Books by Steve Renette
Articles by Steve Renette

Journal of Archaeological Studies, 2024
Kani Shaie is an important archaeological site in the Sulaymaniyah Province of Iraqi Kurdistan. S... more Kani Shaie is an important archaeological site in the Sulaymaniyah Province of Iraqi Kurdistan. Sitting in the center of the Bazyan Valley, it is located on a major communication axis that connects northern Mesopotamia via Kirkuk with the central Zagros Mountains of western Iran. Its main occupation spans the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age, from ca. 6000 to 2000 BCE. Later occupation of the Late Bronze Age, Neo-Assyrian period, and the Hellenistic-Parthian period is also well- represented in the lower mounded area of the site. Throughout these millennia, Kani Shaie was a major focus of settlement within the Bazyan Valley. While never reaching more than 3ha in size, occupation in each period attests to the settlement’s function as a local center that was connected within the exchange networks of southwest Asia. As such, Kani Shaie is of particular importance to connect the archaeology of western Iran with the Mesopotamian world. In this article, we present the excavation results of the 2024 season when two impressive architectural complexes were investigated. The first dating to the beginning of the Early Bronze Age, ca. 3000 BCE, in the aftermath of the collapse of the Uruk exchange network. The second belonging to the Hellenistic-Parthian period and likely connected to the southern expansion of the Adiabene kingdom.
Renette, S., Catanzariti, A., Tanaka, T. & Tomé, A. 2024. "Rural and Small, yet Connected and Complex. The Early Bronze Age Occupation at Kani Shaie and Ban Qala," in: Couturaud, B. (ed.) Early Bronze Age in Iraqi Kurdistan, BAH 226, Beirut: Presses de l'Ifpo, 135-153. Early Bronze Age in Iraqi Kurdistan (BAH 226), 2024

Early Bronze Age in Iraqi Kurdistan (BAH 226), 2024
The site of Kani Shaie is located at the centre of the Bazyan Valley, which straddles the road be... more The site of Kani Shaie is located at the centre of the Bazyan Valley, which straddles the road between Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah in southern Iraqi Kurdistan. The site has a maximum extent of 3 ha consisting of a mound 14 m high that measures ca. 60 m at its base, and a flat to slightly mounded area. Based on current evidence from excavations at the site between 2013 and 2016 and an intensive surface collection in 2018, Kani Shaie was a local centre between ca. 5000 to 2300 BCE, during the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (henceforth EBA), after which the low mounded area was periodically inhabited for relatively short periods from the Late Bronze Age until the late Ottoman period. The site’s largest extent was most likely during the 4th millennium BCE (LC 3-5), while during the 3rd millennium BCE (EBA) settlement was largely restricted to the main mound. Despite the small size of the EBA settlement at only 0.5 ha, excavations revealed that Kani Shaie was not merely a small village. Alongside a wide range of painted ceramic styles with connections to all neighbouring regions (Ninevite 5 from the upper Trans-Tigridian region; Scarlet Ware from the Diyala and southern Trans-Tigridian region; Hasan Ali Ware and Painted Orange Ware from northwestern Iran), EBA occupation levels contained seal-impressed artefacts indicative of diverse administrative practices. Preliminary analysis of these artefacts and the glyptic imagery allows for an initial assessment of sealing practices at Kani Shaie. While there is no evidence for a hierarchical bureaucracy, the local community did develop a range of administrative practices to organize collective resources and secure the accumulation of foodstuffs, possibly in the context of periodic feasting events.
Renette, S. 2023. "The Historical Geography of Western Iran: An Archaeological Perspective on the Location of Kimaš," in: Tavernier, J., Gorris, E. & De Graef, K. (eds.) Susa and Elam II - History, Language, Religion and Culture, MDP 59, Leiden: Brill, 299-339. Susa and Elam II, 2023
Updated discussion of the lands of Kimaš, Hurti, and Harši with a proposal of their location in t... more Updated discussion of the lands of Kimaš, Hurti, and Harši with a proposal of their location in the Kuhdasht, Khorramabad, and Borujerd in the central Zagros. This location has significant implications for our reconstruction of Šulgi's military campaigns, especially his strategy to access overland routes to the Iranian Plateau that bypass Anšan. This new historical geography of the central Zagros also significantly changes our understanding of central Zagros societies at the end of the third millennium BCE.

BASOR, 2023
A wave of new fieldwork in Iraqi Kurdistan during the past decade offers the opportunity to study... more A wave of new fieldwork in Iraqi Kurdistan during the past decade offers the opportunity to study societies of the Islamic periods from an archaeological perspective. Unfortunately, our current understanding of ceramic typology and chronology in the region still hinges overwhelmingly on datasets from major urban centers and the long-standing analysis of the technological development of glazed wares. The material culture of rural communities, on the other hand, is poorly understood. This causes problems for the reconstruction of the social and economic history of Islamic-era societies, and for survey projects that aim to assess longue durée changes in settlement patterns based on chronological assessments of surface collections. This article presents a coherent corpus of Middle Islamic pottery retrieved from a series of large pits from the site of Kani Shaie in Sulaymaniyah Governorate, Iraqi Kurdistan. Given the small size of the site, the lack of contemporary settlement remains, and the nature of the ceramic assemblage, it is proposed that these pits were used to dump refuse by a small nomadic community or household that returned to the site for a number of years in the 11th-13th century C.E. This small dataset offers glimpses into the lifeways of people who inhabited the border zone between the urbanized lowlands of Mesopotamia and the Zagros Highlands.

Renette, S., Lewis, M.P., Wencel, M.M., Farahani, A. & Tomé, A.G. 2022. "Establishing an Absolute Chronological Framework for the Late Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age in Iraqi Kurdistan: Radiocarbon Dates from Kani Shaie," Radiocarbon, doi:10.1017/RDC.2022.72 Radiocarbon, 2022
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The possibility to conduct new fieldwork projects in previously largely unexplored Iraqi Kurdistan during the past decade has reinvigorated research into the transformative fifth to third millennium BCE (Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age) in southwest Asia when human societies grew from small, autonomous villages to centralized states with urban centers. Major efforts to synchronize stratigraphic sequences from various sites in order to reach a consensus on archaeological periodization and to identify the absolute chronology of societal transformations necessarily focused on available datasets from Syria, Turkey, and Iran. However, increased understanding of differences in communities’ adoption, adaptation, or rejection of new forms of technologies and social organization demands the need for constructing region-specific absolute chronological models for comparative analysis. Such work is particularly challenging in the case of Iraqi Kurdistan where sites frequently have major hiatuses in occupation. The site of Kani Shaie (Sulaymaniyah Governorate) offers the rare opportunity to investigate the Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age with a largely uninterrupted sequence of occupation from ca. 5500 to 2500 BCE. This paper presents a series of fourteen radiocarbon dates, representing every archaeological period in this timeframe, as a first step toward the construction of a regional absolute chronology.

Journal of ORIGINI, 2021
In 2012, the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism of Kurdistan Provi... more In 2012, the General Directorate of Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism of Kurdistan Province excavated a series of small, stratigraphic soundings at the site of Tepe Namashir in the
northwestern part of Kurdistan Province, Iran. These excavations retrieved a sequence of occupation
that spanned the fifth millennium BCE (Early to Late Chalcolithic). Interestingly, while the earlier
occupation was characterized by Dalma pottery that is native to the Zagros region, the later occupation included increasing influences from northern Mesopotamia, first with the introduction of
small amounts of late ’Ubaid sherds followed by an increasing dominance of plain wares characterized by heavy chaff temper (Chaff-Faced Ware). As such, the excavation results from Tepe Namashir
shed light on questions regarding the interaction between Mesopotamian and Zagros communities
during the fifth millennium BCE based on the distribution patterns of ceramic traditions.

Iranica Antiqua, 2021
Between 1975-78, L.D. Levine and his team conducted the largest survey project in the Zagros Moun... more Between 1975-78, L.D. Levine and his team conducted the largest survey project in the Zagros Mountains-the Mahidasht Survey Project-focusing on four contiguous plains in Kermanshah Province that straddled the major route between Mesopotamia and the Iranian highlands. Four weeks of excavations at the site of Chogha Maran documented a sequence of settlements of the fifth and third millennia BCE. The results from these excavations form to this day the only stratified dataset for these periods in the western central Zagros. The Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age pottery and administrative artifacts from Chogha Maran reveal distinctly local traditions that differ significantly from the contemporary settlement at Godin Tepe in the Kangavar Plain. This article presents the stratigraphy and artifacts from Chogha Maran based on archival research at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto and a reanalysis of a large corpus of clay sealings and tokens at the National Museum of Iran in Tehran. Our analysis of this material traces the emergence of small-scale, yet complex societies in the central Zagros, which were fully integrated in the highland-lowland interaction networks while maintaining distinctly local cultural traditions expressed most clearly in potting practices and glyptic imagery.

Iraq, 2021
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Kani Shaie is a small archaeological site in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, centrally located in the Bazian Basin, a narrow valley at the western edge of the Zagros Mountains along the major route between Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah. Its main mound was inhabited almost continuously from the fifth to the middle of the third millennium, c. 5000–2500 B.C.E. This period of Mesopotamian prehistory, corresponding to the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age, witnessed major transformations such as initial urbanism and intensification of interregional interaction networks. The recent resurgence of fieldwork in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq is beginning to reveal local trajectories that do not always match the established chronological framework, which is largely based on changes in ceramic technology and styles observed in northern Mesopotamia. Here, we discuss the ceramic sequence retrieved from a step trench at Kani Shaie spanning the entire Late Chalcolithic (c. 4600–3100 B.C.E.). A bottom-up approach to potting traditions at the site allows an initial assessment of the relationship between local communities in the Zagros foothills and large-scale developments in the Mesopotamian world. We argue that the evidence from Kani Shaie reflects a long process in which different communities of practice made active choices of adopting, adapting, or rejecting non-local cultural practices.

Paléorient, 2020
In the past two decades, Iranian archaeologists have conducted numerous surveys and stratigraphic... more In the past two decades, Iranian archaeologists have conducted numerous surveys and stratigraphic soundings throughout the Zagros region of western Iran. Their published work is gradually filling in the major geographical and chronological gaps in our knowledge of the Late Chalcolithic period. At the same time, new research on this period in the Zagros Piedmont of Iraqi Kurdistan is rapidly producing large amounts of data. Unfortunately, scholarship between the two regions is divided by a national border and a linguistic barrier in publications, which still obstructs necessary communication. This article summarizes the current state of knowledge on the Late Chalcolithic in the northern and central Zagros Mountains in order to bridge this artificial divide. Based on the results of Iranian archaeological projects, we propose an updated chronological framework for the Zagros that is in line with recent Mesopotamian and central Iranian models.

by Dorian Q Fuller, Lisa Janz, Maria Marta Sampietro, Philip I. Buckland, Agustín A Diez Castillo, Ciler Cilingiroglu, Gary Feinman, Peter Hiscock, Peter Hommel, Maureece Levin, Henrik B Lindskoug, Scott Macrae, John M. Marston, Alicia R Ventresca-Miller, Ayushi Nayak, Tanya M Peres, Lucas Proctor, Steve Renette, Gwen Robbins Schug, Peter Schmidt, Oula Seitsonen, Arkadiusz Sołtysiak, Robert Spengler, Sean Ulm, David Wright, and Muhammad Zahir Science, 2019
Environmentally transformative human use of land accelerated with the emergence of 5 agriculture,... more Environmentally transformative human use of land accelerated with the emergence of 5 agriculture, but the extent, trajectory, and implications of these early changes are not well understood. An empirical global assessment of land use from 10,000 BP to 1850 CE reveals a planet largely transformed by hunter-gatherers, farmers and pastoralists by 3,000 years ago, significantly earlier than land-use reconstructions commonly used by Earth scientists. Synthesis of knowledge contributed by over 250 archaeologists highlighted gaps in archaeological 10 expertise and data quality, which peaked at 2000 BP and in traditionally studied and wealthier regions. Archaeological reconstruction of global land-use history illuminates the deep roots of Earth's transformation through millennia of increasingly intensive land use, challenging the emerging Anthropocene paradigm that anthropogenic global environmental change is mostly recent. 15 One Sentence Summary: A map of synthesized archaeological knowledge on land use reveals a planet transformed by hunter-gatherers, farmers and pastoralists by 3,000 years ago.
Authors not found on Academia:
Torben Rick, Tim Denham, Jonathan Driver, Heather Thakar, Amber L. Johnson, R. Alan Covey, Jason Herrmann, Carrie Hritz, Catherine Kearns, Dan Lawrence, Michael Morrison, Robert J. Speakman, Martina L. Steffen, Keir M. Strickland, M. Cemre Ustunkaya, Jeremy Powell, Alexa Thornton.
Copyright ©2016 The Penn Museum. This article first appeared in Expedition magazine, Volume 58, I... more Copyright ©2016 The Penn Museum. This article first appeared in Expedition magazine, Volume 58, Issue 1, 2016, pages 16-23
Iran, 2015
Our understanding of cultural and political developments in western Iran during the third millenn... more Our understanding of cultural and political developments in western Iran during the third millennium BC relies on the chronological correlation with other regions. The Early Bronze Age in the western Zagros region is marked by a monochrome painted ceramic tradition, best known from the type site Godin Tepe. A set of Godin style related sherds discovered at al-Hiba in south Iraq during the early 1970s provides the only chronological anchor point to date the early phases of this tradition. A detailed stylistic analysis of these sherds indicates the need to push back the traditional dates of the Godin sequence significantly.
Renette, S. 2018. "The Early Bronze Age Zagros Interaction Sphere: A View from Kani Shaie," in: Azizi Kharanghi, M.H., Khanipour, M. and Naseri, R. (ed.) Proceedings of the International Congress of Young Archaeologists, Tehran, October 11-14, 2015, Tehran: Iranology Foundation, 90-102. in: Naseri, R. et al. (eds.) Proceedings of the International Congress of Young Archaeologists, T... more in: Naseri, R. et al. (eds.) Proceedings of the International Congress of Young Archaeologists, Tehran, October 11-14, 2015
Feasting in the Archaeology and Texts of the Bible and the Ancient Near East, 2014
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Books by Steve Renette
Articles by Steve Renette
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The possibility to conduct new fieldwork projects in previously largely unexplored Iraqi Kurdistan during the past decade has reinvigorated research into the transformative fifth to third millennium BCE (Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age) in southwest Asia when human societies grew from small, autonomous villages to centralized states with urban centers. Major efforts to synchronize stratigraphic sequences from various sites in order to reach a consensus on archaeological periodization and to identify the absolute chronology of societal transformations necessarily focused on available datasets from Syria, Turkey, and Iran. However, increased understanding of differences in communities’ adoption, adaptation, or rejection of new forms of technologies and social organization demands the need for constructing region-specific absolute chronological models for comparative analysis. Such work is particularly challenging in the case of Iraqi Kurdistan where sites frequently have major hiatuses in occupation. The site of Kani Shaie (Sulaymaniyah Governorate) offers the rare opportunity to investigate the Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age with a largely uninterrupted sequence of occupation from ca. 5500 to 2500 BCE. This paper presents a series of fourteen radiocarbon dates, representing every archaeological period in this timeframe, as a first step toward the construction of a regional absolute chronology.
northwestern part of Kurdistan Province, Iran. These excavations retrieved a sequence of occupation
that spanned the fifth millennium BCE (Early to Late Chalcolithic). Interestingly, while the earlier
occupation was characterized by Dalma pottery that is native to the Zagros region, the later occupation included increasing influences from northern Mesopotamia, first with the introduction of
small amounts of late ’Ubaid sherds followed by an increasing dominance of plain wares characterized by heavy chaff temper (Chaff-Faced Ware). As such, the excavation results from Tepe Namashir
shed light on questions regarding the interaction between Mesopotamian and Zagros communities
during the fifth millennium BCE based on the distribution patterns of ceramic traditions.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/iraq/article/late-chalcolithic-ceramic-development-in-southern-iraqi-kurdistan-the-stratigraphic-sounding-at-kani-shaie/E57546942D44461CE5F867B24CA27764
Kani Shaie is a small archaeological site in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, centrally located in the Bazian Basin, a narrow valley at the western edge of the Zagros Mountains along the major route between Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah. Its main mound was inhabited almost continuously from the fifth to the middle of the third millennium, c. 5000–2500 B.C.E. This period of Mesopotamian prehistory, corresponding to the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age, witnessed major transformations such as initial urbanism and intensification of interregional interaction networks. The recent resurgence of fieldwork in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq is beginning to reveal local trajectories that do not always match the established chronological framework, which is largely based on changes in ceramic technology and styles observed in northern Mesopotamia. Here, we discuss the ceramic sequence retrieved from a step trench at Kani Shaie spanning the entire Late Chalcolithic (c. 4600–3100 B.C.E.). A bottom-up approach to potting traditions at the site allows an initial assessment of the relationship between local communities in the Zagros foothills and large-scale developments in the Mesopotamian world. We argue that the evidence from Kani Shaie reflects a long process in which different communities of practice made active choices of adopting, adapting, or rejecting non-local cultural practices.
Authors not found on Academia:
Torben Rick, Tim Denham, Jonathan Driver, Heather Thakar, Amber L. Johnson, R. Alan Covey, Jason Herrmann, Carrie Hritz, Catherine Kearns, Dan Lawrence, Michael Morrison, Robert J. Speakman, Martina L. Steffen, Keir M. Strickland, M. Cemre Ustunkaya, Jeremy Powell, Alexa Thornton.
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https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/radiocarbon/article/establishing-an-absolute-chronological-framework-for-the-late-chalcolithic-to-early-bronze-age-in-iraqi-kurdistan-radiocarbon-dates-from-kani-shaie/01EFB083A77141A98ABE99434322BC27
The possibility to conduct new fieldwork projects in previously largely unexplored Iraqi Kurdistan during the past decade has reinvigorated research into the transformative fifth to third millennium BCE (Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age) in southwest Asia when human societies grew from small, autonomous villages to centralized states with urban centers. Major efforts to synchronize stratigraphic sequences from various sites in order to reach a consensus on archaeological periodization and to identify the absolute chronology of societal transformations necessarily focused on available datasets from Syria, Turkey, and Iran. However, increased understanding of differences in communities’ adoption, adaptation, or rejection of new forms of technologies and social organization demands the need for constructing region-specific absolute chronological models for comparative analysis. Such work is particularly challenging in the case of Iraqi Kurdistan where sites frequently have major hiatuses in occupation. The site of Kani Shaie (Sulaymaniyah Governorate) offers the rare opportunity to investigate the Chalcolithic to Early Bronze Age with a largely uninterrupted sequence of occupation from ca. 5500 to 2500 BCE. This paper presents a series of fourteen radiocarbon dates, representing every archaeological period in this timeframe, as a first step toward the construction of a regional absolute chronology.
northwestern part of Kurdistan Province, Iran. These excavations retrieved a sequence of occupation
that spanned the fifth millennium BCE (Early to Late Chalcolithic). Interestingly, while the earlier
occupation was characterized by Dalma pottery that is native to the Zagros region, the later occupation included increasing influences from northern Mesopotamia, first with the introduction of
small amounts of late ’Ubaid sherds followed by an increasing dominance of plain wares characterized by heavy chaff temper (Chaff-Faced Ware). As such, the excavation results from Tepe Namashir
shed light on questions regarding the interaction between Mesopotamian and Zagros communities
during the fifth millennium BCE based on the distribution patterns of ceramic traditions.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/iraq/article/late-chalcolithic-ceramic-development-in-southern-iraqi-kurdistan-the-stratigraphic-sounding-at-kani-shaie/E57546942D44461CE5F867B24CA27764
Kani Shaie is a small archaeological site in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, centrally located in the Bazian Basin, a narrow valley at the western edge of the Zagros Mountains along the major route between Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah. Its main mound was inhabited almost continuously from the fifth to the middle of the third millennium, c. 5000–2500 B.C.E. This period of Mesopotamian prehistory, corresponding to the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age, witnessed major transformations such as initial urbanism and intensification of interregional interaction networks. The recent resurgence of fieldwork in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq is beginning to reveal local trajectories that do not always match the established chronological framework, which is largely based on changes in ceramic technology and styles observed in northern Mesopotamia. Here, we discuss the ceramic sequence retrieved from a step trench at Kani Shaie spanning the entire Late Chalcolithic (c. 4600–3100 B.C.E.). A bottom-up approach to potting traditions at the site allows an initial assessment of the relationship between local communities in the Zagros foothills and large-scale developments in the Mesopotamian world. We argue that the evidence from Kani Shaie reflects a long process in which different communities of practice made active choices of adopting, adapting, or rejecting non-local cultural practices.
Authors not found on Academia:
Torben Rick, Tim Denham, Jonathan Driver, Heather Thakar, Amber L. Johnson, R. Alan Covey, Jason Herrmann, Carrie Hritz, Catherine Kearns, Dan Lawrence, Michael Morrison, Robert J. Speakman, Martina L. Steffen, Keir M. Strickland, M. Cemre Ustunkaya, Jeremy Powell, Alexa Thornton.
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This paper will present new results of the Marivan Plain Survey project (MPAP) that fill this gap. The site of Qala Zewa shows evidence for continuous occupation during the Late Neolithic through Early Chalcolithic. Pottery from this site shows clear connections with the Mahi Dasht/Kermanshah region based on sherds that have good parallels in the Sarab and J ware traditions. While these results demonstrate that communities inhabiting the more difficult to access intermontane valleys actively participated in the major socioeconomic changes of the Neolithic, planned future work will focus on reconstructing settlement patterns, chronology, and variations in subsistence economies.
virtual reality systems and 3D printing, have been pushing boundaries in the ways that archaeological fieldwork,
research and dissemination are being conducted.
The application of these digital technologies has opened a wide range of possibilities and solutions in the preservation
and dissemination of archaeological and cultural heritage, playing an especially important role in unstable socio-political
contexts. The sites of Tell Beydar (Syria) and Kani Shaie (Iraqi Kurdistan) were thus chosen as case-studies where modern
approaches to archaeological heritage have been developed.