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Figure
16: Red-slipped jug with incised mark. Maximum diameter: 26cm.
Figure
17: The ten marks that were incised on pottery found during
the 2000 season.
Figure
18: A tentative working reconstruction
of the "Cappadocia Gate", which omits any roofing of the
passage.
'Palace Complex'. The marks are
usually single, although one appears to comprise two signs, and it
can be seen that they were scratched in after the pots had been fired.
Several have been found high on the shoulders of jugs, where they
were incised behind or slightly to the right of the handle. This careful
placement argues against idle doodling and suggests that they may
be representative of some kind of deliberate record keeping. The presence
of a mark on the funnel and another on a base shows that not all,
if any, of these marks were used to indicate capacities or contents.
Whether they represent potters marks, owner's marks or some form of
administrative notation connected with the use of the vessels is uncertain.
The marks, whatever their function, demonstrate that there was some
level of record keeping, whether or not it was truly literate. Further,
it might well be expected that the language of this particular system
was a local (Anatolian) one. If this can be substantiated, it raises
the possibility that these few signs represent the first ever evidence
that the Cappadocian language was written in an alphabetic script
with close affinities to Phrygian.
The 'Cappadocia Gate'
New architectural reconstructions and graphic simulations of the
'Cappadocia Gate' provide realistic impressions of the original appearance
of this impressive monument (Fig. 18).
These visualisations also highlight a number of outstanding architectural
problems that will perhaps be resolved through the complete clearance
of the gateway passage and the adjacent internal chamber over the
next three seasons. Outstanding issues include the nature of the original
road surface, which was presumably paved with stone, and the ways
in which the gate passage was drained. It may be presumed that the
outer gate passage was roofed over to provide access between the flanking
towers, particularly if the passage was narrower than shown in Figure
18.
Such an arrangement would have greatly enhanced the defensive properties
of the gate. It is not yet clear, however, whether such a walkway
over the passage would have been vaulted or carried on long, horizontal
beams. It seems possible that the sandstone battlements along the
front of the towers might also have been carried across the passage.
Depictions of Iron Age city gates from Assyria and Urartu suggest
that the passage battlements would have been at the same height as
the city wall rather than at the greater elevation of the towers.
The reconstruction shows sandstone battlements rising flush with the
wall, the weight being too great for support on overhanging parapets.
Many of the sandstone blocks, the use of which was apparently restricted
to the gate towers. have been exposed to sufficient heat for parts
or all of one face to have turned pink, which is clear evidence for
the incorporation of structural timber. Future clearance of the gate
might also determine the position of the double leaved doors that
would have once controlled movement through the passage.
Evidence of burning from the front of the eastern section of the glacis
could also be taken to suggest that timber shelters once stood on
top of the towers. The existence of some form of shelter from the
often extreme weather conditions would not be surprising.
A detailed proposal for conservation and limited reconstruction, which
addresses the twin concerns of preservation and the safety of visitors,
has been drawn up in advance of plans for further clearance and excavation
in and near the Gate.
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