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Mumun pottery period

The Mumun pottery period is an archaeological era in Korean prehistory that dates to approximately 1500-300 BC.[1][2][3] This period is named after the Korean name for undecorated or plain cooking and storage vessels that form a large part of the pottery assemblage over the entire length of the period, but especially 850-550 BC.

Mumun pottery period
Geographical rangeKorean peninsula
PeriodLate Stone Age , Bronze Age
Datesc. 1500 – c. 300 BC
Preceded byJeulmun pottery period
Korean name
Hangul
무문토기시대
Hanja
無文土器時代
Revised RomanizationMumun togi sidae
McCune–ReischauerMumun t'ogi sidae

The Mumun period is known for the origins of intensive agriculture and complex societies in both the Korean Peninsula and the Japanese Archipelago.[2][3][4] This period or parts of it have sometimes been labelled as the "Korean Bronze Age", after Thomsen's 19th century three-age system classification of human prehistory. However, the application of such terminology in the Korean case is misleading since local bronze production did not occur until approximately the late 8th century BC at the earliest, bronze artifacts are rare, and the distribution of bronze is highly regionalized until after 300 BC.[5][6] A boom in the archaeological excavations of Mumun Period sites since the mid-1990s has recently increased collective knowledge about this formative period in the prehistory of East Asia.

The Mumun period is preceded by the Jeulmun Pottery Period (c. 8000-1500 BC). The Jeulmun was a period of hunting, gathering, and small-scale cultivation of plants.[6] The origins of the Mumun Period are not well known, but the megalithic burials, Mumun pottery, and large settlements found in the Liao River Basin and North Korea c. 1800-1500 probably indicate the origins of the Mumun Period of Southern Korea. Slash-and-burn cultivators who used Mumun pottery displaced people using Jeulmun Period subsistence patterns.[7]

Chronology

Early Mumun

The Early (or Formative) Mumun (c. 1500-850 BC) is characterized by shifting cultivation, fishing, hunting, and discrete settlements with rectangular semi-subterranean pit-houses. The social scale of Early Mumun societies was egalitarian in nature, but the latter part of this period is characterized by increasing intra-settlement competition and perhaps the presence of part-time "big-man" leadership.[8] Early Mumun settlements are relatively concentrated in the river valleys formed by tributaries of the Geum River in West-central Korea. However, one of the largest Early Mumun settlements, Eoeun (Hangeul: 어은), is located in the Middle Nam River valley in South-central Korea. In the latter Early Mumun, large settlements composed of many long-houses such as Baekseok-dong (Hangeul: 백석동) appeared in the area of modern Cheonan City, Chungcheong Nam-do.

Important long-term traditions related to Mumun ceremonial and mortuary systems originated in this sub-period. These traditions include the construction of megalithic burials, the production of red-burnished pottery, and production of polished groundstone daggers.

Middle Mumun

 
 
Large Middle Mumun (c. 8th century BC storage vessel unearthed from a pit-house in or near Daepyeong, H= c. 60-70 cm.

The Middle (or Classic) Mumun (c. 850-550 BC) is characterized by intensive agriculture, as evidenced by the large and expansive dry-field remains (c. 32,500 square metres) recovered at Daepyeong, a sprawling settlement with several multiple ditch enclosures, hundreds of pit-houses, specialized production, and evidence of the presence of incipient elites and social competition.[2][3][9] A number of wet-field features have been excavated in southern Korea, indicating that paddy field rice-farming was also practiced.

 
Representations of a dagger (right)and two human figures, one of which is kneeling (left), carved into the capstone of Megalithic Burial No. 5, Orim-dong, Yeosu, Korea.

Burials dating to the latter part of the Middle Mumun (c. 700-550 BC) contain a few high status mortuary offerings such as bronze artifacts. Bronze production probably began around this time in Southern Korea. Other high status burials contain greenstone (or jade) ornaments.[4][9] A number of megalithic burials with deep shaft interments, substantial 'pavements' of rounded cobblestone, and prestige artifacts such as bronze daggers, jade, and red-burnished vessels were built in the vicinity of the southern coast in the Late Middle Mumun. High status megalithic burials and large raised-floor buildings at the Deokcheon-ni (Hangeul: 덕천리) and Igeum-dong sites in Gyeongsang Nam-do provide further evidence of the growth of social inequality and the existence of polities that were organized in ways that appear to be similar to simple "chiefdoms".[4]

Korean archaeologists sometimes refer to Middle Mumun culture as Songguk-ri Culture (Hanja: 松菊里 文化; Hangeul: 송국리 문화).[1] Co-occurring artifacts and features that are grouped together as Songguk-ri Culture are found in settlement sites in the Hoseo and Honam regions of southeast Korea, but Songguk-ri Culture settlements are also found in western Yeongnam. Excavations have also revealed Songguk-ri settlements in the Ulsan and Gimhae areas. In 2005 archaeologists uncovered Songguk-ri Culture pit-houses at a site deep in the interior of Gangwon Province. The ultimate geographic reach of Songguk-ri Culture appears to have been Jeju Island and western Japan.

Mumun culture is the beginning of a long-term tradition of rice-farming in Korea that links Mumun Culture with the present day, but evidence from the Early and Middle Mumun suggests that, although rice was grown, it was not the dominant crop.[3] During the Mumun people grew millets, barley, wheat, legumes, and continued to hunt and fish.

 
Settlement sites of the Mumun Period that are mentioned in the text of this article.

Late Mumun

The Late (or Post-classic) Mumun (550-300 BC) is characterized by increasing conflict, fortified hilltop settlements, and a concentration of population in the southern coastal area. A Late Mumun occupation was found at the Namsan settlement, located on the top of a hill 100 m above sea level in modern Changwon City, Gyeongsang Nam-do. A shellmidden (shellmound) was found in the vicinity of Namsan, indicating that, in addition to agriculture, shellfish exploitation was part of the Late Mumun subsistence system in some areas. Pit-houses at Namsan were located inside a ring-ditch that is some 4.2 m deep and 10 m in width. Why would such a formidable ring-ditch, so massive in size, have been necessary? One possible answer is intergroup conflict. Archaeologists propose that the Late Mumun was a period of conflict between groups of people.

The number of settlements in the Late Mumun is much lower than in the previous sub-period. This indicates that populations were reorganized and settlement was probably more concentrated in a smaller number of larger settlements. There are a number of reasons why this could have occurred. There are some indications that conflict increased or climatic change led to crop failures.

Notably, according to the traditional Yayoi chronological sequence, Mumun-esque settlements appeared in Northern Kyūshū (Japan) during the Late Mumun. The Mumun period ends when iron appeared in the archaeological record along with pit-houses that had interior composite hearth-ovens reminiscent of the historic period (agungi).

Some scholars suggest that the Mumun pottery period should be extended to c. 0 BC because of the presence of an undecorated ware that was popular between 400 BC and 0 BC called jeomtodae (Korean점토대). However, bronze became very important in ceremonial and elite life from 300 BC. Additionally, iron tools are increasingly found in Southern Korea after 300 BC. These factors clearly differentiate the time period 300 BC - 0 from the cultural, technological, and social scale that was present in the Mumun pottery period. The unequal presence of bronze and iron in increased amounts from a few high status graves after 300 BC as sets this time apart from the Mumun pottery period. It is thus that, as a cultural-technical period, the Mumun was finished by approximately 300 BC.

From about 300 BC, bronze objects became the most valued prestige mortuary goods, but iron objects were traded and then produced in the Korean peninsula at that time. The Late Mumun-Early Iron Age Neuk-do Island Shellmidden Site yielded a small number of iron objects, Lelang and Yayoi pottery, and other evidence showing that beginning in the Late Mumun, local societies were drawn into closer economic and political contact with the societies of the Late Zhou Dynasty, Final Jōmon, and Early Yayoi.

Mumun cultural traits

As an archaeological culture, the Mumun is composed of the following elements:

Languages

According to Juha Janhunen and Alexander Vovin, Japonic languages were spoken in parts of the Korean Peninsula before they were replaced by Koreanic speakers.[10][11] According to Whitman and several other researchers, Japonic/proto-Japonic arrived in the Korean peninsula around 1500 BC[12][13] and was brought to the Japanese archipelago by Yayoi wet-rice farmers at some time between 700-300 BC.[14][15] Whitman and Miyamoto associate Japonic as the language family associated with both Mumun and Yayoi cultures.[16][13] Several linguists believe that speakers of Koreanic/proto-Koreanic arrived in the Korean Peninsula at some time after the Japonic/proto-Japonic speakers and coexisted with these peoples (i.e. the descendants of both the Mumun and Yayoi cultures) and possibly assimilated them. Both Koreanic and Japonic had prolonged influence on each other and a later founder effect diminished the internal variety of both language families.[17][18][19]

Subsistence

  • Broad-spectrum subsistence was practiced through the Early Mumun. That is to say, evidence excavated from pit-houses and other outdoor household features indicates that hunting, fishing, and foraging was occurring in addition to agriculture.[6]
  • stone tools used in agricultural subsistence activities are common and include semi-lunar blades.[4]
  • Intensive wet-field agriculture (paddy farming) was in place in the Middle Mumun.[3] However, even the pit-houses of settlements associated with wet-field archaeological features show evidence that people were also engaged to some degree in hunting and fishing.

Settlement

  • Large rectangular-shaped pit-houses were used in Early Mumun. These pit-houses had one or more hearths, and pit-houses with up to 6 hearths indicate that such features were the living spaces for multiple generations of the same household.[8]
  • Some time after 900 BC, small pit-houses were the norm. The plan-shape of these pit-houses are square, circular and oval. They do not have interior hearths — instead, the central area of the pit-house floor is equipped with a shallow oval 'work-pit'.[1]
  • Archaeologists see this change in architecture as a social shift in the household. Namely, the tight and multi-generational unit housed under one roof in the Early Mumun changed fundamentally into households formed of groups of semi-independent nuclear family units in separate pit-houses.[8]
  • The average settlement in the Mumun was small, but settlements with as many as several hundred pit-houses emerged in the Middle Mumun.[8]

Economy

  • Household production was the basic mode of the Mumun economy, but specialized craft production and a big-man-style redistributive prestige economy emerged in the Middle Mumun.[8]
  • Archaeological evidence has documented cases in which it appears that surplus production of crops, stone tools, and pottery occurred in the Middle Mumun.[3][4]
  • Artifacts that illustrate regional redistributive systems and exchange include greenstone ornaments, bronze objects, and some kinds of red-burnished pottery.[9]

Mortuary practices

  • Megalithic burials, stone-cist burials, and jar burials are found.
  • Some burials in the latter part of the Middle Mumun are especially large and required a significant amount of labour to construct. A small number of Middle Mumun burials contain prestige/ceremonial artifacts such as bronze, greenstone, groundstone daggers, and red-burnished ware.[4][9][20]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Ahn, Jae-ho (2000). "Hanguk Nonggyeongsahoe-eui Seongnib (The Formation of Agricultural Society in Korea)". Hanguk Kogo-Hakbo (in Korean). 43: 41–66.
  2. ^ a b c Bale, Martin T. (2001). "Archaeology of Early Agriculture in Korea: An Update on Recent Developments". Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association. 21 (5): 77–84.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Crawford, Gary W.; Gyoung-Ah Lee (2003). "Agricultural Origins in the Korean Peninsula". Antiquity. 77 (295): 87–95. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00061378. S2CID 163060564.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Rhee, S. N.; Choi, M. L. (1992). "Emergence of Complex Society in Prehistoric Korea". Journal of World Prehistory. 6: 51–95. doi:10.1007/BF00997585. S2CID 145722584.
  5. ^ Kim, Seung Og (1996). Political Competition and Social Transformation: The Development of Residence, Residential Ward, and Community in Prehistoric Taegongni of Southwestern Korea. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  6. ^ a b c Lee, June-Jeong (2001). From Shellfish Gathering to Agriculture in Prehistoric Korea: The Chulmun to Mumun Transition. Madison: University of Wisconsin-Madison Press.
  7. ^ Kim, Jangsuk (2003). "Land-use Conflict and the Rate of Transition to Agricultural Economy: A Comparative Study of Southern Scandinavia and Central-western Korea". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 10 (3): 277–321. doi:10.1023/A:1026087723164. S2CID 144173837.
  8. ^ a b c d e Bale, Martin T.; Min-jung Ko (2006). "Craft Production and Social Change in Mumun Period Korea". Asian Perspectives. 45 (2): 159–187. doi:10.1353/asi.2006.0019. hdl:10125/17250. S2CID 55944795.
  9. ^ a b c d Nelson, Sarah M. (1999). "Megalithic Monuments and the Introduction of Rice into Korea". In Gosden, C.; Hather, J. (eds.). The Prehistory of Food: Appetites for Change. London: Routledge. pp. 147–165. ISBN 978-0-415-11765-4.
  10. ^ Janhunen, Juha (2010). "Reconstructing the Language Map of Prehistorical Northeast Asia". Studia Orientalia (108): 281–304. ... there are strong indications that the neighbouring Baekje state (in the southwest) was predominantly Japonic-speaking until it was linguistically Koreanized.
  11. ^ Vovin, Alexander (2013). "From Koguryo to Tamna: Slowly riding to the South with speakers of Proto-Korean". Korean Linguistics. 15 (2): 222–240.
  12. ^ Whitman (2011), p. 157.
  13. ^ a b Miyamoto (2016), pp. 69–70.
  14. ^ Serafim (2008), p. 98.
  15. ^ Vovin (2017).
  16. ^ Whitman, John (2011-12-01). "Northeast Asian Linguistic Ecology and the Advent of Rice Agriculture in Korea and Japan". Rice. 4 (3): 149–158. doi:10.1007/s12284-011-9080-0. ISSN 1939-8433.
  17. ^ Janhunen (2010), p. 294.
  18. ^ Vovin (2013), pp. 222, 237.
  19. ^ Unger (2009), p. 87.
  20. ^ Bale, Martin T. "Excavations of Large-scale Megalithic Burials at Yulha-ri, Gimhae-si, Gyeongsang Nam-do". Korea Institute, Harvard University. Retrieved 2007-11-08.

Further reading

  • Nelson, Sarah M. (1993). The Archaeology of Korea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-40443-3.

External links

    mumun, pottery, period, archaeological, korean, prehistory, that, dates, approximately, 1500, this, period, named, after, korean, name, undecorated, plain, cooking, storage, vessels, that, form, large, part, pottery, assemblage, over, entire, length, period, e. The Mumun pottery period is an archaeological era in Korean prehistory that dates to approximately 1500 300 BC 1 2 3 This period is named after the Korean name for undecorated or plain cooking and storage vessels that form a large part of the pottery assemblage over the entire length of the period but especially 850 550 BC Mumun pottery periodGeographical rangeKorean peninsulaPeriodLate Stone Age Bronze AgeDatesc 1500 c 300 BCPreceded byJeulmun pottery periodKorean nameHangul무문토기시대Hanja無文土器時代Revised RomanizationMumun togi sidaeMcCune ReischauerMumun t ogi sidaeThe Mumun period is known for the origins of intensive agriculture and complex societies in both the Korean Peninsula and the Japanese Archipelago 2 3 4 This period or parts of it have sometimes been labelled as the Korean Bronze Age after Thomsen s 19th century three age system classification of human prehistory However the application of such terminology in the Korean case is misleading since local bronze production did not occur until approximately the late 8th century BC at the earliest bronze artifacts are rare and the distribution of bronze is highly regionalized until after 300 BC 5 6 A boom in the archaeological excavations of Mumun Period sites since the mid 1990s has recently increased collective knowledge about this formative period in the prehistory of East Asia The Mumun period is preceded by the Jeulmun Pottery Period c 8000 1500 BC The Jeulmun was a period of hunting gathering and small scale cultivation of plants 6 The origins of the Mumun Period are not well known but the megalithic burials Mumun pottery and large settlements found in the Liao River Basin and North Korea c 1800 1500 probably indicate the origins of the Mumun Period of Southern Korea Slash and burn cultivators who used Mumun pottery displaced people using Jeulmun Period subsistence patterns 7 Contents 1 Chronology 1 1 Early Mumun 1 2 Middle Mumun 1 3 Late Mumun 2 Mumun cultural traits 2 1 Languages 2 2 Subsistence 2 3 Settlement 2 4 Economy 2 5 Mortuary practices 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksChronology EditEarly Mumun Edit The Early or Formative Mumun c 1500 850 BC is characterized by shifting cultivation fishing hunting and discrete settlements with rectangular semi subterranean pit houses The social scale of Early Mumun societies was egalitarian in nature but the latter part of this period is characterized by increasing intra settlement competition and perhaps the presence of part time big man leadership 8 Early Mumun settlements are relatively concentrated in the river valleys formed by tributaries of the Geum River in West central Korea However one of the largest Early Mumun settlements Eoeun Hangeul 어은 is located in the Middle Nam River valley in South central Korea In the latter Early Mumun large settlements composed of many long houses such as Baekseok dong Hangeul 백석동 appeared in the area of modern Cheonan City Chungcheong Nam do Important long term traditions related to Mumun ceremonial and mortuary systems originated in this sub period These traditions include the construction of megalithic burials the production of red burnished pottery and production of polished groundstone daggers Middle Mumun Edit Ganghwa dolmen South Korea Large Middle Mumun c 8th century BC storage vessel unearthed from a pit house in or near Daepyeong H c 60 70 cm The Middle or Classic Mumun c 850 550 BC is characterized by intensive agriculture as evidenced by the large and expansive dry field remains c 32 500 square metres recovered at Daepyeong a sprawling settlement with several multiple ditch enclosures hundreds of pit houses specialized production and evidence of the presence of incipient elites and social competition 2 3 9 A number of wet field features have been excavated in southern Korea indicating that paddy field rice farming was also practiced Representations of a dagger right and two human figures one of which is kneeling left carved into the capstone of Megalithic Burial No 5 Orim dong Yeosu Korea Burials dating to the latter part of the Middle Mumun c 700 550 BC contain a few high status mortuary offerings such as bronze artifacts Bronze production probably began around this time in Southern Korea Other high status burials contain greenstone or jade ornaments 4 9 A number of megalithic burials with deep shaft interments substantial pavements of rounded cobblestone and prestige artifacts such as bronze daggers jade and red burnished vessels were built in the vicinity of the southern coast in the Late Middle Mumun High status megalithic burials and large raised floor buildings at the Deokcheon ni Hangeul 덕천리 and Igeum dong sites in Gyeongsang Nam do provide further evidence of the growth of social inequality and the existence of polities that were organized in ways that appear to be similar to simple chiefdoms 4 Korean archaeologists sometimes refer to Middle Mumun culture as Songguk ri Culture Hanja 松菊里 文化 Hangeul 송국리 문화 1 Co occurring artifacts and features that are grouped together as Songguk ri Culture are found in settlement sites in the Hoseo and Honam regions of southeast Korea but Songguk ri Culture settlements are also found in western Yeongnam Excavations have also revealed Songguk ri settlements in the Ulsan and Gimhae areas In 2005 archaeologists uncovered Songguk ri Culture pit houses at a site deep in the interior of Gangwon Province The ultimate geographic reach of Songguk ri Culture appears to have been Jeju Island and western Japan Mumun culture is the beginning of a long term tradition of rice farming in Korea that links Mumun Culture with the present day but evidence from the Early and Middle Mumun suggests that although rice was grown it was not the dominant crop 3 During the Mumun people grew millets barley wheat legumes and continued to hunt and fish Settlement sites of the Mumun Period that are mentioned in the text of this article Late Mumun Edit The Late or Post classic Mumun 550 300 BC is characterized by increasing conflict fortified hilltop settlements and a concentration of population in the southern coastal area A Late Mumun occupation was found at the Namsan settlement located on the top of a hill 100 m above sea level in modern Changwon City Gyeongsang Nam do A shellmidden shellmound was found in the vicinity of Namsan indicating that in addition to agriculture shellfish exploitation was part of the Late Mumun subsistence system in some areas Pit houses at Namsan were located inside a ring ditch that is some 4 2 m deep and 10 m in width Why would such a formidable ring ditch so massive in size have been necessary One possible answer is intergroup conflict Archaeologists propose that the Late Mumun was a period of conflict between groups of people The number of settlements in the Late Mumun is much lower than in the previous sub period This indicates that populations were reorganized and settlement was probably more concentrated in a smaller number of larger settlements There are a number of reasons why this could have occurred There are some indications that conflict increased or climatic change led to crop failures Notably according to the traditional Yayoi chronological sequence Mumun esque settlements appeared in Northern Kyushu Japan during the Late Mumun The Mumun period ends when iron appeared in the archaeological record along with pit houses that had interior composite hearth ovens reminiscent of the historic period agungi Some scholars suggest that the Mumun pottery period should be extended to c 0 BC because of the presence of an undecorated ware that was popular between 400 BC and 0 BC called jeomtodae Korean 점토대 However bronze became very important in ceremonial and elite life from 300 BC Additionally iron tools are increasingly found in Southern Korea after 300 BC These factors clearly differentiate the time period 300 BC 0 from the cultural technological and social scale that was present in the Mumun pottery period The unequal presence of bronze and iron in increased amounts from a few high status graves after 300 BC as sets this time apart from the Mumun pottery period It is thus that as a cultural technical period the Mumun was finished by approximately 300 BC From about 300 BC bronze objects became the most valued prestige mortuary goods but iron objects were traded and then produced in the Korean peninsula at that time The Late Mumun Early Iron Age Neuk do Island Shellmidden Site yielded a small number of iron objects Lelang and Yayoi pottery and other evidence showing that beginning in the Late Mumun local societies were drawn into closer economic and political contact with the societies of the Late Zhou Dynasty Final Jōmon and Early Yayoi Mumun cultural traits EditAs an archaeological culture the Mumun is composed of the following elements Languages Edit According to Juha Janhunen and Alexander Vovin Japonic languages were spoken in parts of the Korean Peninsula before they were replaced by Koreanic speakers 10 11 According to Whitman and several other researchers Japonic proto Japonic arrived in the Korean peninsula around 1500 BC 12 13 and was brought to the Japanese archipelago by Yayoi wet rice farmers at some time between 700 300 BC 14 15 Whitman and Miyamoto associate Japonic as the language family associated with both Mumun and Yayoi cultures 16 13 Several linguists believe that speakers of Koreanic proto Koreanic arrived in the Korean Peninsula at some time after the Japonic proto Japonic speakers and coexisted with these peoples i e the descendants of both the Mumun and Yayoi cultures and possibly assimilated them Both Koreanic and Japonic had prolonged influence on each other and a later founder effect diminished the internal variety of both language families 17 18 19 Subsistence Edit Broad spectrum subsistence was practiced through the Early Mumun That is to say evidence excavated from pit houses and other outdoor household features indicates that hunting fishing and foraging was occurring in addition to agriculture 6 stone tools used in agricultural subsistence activities are common and include semi lunar blades 4 Intensive wet field agriculture paddy farming was in place in the Middle Mumun 3 However even the pit houses of settlements associated with wet field archaeological features show evidence that people were also engaged to some degree in hunting and fishing Settlement Edit Large rectangular shaped pit houses were used in Early Mumun These pit houses had one or more hearths and pit houses with up to 6 hearths indicate that such features were the living spaces for multiple generations of the same household 8 Some time after 900 BC small pit houses were the norm The plan shape of these pit houses are square circular and oval They do not have interior hearths instead the central area of the pit house floor is equipped with a shallow oval work pit 1 Archaeologists see this change in architecture as a social shift in the household Namely the tight and multi generational unit housed under one roof in the Early Mumun changed fundamentally into households formed of groups of semi independent nuclear family units in separate pit houses 8 The average settlement in the Mumun was small but settlements with as many as several hundred pit houses emerged in the Middle Mumun 8 Economy Edit Household production was the basic mode of the Mumun economy but specialized craft production and a big man style redistributive prestige economy emerged in the Middle Mumun 8 Archaeological evidence has documented cases in which it appears that surplus production of crops stone tools and pottery occurred in the Middle Mumun 3 4 Artifacts that illustrate regional redistributive systems and exchange include greenstone ornaments bronze objects and some kinds of red burnished pottery 9 Mortuary practices Edit Megalithic burials stone cist burials and jar burials are found Some burials in the latter part of the Middle Mumun are especially large and required a significant amount of labour to construct A small number of Middle Mumun burials contain prestige ceremonial artifacts such as bronze greenstone groundstone daggers and red burnished ware 4 9 20 See also EditList of archaeological periods master list Prehistoric Korea Liaoning bronze dagger cultureReferences Edit a b c Ahn Jae ho 2000 Hanguk Nonggyeongsahoe eui Seongnib The Formation of Agricultural Society in Korea Hanguk Kogo Hakbo in Korean 43 41 66 a b c Bale Martin T 2001 Archaeology of Early Agriculture in Korea An Update on Recent Developments Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association 21 5 77 84 a b c d e f Crawford Gary W Gyoung Ah Lee 2003 Agricultural Origins in the Korean Peninsula Antiquity 77 295 87 95 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00061378 S2CID 163060564 a b c d e f Rhee S N Choi M L 1992 Emergence of Complex Society in Prehistoric Korea Journal of World Prehistory 6 51 95 doi 10 1007 BF00997585 S2CID 145722584 Kim Seung Og 1996 Political Competition and Social Transformation The Development of Residence Residential Ward and Community in Prehistoric Taegongni of Southwestern Korea Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press a b c Lee June Jeong 2001 From Shellfish Gathering to Agriculture in Prehistoric Korea The Chulmun to Mumun Transition Madison University of Wisconsin Madison Press Kim Jangsuk 2003 Land use Conflict and the Rate of Transition to Agricultural Economy A Comparative Study of Southern Scandinavia and Central western Korea Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 10 3 277 321 doi 10 1023 A 1026087723164 S2CID 144173837 a b c d e Bale Martin T Min jung Ko 2006 Craft Production and Social Change in Mumun Period Korea Asian Perspectives 45 2 159 187 doi 10 1353 asi 2006 0019 hdl 10125 17250 S2CID 55944795 a b c d Nelson Sarah M 1999 Megalithic Monuments and the Introduction of Rice into Korea In Gosden C Hather J eds The Prehistory of Food Appetites for Change London Routledge pp 147 165 ISBN 978 0 415 11765 4 Janhunen Juha 2010 Reconstructing the Language Map of Prehistorical Northeast Asia Studia Orientalia 108 281 304 there are strong indications that the neighbouring Baekje state in the southwest was predominantly Japonic speaking until it was linguistically Koreanized Vovin Alexander 2013 From Koguryo to Tamna Slowly riding to the South with speakers of Proto Korean Korean Linguistics 15 2 222 240 Whitman 2011 p 157 a b Miyamoto 2016 pp 69 70 sfnp error no target CITEREFMiyamoto2016 help Serafim 2008 p 98 sfnp error no target CITEREFSerafim2008 help Vovin 2017 sfnp error no target CITEREFVovin2017 help Whitman John 2011 12 01 Northeast Asian Linguistic Ecology and the Advent of Rice Agriculture in Korea and Japan Rice 4 3 149 158 doi 10 1007 s12284 011 9080 0 ISSN 1939 8433 Janhunen 2010 p 294 Vovin 2013 pp 222 237 sfnp error no target CITEREFVovin2013 help Unger 2009 p 87 sfnp error no target CITEREFUnger2009 help Bale Martin T Excavations of Large scale Megalithic Burials at Yulha ri Gimhae si Gyeongsang Nam do Korea Institute Harvard University Retrieved 2007 11 08 Further reading EditNelson Sarah M 1993 The Archaeology of Korea Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40443 3 External links EditPaper on Boseong River excavations by Kim Gyeongtaek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mumun pottery period amp oldid 1139799647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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