection observed in later Levantine societies between mortuary rituals, fertility and the underground.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105000033739&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/s0959774325000022
DO - 10.1017/s0959774325000022
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000033739
SN - 0959-7743
JO - Cambridge Archaeological Journal
JF - Cambridge Archaeological Journal
ER -