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Hasanlu Lovers

The Hasanlu Lovers are a pair of human remains found at the Teppe Hasanlu archaeological site, located in the Naqadeh in the West Azerbaijan Province of Iran. Around 800 BCE, the city of Hasanlu, located in north-western Iran, was destroyed by an unknown invader. Inhabitants were slain and left where they fell. In 1973, the lovers were discovered by a team of archaeologists from the University of Pennsylvania led by Robert H. Dyson.[1][2]

Hasanlu Lovers
Born
Birth names unknown

Teppe Hasanlu – Iran
DiedAround 800 BCE
Teppe Hasanlu – Iran
Other names'Hasanlu Lovers'
Known forExcavated from the Hasanlu archaeological site by a team from Pennsylvania Museum led by Director Robert H. Dyson Jr in 1973
Notable workThe “lovers” were on display at the Penn Museum from the mid-1970s until the mid-1980s.

The two human skeletons were found together in a bin during excavations, seemingly embracing at the time of death,[3] with no other objects except a stone slab under the head of one skeleton. They died together around 800 BCE, during the last destruction of the Hasanlu.[3] Approximately 246 skeletons were found at the site altogether.[4] How the lovers died and ended up in the bin is still under speculation but both skeletons lack evidence of injury near the time of death and possibly died of asphyxiation.[5] They were exhibited at the Penn Museum from 1974 until the mid-1980s.[6]

The right skeleton, referred to as HAS 73-5-799 (SK 335), is lying on its back and the left skeleton, referred to as HAS 73-5-800 (SK 336), is lying on its left side facing SK 335.[3] When excavated, the skeletons were tested to determine various characteristics. Dental evidence suggest SK 335 was a young adult, possibly 19–22 years of age. Researchers identified the skeleton as male largely based on the pelvis. The skeleton had no apparent evidence of disease or healed lifetime injuries.[1][2][3] Skeleton SK 336 appeared to have been healthy in life; the skeleton had no apparent evidence of healed lifetimes injuries, and was estimated to have been aged to about 30–35 years.[1][2][3] Sex determination of the left skeleton was less definitive. Evidence suggests SK 336 was also male[7] after being originally identified as female.[4] The skeletons have been a subject of debate since they were first excavated.[3][5]

Archaeological record of Hasanlu edit

 
Map of Ancient Near East including Hasanlu

Hasanlu is an ancient Near Eastern site located in the Qadar River valley, on the southern shore of Lake Urmia in northwest Iran.[8][9] The city of Hasanlu was occupied consistently from the sixth millennium BCE to around 800 BCE, when the site was invaded and destroyed by fire.[9] In 1934–1936 Hasanlu was commercially dug by Sir Aurel Stein, a British archaeologist.[10] Then, in 1956, the Hasanlu Project was launched by the sponsorship of the University Museum of Pennsylvania, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Archaeological Service of Iran.[9] Following the launch of the Hasanlu Project, a team of archaeologists from Penn Museum led by Director Robert H. Dyson excavated the site from 1957 to 1974.[10] This team completed nine excavation campaigns, and the excavation of the site ended more than 40 years ago (as of in 2022).

Excavation of the site revealed burnt remains of huge mudbrick walls, thick layers of ash, skeletons, vessels, and more. Excavation exposed extensive destruction – evidence of the city’s invasion and arson. Archaeologists explain that the nature of the destruction resulted in the city being frozen in time, preserving buildings, artefacts, and skeletal remains.[8] Approximately 246 skeletons,[4] of a variety of ages and genders were found. The bodies were left where they were killed in the streets and in buildings. Some victims were found in groups, with head lacerations, and dismembered limbs which suggested mass executions had taken place.[8] Among the 246 skeletons found, two of them were the remains of the Hasanlu Lovers.

Who attacked Hasanlu is still unknown; the general academic consensus is that the Iranian Empire were the invaders, but the Assyrian Empire was also very prominent in the region. There is no indication from the skeletons themselves or from the artefacts exactly who the invaders were. The city of Hasanlu itself is considered protohistoric: there was no writing around the site, unlike sites in neighboring regions.[7] Because of this, archaeologists do not know how the people of Hasanlu would have identified themselves, who they were, or the language they would have spoken.

Rediscovery and excavation edit

 
Archaeological Site of Hasanlu: Figure 23.2. (Adapted) Plan of Hasanlu with the Hasanlu Lovers indicated by an arrow.[5]

The skeletal remains of the Hasanlu Lovers were found together in a plaster-lined brick bin with no other objects except a stone slab under the head of one skeleton.[3][11] The excavation took place in 1973, directed by Robert H. Dyson, Jr. Dr. Selinsky stated that the lovers perished together during the invasion of the site, around 800 BCE, during the last destruction of the Hasanlu,[3] but did not have any lethal wounds.[3] Archaeologist Oscar Muscarella suggests that the hole in the right skeleton's skull is not due to an injury, but the result of a blow created by a workman's pickaxe.[5] When discovered, the two skeletons were facing and embracing each other.[3] The skeleton on the left is lying on their left side, reaching with their right hand towards the skeleton on the right.

There is no definitive explanation as to how the two skeletons ended up in the bin – only assumptions. One assumption is that "they must have crawled into this bin, which was probably covered at the time, and escaped detection."[5] Since cause of death was not due to injury, archaeologists have concluded that the probable cause of death was asphyxiation,[5] when debris fell from the burning building, and sealed them in.

Scientific analysis edit

Anthropologists Page Selinsky and Janet Monge go into extensive detail about the DNA testing of the Hasanlu lovers and how the DNA testing[7] compares to the skeletal assessment of their biological sex.

The lovers were first sampled for specific isotopes to see if there were any differences in the skeletal series and the diets that they consumed. What the isotopic testing revealed was that the diets of the individuals were quite varied, but they were not patterned in any particular way. Isotopic signatures indicate that the diets of the residents of Hasanlu were varied, including wheat, barley, sheep and goats.[12] Isotopic signatures coming from oxygen revealed the lovers' settlement patterns; these oxygen isotopic signatures revealed that the lovers, and the other Hasanlu people, were all born and raised in the Hasanlu area.[7]

It was concluded by Selinsky and Monge that both individuals were male.[3][7] They came to this conclusion when comparing both the DNA analysis and skeletal assessment. Dr Selinsky stated that the pelvis was the single best criterion for estimating the sex of the skeletons as there are distinctive features between a female and a male pelvis.[7]

The skeleton on the right (referred to as SK 335) is lying on its back. The front portion of his pelvis was lost but when examining his sciatic notch, it was evident he was a male due to the very narrow gap which is a distinctive feature of the male pelvis.[7] As such, researchers identified the skeleton as male largely based on the pelvis. The skeleton had no apparent evidence of disease or healed lifetime injuries.[1][2][3]

For the left skeleton (SK 336), lying on its left side facing SK 335, the sex estimation was less clear, but overall research suggests a male: the cranium is distinctively male, while the pelvis is more mixed in its morphology.[3] At the time of excavation, this skeleton was originally identified as female.[5] This was because his sciatic notch was quite wide, a characteristic of a female pelvis, but the front portion of his pelvis which was retrieved from the site, had an acute angle in the front and was less pulled out than a female’s, which suggested the skeleton was a male.[7] The individual appeared to have been healthy in life, and the skeleton had no apparent evidence of healed lifetime injuries.[1][2][3] The sex of the lovers was confirmed from a bone sample for an ancient DNA analysis. The genetic determination of the Hasanlu lovers was male.[7]

The age of the two skeletons was also determined. Dental evidence suggests that the right skeleton was a young adult or subadult, estimated to be aged 19–22 years old,[3] as he has third molars, and his wisdom teeth recently grew. His skull was less developed, which was attributable to the young age of the individual.[7] The left skeleton was estimated to be an older adult 30–35 years old; his skull had fully developed, and the cranium was distinctively male.[3]

Controversy edit

Some researchers argue sensationalism about the Hasanlu Lovers, and other potential examples of non-heteronormative behaviours in the past are problematic.[13][14] The two skeletons received their sobriquet 'Hasanlu Lovers' due to the intimate position they were found in. Before the skeletons were subjected to DNA analysis one skeleton was thought to be male and the other female. Muscarella, an archaeologist who was heavily invested in the discoveries made at Hasanlu, states, "I knew at first sight who was the female,"[15] in reference to the two skeletons. However, the team from the University of Pennsylvania, assessed that the right skeleton was likely male due to its morphology. The left skeleton had less clear osteological indicators, but was later identified to be male through DNA analysis.[3] Limitations of osteological sex assessments as noted by one author is that there are many times when the biological sex can not be certain, and that these tests do not reveal anything about the culturally-constructed gender.[14]

Reasons for expecting the skeletons to be a heteronormative couple, as Killgrove and Geller explain, are because modern society is primed by culture to see this representation.[14][16] Geller states that projecting contemporary assumptions about sex, gender, and sexuality onto the past can be problematic,[16] and that the true relationship between the two skeletons is unknown and remains up to speculation, despite the implications that may be drawn from their apparently intimate pose.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Dandamaev, M. A. (1989). The Culture and Social Institutions of Ancient Iran. Cambridge; New York City: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521321075.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dyson, Jr., Robert H. (1973). "Survey of Excavations in Iran 1971–72". Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies. 11: 195. doi:10.2307/4300498. JSTOR 4300498.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "The Lovers – Hasanlu". Penn Museum. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Muscarella, Oscar W. "Warfare at Hasanlu in the Late 9th Century B.C." Expedition Magazine 31.23 (1989): Expedition Magazine. Penn Museum, 1989 Web. 31 Jul 2020 http://www.penn.museum/sites/expedition/?p=2478
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Muscarella, Oscar White (2013). Koehl, Robert B. (ed.). Amilla: The Quest for Excellence. Studies Presented to Guenter Kopcke in Celebration of His 75th Birthday. Vol. 43. INSTAP Academic Press (Institute for Aegean Prehistory). doi:10.2307/j.ctt5vj90s.30. ISBN 978-1623033132. JSTOR j.ctt5vj90s.
  6. ^ . www.upenn.edu. Archived from the original on 7 August 2002. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Expedition – "Hasanlu Lovers", retrieved 11 May 2022
  8. ^ a b c "Expedition Magazine – Penn Museum". www.penn.museum. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Tedesco, Laura Anne. "Hasanlu in the Iron Age". metmuseum.
  10. ^ a b Muscarella, Oscar White (2006). "The Excavation of Hasanlu: An Archaeological Evaluation". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 342 (342): 69–94. doi:10.1086/BASOR25066953. ISSN 0003-097X. JSTOR 25066953. S2CID 163988676.
  11. ^ Ellsworth, Amy. "Penn Museum Blog". Penn Museum. p. 20. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  12. ^ Toebbe, Diana Smay (2005). Measurement of inclusion biases in archaeological skeletal collections: A case study of Hasanlu. ISBN 978-0542154126.
  13. ^ Snoddy, Anne Marie E.; Beaumont, Julia; Buckley, Hallie R.; Colombo, Antony; Halcrow, Siân E.; Kinaston, Rebecca L.; Vlok, Melandri (1 March 2020). "Sensationalism and speaking to the public: Scientific rigour and interdisciplinary collaborations in palaeopathology". International Journal of Paleopathology. 28: 88–91. doi:10.1016/j.ijpp.2020.01.003. hdl:10454/17640. ISSN 1879-9817. PMID 32028057.
  14. ^ a b c Killgrove, Kristina (8 April 2017). "Is That Skeleton Gay? The Problem With Projecting Modern Ideas Onto The Past". Forbes. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  15. ^ Muscarella, Oscar White (2013). The Hasanlu Lovers. Institute for Aegean Prehistory Press. pp. 345–350.
  16. ^ a b Geller, Pamela L. (2017). The Bioarchaeology of Socio-Sexual Lives. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-40995-5. ISBN 978-3319409931.

Further reading edit

  • Brahic, C. (2018, September 15). The Horror of Hasanlu. NewScientist, 239(3195), 36–39. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0262-4079(18)31662-2
  • Dyson, R. H., & Muscarella, O. W. (1989). Constructing the Chronology and Historical Implications of Hasanlu IV. Journal of the Bristish Institute of Persian Studies, 27(1), 1–27. doi:https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.1989.11834359
  • Ellsworth, A. (2010, September 10). Penn Museum. Retrieved from Fun Friday Image Of The Week – The Lovers : Penn Museum Blog | Fun Friday Image of the Week – The Lovers
  • House of History. (2020, August 21). The Oldest Kiss in History (800 BCE). Retrieved from The Oldest Kiss in History (800 BCE)
  • Karasavvas, T. (2020, July 2). The Eternal Kiss of the Hasanlu Lovers Throws Up Questions of Ancient Love: Romance, Bromance or Something More Familial? Retrieved from Ancient Origins: Reconstructing The Story Of Humanity's Past: https://www.ancient-origins.net/artifacts-other-artifacts/eternal-kiss-hasanlu-lovers-throws-questions-ancient-love-romance-bromance-021587
  • Killgrove, K. (2017, April 9). That Skeleton Gay? The Problem With Projecting Modern Ideas Onto the Past. Retrieved from Forbes: Is That Skeleton Gay? The Problem With Projecting Modern Ideas Onto The Past
  • Medvedskaya, I. (1988). Who Destroyed Hasanlu IV? Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, 26(1), 1–15. doi:https://doi.org/10.1080/05786967.1988.11834344
  • Muscarella, O. W. (2006). The Excavation of Hasanlu: An Archaeological Evaluation. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 342, 69–94. The Excavation of Hasanlu: An Archaeological Evaluation
  • Muscarella, O. W. (2013). The Excavation of Hasanlu: An Archaeological Evaluation. In O. W. Muscarella, Archaeology, Atifacts and Antiquities of the Ancient Near East (pp. 305–349). The Netherlands: Brill. doi:https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004236691_011
  • Muscarella, O. W., & Koehl, R. B. (2013). The Hasanlu Lovers. In O. W. Muscarella, & R. B. Koehl, Amilla (pp. 345–350). Institute for Aegean Prehistory Press.
  • Paoletti, G. (2017, December 20). Hasanlu Lovers: The Story Behind A 2800-Year-Old-Embrace. Retrieved from ATI: Hasanlu Lovers: The Story Behind A 2800-Year-Old-Embrace
  • Robert H. Dyson, J. (1965). Problems of Protohistoric Iran as Seen from Hasanlu. Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 24(3), 193—217.
  • Robert H. Dyson, J. (1989). Rediscovering Hasanlu. Expedition, 31(2–3), 3–11. Retrieved from [1]
  • Selinsky, P. (2017). Lovers, Friends, or Strangers? Penn Museum, Expedition Magazine, 59(2), 46.
  • Selinsky, P., & Monge, J. (2017, October 18). Expedition – "Hasanlu Lovers". Penn Museum. Retrieved from Expedition – "Hasanlu Lovers"
  • Urbanus, J. (2015, January/February). The Price of Plunder. Retrieved from Archaeology : The Price of Plunder – Archaeology Magazine

hasanlu, lovers, pair, human, remains, found, teppe, hasanlu, archaeological, site, located, naqadeh, west, azerbaijan, province, iran, around, city, hasanlu, located, north, western, iran, destroyed, unknown, invader, inhabitants, were, slain, left, where, th. The Hasanlu Lovers are a pair of human remains found at the Teppe Hasanlu archaeological site located in the Naqadeh in the West Azerbaijan Province of Iran Around 800 BCE the city of Hasanlu located in north western Iran was destroyed by an unknown invader Inhabitants were slain and left where they fell In 1973 the lovers were discovered by a team of archaeologists from the University of Pennsylvania led by Robert H Dyson 1 2 Hasanlu LoversBornBirth names unknownTeppe Hasanlu IranDiedAround 800 BCETeppe Hasanlu IranOther names Hasanlu Lovers Known forExcavated from the Hasanlu archaeological site by a team from Pennsylvania Museum led by Director Robert H Dyson Jr in 1973Notable workThe lovers were on display at the Penn Museum from the mid 1970s until the mid 1980s The two human skeletons were found together in a bin during excavations seemingly embracing at the time of death 3 with no other objects except a stone slab under the head of one skeleton They died together around 800 BCE during the last destruction of the Hasanlu 3 Approximately 246 skeletons were found at the site altogether 4 How the lovers died and ended up in the bin is still under speculation but both skeletons lack evidence of injury near the time of death and possibly died of asphyxiation 5 They were exhibited at the Penn Museum from 1974 until the mid 1980s 6 The right skeleton referred to as HAS 73 5 799 SK 335 is lying on its back and the left skeleton referred to as HAS 73 5 800 SK 336 is lying on its left side facing SK 335 3 When excavated the skeletons were tested to determine various characteristics Dental evidence suggest SK 335 was a young adult possibly 19 22 years of age Researchers identified the skeleton as male largely based on the pelvis The skeleton had no apparent evidence of disease or healed lifetime injuries 1 2 3 Skeleton SK 336 appeared to have been healthy in life the skeleton had no apparent evidence of healed lifetimes injuries and was estimated to have been aged to about 30 35 years 1 2 3 Sex determination of the left skeleton was less definitive Evidence suggests SK 336 was also male 7 after being originally identified as female 4 The skeletons have been a subject of debate since they were first excavated 3 5 Contents 1 Archaeological record of Hasanlu 2 Rediscovery and excavation 3 Scientific analysis 4 Controversy 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingArchaeological record of Hasanlu edit nbsp Map of Ancient Near East including Hasanlu Hasanlu is an ancient Near Eastern site located in the Qadar River valley on the southern shore of Lake Urmia in northwest Iran 8 9 The city of Hasanlu was occupied consistently from the sixth millennium BCE to around 800 BCE when the site was invaded and destroyed by fire 9 In 1934 1936 Hasanlu was commercially dug by Sir Aurel Stein a British archaeologist 10 Then in 1956 the Hasanlu Project was launched by the sponsorship of the University Museum of Pennsylvania the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Archaeological Service of Iran 9 Following the launch of the Hasanlu Project a team of archaeologists from Penn Museum led by Director Robert H Dyson excavated the site from 1957 to 1974 10 This team completed nine excavation campaigns and the excavation of the site ended more than 40 years ago as of in 2022 Excavation of the site revealed burnt remains of huge mudbrick walls thick layers of ash skeletons vessels and more Excavation exposed extensive destruction evidence of the city s invasion and arson Archaeologists explain that the nature of the destruction resulted in the city being frozen in time preserving buildings artefacts and skeletal remains 8 Approximately 246 skeletons 4 of a variety of ages and genders were found The bodies were left where they were killed in the streets and in buildings Some victims were found in groups with head lacerations and dismembered limbs which suggested mass executions had taken place 8 Among the 246 skeletons found two of them were the remains of the Hasanlu Lovers Who attacked Hasanlu is still unknown the general academic consensus is that the Iranian Empire were the invaders but the Assyrian Empire was also very prominent in the region There is no indication from the skeletons themselves or from the artefacts exactly who the invaders were The city of Hasanlu itself is considered protohistoric there was no writing around the site unlike sites in neighboring regions 7 Because of this archaeologists do not know how the people of Hasanlu would have identified themselves who they were or the language they would have spoken Rediscovery and excavation edit nbsp Archaeological Site of Hasanlu Figure 23 2 Adapted Plan of Hasanlu with the Hasanlu Lovers indicated by an arrow 5 The skeletal remains of the Hasanlu Lovers were found together in a plaster lined brick bin with no other objects except a stone slab under the head of one skeleton 3 11 The excavation took place in 1973 directed by Robert H Dyson Jr Dr Selinsky stated that the lovers perished together during the invasion of the site around 800 BCE during the last destruction of the Hasanlu 3 but did not have any lethal wounds 3 Archaeologist Oscar Muscarella suggests that the hole in the right skeleton s skull is not due to an injury but the result of a blow created by a workman s pickaxe 5 When discovered the two skeletons were facing and embracing each other 3 The skeleton on the left is lying on their left side reaching with their right hand towards the skeleton on the right There is no definitive explanation as to how the two skeletons ended up in the bin only assumptions One assumption is that they must have crawled into this bin which was probably covered at the time and escaped detection 5 Since cause of death was not due to injury archaeologists have concluded that the probable cause of death was asphyxiation 5 when debris fell from the burning building and sealed them in Scientific analysis editAnthropologists Page Selinsky and Janet Monge go into extensive detail about the DNA testing of the Hasanlu lovers and how the DNA testing 7 compares to the skeletal assessment of their biological sex The lovers were first sampled for specific isotopes to see if there were any differences in the skeletal series and the diets that they consumed What the isotopic testing revealed was that the diets of the individuals were quite varied but they were not patterned in any particular way Isotopic signatures indicate that the diets of the residents of Hasanlu were varied including wheat barley sheep and goats 12 Isotopic signatures coming from oxygen revealed the lovers settlement patterns these oxygen isotopic signatures revealed that the lovers and the other Hasanlu people were all born and raised in the Hasanlu area 7 It was concluded by Selinsky and Monge that both individuals were male 3 7 They came to this conclusion when comparing both the DNA analysis and skeletal assessment Dr Selinsky stated that the pelvis was the single best criterion for estimating the sex of the skeletons as there are distinctive features between a female and a male pelvis 7 The skeleton on the right referred to as SK 335 is lying on its back The front portion of his pelvis was lost but when examining his sciatic notch it was evident he was a male due to the very narrow gap which is a distinctive feature of the male pelvis 7 As such researchers identified the skeleton as male largely based on the pelvis The skeleton had no apparent evidence of disease or healed lifetime injuries 1 2 3 For the left skeleton SK 336 lying on its left side facing SK 335 the sex estimation was less clear but overall research suggests a male the cranium is distinctively male while the pelvis is more mixed in its morphology 3 At the time of excavation this skeleton was originally identified as female 5 This was because his sciatic notch was quite wide a characteristic of a female pelvis but the front portion of his pelvis which was retrieved from the site had an acute angle in the front and was less pulled out than a female s which suggested the skeleton was a male 7 The individual appeared to have been healthy in life and the skeleton had no apparent evidence of healed lifetime injuries 1 2 3 The sex of the lovers was confirmed from a bone sample for an ancient DNA analysis The genetic determination of the Hasanlu lovers was male 7 The age of the two skeletons was also determined Dental evidence suggests that the right skeleton was a young adult or subadult estimated to be aged 19 22 years old 3 as he has third molars and his wisdom teeth recently grew His skull was less developed which was attributable to the young age of the individual 7 The left skeleton was estimated to be an older adult 30 35 years old his skull had fully developed and the cranium was distinctively male 3 Controversy editSome researchers argue sensationalism about the Hasanlu Lovers and other potential examples of non heteronormative behaviours in the past are problematic 13 14 The two skeletons received their sobriquet Hasanlu Lovers due to the intimate position they were found in Before the skeletons were subjected to DNA analysis one skeleton was thought to be male and the other female Muscarella an archaeologist who was heavily invested in the discoveries made at Hasanlu states I knew at first sight who was the female 15 in reference to the two skeletons However the team from the University of Pennsylvania assessed that the right skeleton was likely male due to its morphology The left skeleton had less clear osteological indicators but was later identified to be male through DNA analysis 3 Limitations of osteological sex assessments as noted by one author is that there are many times when the biological sex can not be certain and that these tests do not reveal anything about the culturally constructed gender 14 Reasons for expecting the skeletons to be a heteronormative couple as Killgrove and Geller explain are because modern society is primed by culture to see this representation 14 16 Geller states that projecting contemporary assumptions about sex gender and sexuality onto the past can be problematic 16 and that the true relationship between the two skeletons is unknown and remains up to speculation despite the implications that may be drawn from their apparently intimate pose See also editEmbracing Skeletons of Alepotrypa Lovers of Valdaro Lovers of Cluj Napoca Lovers of Modena Lovers of TeruelReferences edit a b c d e Dandamaev M A 1989 The Culture and Social Institutions of Ancient Iran Cambridge New York City Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521321075 a b c d e Dyson Jr Robert H 1973 Survey of Excavations in Iran 1971 72 Iran Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies 11 195 doi 10 2307 4300498 JSTOR 4300498 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q The Lovers Hasanlu Penn Museum Retrieved 31 October 2017 a b c Muscarella Oscar W Warfare at Hasanlu in the Late 9th Century B C Expedition Magazine 31 23 1989 Expedition Magazine Penn Museum 1989 Web 31 Jul 2020 http www penn museum sites expedition p 2478 a b c d e f g Muscarella Oscar White 2013 Koehl Robert B ed Amilla The Quest for Excellence Studies Presented to Guenter Kopcke in Celebration of His 75th Birthday Vol 43 INSTAP Academic Press Institute for Aegean Prehistory doi 10 2307 j ctt5vj90s 30 ISBN 978 1623033132 JSTOR j ctt5vj90s Gazette Changing Times 1961 1981 July August 2002 www upenn edu Archived from the original on 7 August 2002 Retrieved 3 August 2020 a b c d e f g h i j Expedition Hasanlu Lovers retrieved 11 May 2022 a b c Expedition Magazine Penn Museum www penn museum Retrieved 11 May 2022 a b c Tedesco Laura Anne Hasanlu in the Iron Age metmuseum a b Muscarella Oscar White 2006 The Excavation of Hasanlu An Archaeological Evaluation Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 342 342 69 94 doi 10 1086 BASOR25066953 ISSN 0003 097X JSTOR 25066953 S2CID 163988676 Ellsworth Amy Penn Museum Blog Penn Museum p 20 Retrieved 12 October 2014 Toebbe Diana Smay 2005 Measurement of inclusion biases in archaeological skeletal collections A case study of Hasanlu ISBN 978 0542154126 Snoddy Anne Marie E Beaumont Julia Buckley Hallie R Colombo Antony Halcrow Sian E Kinaston Rebecca L Vlok Melandri 1 March 2020 Sensationalism and speaking to the public Scientific rigour and interdisciplinary collaborations in palaeopathology International Journal of Paleopathology 28 88 91 doi 10 1016 j ijpp 2020 01 003 hdl 10454 17640 ISSN 1879 9817 PMID 32028057 a b c Killgrove Kristina 8 April 2017 Is That Skeleton Gay The Problem With Projecting Modern Ideas Onto The Past Forbes Retrieved 31 July 2020 Muscarella Oscar White 2013 The Hasanlu Lovers Institute for Aegean Prehistory Press pp 345 350 a b Geller Pamela L 2017 The Bioarchaeology of Socio Sexual Lives doi 10 1007 978 3 319 40995 5 ISBN 978 3319409931 Further reading editBrahic C 2018 September 15 The Horror of Hasanlu NewScientist 239 3195 36 39 doi https doi org 10 1016 S0262 4079 18 31662 2 Dyson R H amp Muscarella O W 1989 Constructing the Chronology and Historical Implications of Hasanlu IV Journal of the Bristish Institute of Persian Studies 27 1 1 27 doi https doi org 10 1080 05786967 1989 11834359 Ellsworth A 2010 September 10 Penn Museum Retrieved from Fun Friday Image Of The Week The Lovers Penn Museum Blog Fun Friday Image of the Week The Lovers House of History 2020 August 21 The Oldest Kiss in History 800 BCE Retrieved from The Oldest Kiss in History 800 BCE Karasavvas T 2020 July 2 The Eternal Kiss of the Hasanlu Lovers Throws Up Questions of Ancient Love Romance Bromance or Something More Familial Retrieved from Ancient Origins Reconstructing The Story Of Humanity s Past https www ancient origins net artifacts other artifacts eternal kiss hasanlu lovers throws questions ancient love romance bromance 021587 Killgrove K 2017 April 9 That Skeleton Gay The Problem With Projecting Modern Ideas Onto the Past Retrieved from Forbes Is That Skeleton Gay The Problem With Projecting Modern Ideas Onto The Past Medvedskaya I 1988 Who Destroyed Hasanlu IV Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies 26 1 1 15 doi https doi org 10 1080 05786967 1988 11834344 Muscarella O W 2006 The Excavation of Hasanlu An Archaeological Evaluation Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 342 69 94 The Excavation of Hasanlu An Archaeological Evaluation Muscarella O W 2013 The Excavation of Hasanlu An Archaeological Evaluation In O W Muscarella Archaeology Atifacts and Antiquities of the Ancient Near East pp 305 349 The Netherlands Brill doi https doi org 10 1163 9789004236691 011 Muscarella O W amp Koehl R B 2013 The Hasanlu Lovers In O W Muscarella amp R B Koehl Amilla pp 345 350 Institute for Aegean Prehistory Press Paoletti G 2017 December 20 Hasanlu Lovers The Story Behind A 2800 Year Old Embrace Retrieved from ATI Hasanlu Lovers The Story Behind A 2800 Year Old Embrace Robert H Dyson J 1965 Problems of Protohistoric Iran as Seen from Hasanlu Journal of Near Eastern Studies 24 3 193 217 Robert H Dyson J 1989 Rediscovering Hasanlu Expedition 31 2 3 3 11 Retrieved from 1 Selinsky P 2017 Lovers Friends or Strangers Penn Museum Expedition Magazine 59 2 46 Selinsky P amp Monge J 2017 October 18 Expedition Hasanlu Lovers Penn Museum Retrieved from Expedition Hasanlu Lovers Urbanus J 2015 January February The Price of Plunder Retrieved from Archaeology The Price of Plunder Archaeology Magazine Portals nbsp Iran nbsp History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hasanlu Lovers amp oldid 1218103161, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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