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Nok culture

9°30′N 8°0′E / 9.500°N 8.000°E / 9.500; 8.000

Nok culture
Geographical rangeWest Africa
PeriodNeolithic, Iron Age
Datesc. 1500 BC — c. 1 BC
Type siteNok
Major sites
Followed byKwararafa

The Nok culture is a population whose material remains are named after the Ham village of Nok in southern Kaduna State of Nigeria, where their terracotta sculptures were first discovered in 1928.[1][2] The Nok people and the Gajiganna people may have migrated from the Central Sahara, along with pearl millet and pottery, diverged prior to arriving in the northern region of Nigeria, and thus, settled in their respective locations in the region of Gajiganna and Nok.[3] Nok people may have also migrated from the West African Sahel to the region of Nok.[4] Nok culture may have emerged in 1500 BCE and continued to persist until 1 BCE.[3]

Nok people may have developed terracotta sculptures, through large-scale economic production,[5] as part of a complex funerary culture[6] that may have included practices such as feasting.[3] The earliest Nok terracotta sculptures may have developed in 900 BCE.[3] Some Nok terracotta sculptures portray figures wielding slingshots, as well as bows and arrows, which may be indicative of Nok people engaging in the hunting, or trapping, of undomesticated animals.[7] A Nok sculpture portrays two individuals, along with their goods, in a dugout canoe.[7] Both of the anthropomorphic figures in the watercraft are paddling.[8] The Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe may indicate that Nok people used dugout canoes to transport cargo, along tributaries (e.g., Gurara River) of the Niger River, and exchanged them in a regional trade network.[8] The Nok terracotta depiction of a figure with a seashell on its head may indicate that the span of these riverine trade routes may have extended to the Atlantic coast.[8] In the maritime history of Africa, there is the earlier Dufuna canoe, which was constructed approximately 8000 years ago in the northern region of Nigeria; as the second earliest form of water vessel known in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe was created in the central region of Nigeria during the first millennium BCE.[8]

Latter artistic traditions of West AfricaBura of Niger (3rd century CE – 10th century CE), Koma of Ghana (7th century CE – 15th century CE), Igbo-Ukwu of Nigeria (9th century CE – 10th century CE), Jenne-Jeno of Mali (11th century CE – 12th century CE), and Ile Ife of Nigeria (11th century CE – 15th century CE) – may have been shaped by the earlier West African clay terracotta tradition of the Nok culture.[9] Nok settlement sites are often found on mountaintops.[10] Iron metallurgy may have independently developed in the Nok culture between 750 BCE and 550 BCE.[3][11][12][13]

Origin edit

Breunig and Rupp (2016) stated: "Their origin is unknown, but since the plants they used as crops (especially millet) are indigenous to the Sahel region, a northern homeland is more probable than any other."[14] Breunig (2017) expounded: "The people of the Nok culture must have come from somewhere else. So far, however, we have not found out what region, though we suspect the Sahel zone in West Africa."[4] Champion et al. (2022) suggested that they may have come from the Central Sahara, and stated:

The cultivation of pearl millet diffused from the desiccating West and Central Sahara into the West African savanna zone after 2500 BCE, in the context of southwards population movements (Ozainne et al. 2014; Neumann 2018; Fuller et al. 2021)…The presence of pearl millet without roulette decorations or chaff temper, as seen in the Nok and early Gajiganna sites, suggests that the third diffusion originated directly from the central Sahara and possibly split before reaching northern Nigeria, accounting for the differences in Nok and Gajiganna pottery (Fig. 8; and see Champion 2020, p. 462).[3]

 
West African sites with archaeobotanical remains from third to first millennium cal bc. The arrows indicate directions of pearl millet diffusion into sub-Saharan West Africa, including 5. Nok region sites.

Sculptures edit

Nok sculptures
 
Nok sculpture, terracotta, Louvre
 
Nok male figure; 500 BC – 500 AD; terracotta; 49.5 cm × 22.2 cm × 16.8 cm (19.5 in × 8.7 in × 6.6 in); from northern Nigeria; Kimbell Art Museum (Fort Worth, Texas, USA)
 
Female statue; 48 cm tall; age: 900 to 1,500 years
 
Nok rider and horse; 53 cm tall; age: 1,400 to 2,000 years

The function of Nok terracotta sculptures is still unknown. For the most part, the terracotta is preserved in the form of scattered fragments. That is why Nok art is well known today only for the heads, both male and female, whose hairstyles are particularly detailed and refined. The statues are in fragments because the discoveries are usually made from alluvial mud, in terrain made by the erosion of water. The terracotta statues found there are hidden, rolled, polished, and broken. Rarely are works of great size conserved intact making them highly valued on the international art market.[15]

The terracotta figures are hollow, coil built, nearly life sized human heads and bodies that are depicted with highly stylized features, abundant jewelry, and varied postures. Because of the homogeneous composition of the scultptures across the Nok cultural, in contrast to the varying compositions of Nok pottery, it is thought that Nok sculpture was made from a few clay deposits, suggesting a centralized and specialized production.[16]

Little is known of the original function of the pieces, but theories include ancestor portrayal, grave markers, and charms to prevent crop failure, infertility, and illness. Also, based on the dome-shaped bases found on several figures, they could have been used as finials for the roofs of ancient structures.

Margaret Young-Sanchez, Associate Curator of Art of the Americas, Africa, and Oceania in The Cleveland Museum of Art, explains that most Nok ceramics were shaped by hand from coarse-grained clay and subtractively sculpted in a manner that suggests an influence from wood carving. After some drying, the sculptures were covered with slip and burnished to produce a smooth, glossy surface. The figures are hollow, with several openings to facilitate thorough drying and firing. The firing process most likely resembled that used today in Nigeria, in which the pieces are covered with grass, twigs, and leaves and burned for several hours.

As a result of natural erosion and deposition, Nok terracottas were scattered at various depths throughout the Sahel grasslands, causing difficulty in the dating and classification of the mysterious artifacts. Luckily, two archaeological sites, Samun Dukiya and Taruga, were found containing Nok art that had remained unmoved. Radiocarbon and thermo-luminescence tests dated the sculptures to a range of dates between about 2,900 and 2,000 years ago, making them some of the oldest in Western Africa. Many further dates were retrieved in the course of new archaeological excavations, extending the beginnings of the Nok tradition even further back in time.[17]

Because of the similarities between the two sites, archaeologist Graham Connah believes that "Nok artwork represents a style that was adopted by a range of iron-using farming societies of varying cultures, rather than being the diagnostic feature of a particular human group as has often been claimed."

Nok people may have developed terracotta sculptures through large-scale economic production.[5] Among Nok terracotta sculptures at Pangwari, there are sculptures portraying a large teeth-bearing therianthropic (human-feline) figure and the torso of a seated figure wearing a belt around their waist and a necklace, which had added features (e.g., bows, knots); there are also sculptures portraying the head of a human figure that has a bird beak and the head of a male figure with a seashell on it, which may have been created by the same sculptor.[7] Additionally, there are sculptures portraying figures wielding slingshots, as well as bows and arrows, which may be indicative of Nok people engaging in the hunting, or trapping, of untamed animals.[7]

A Nok sculpture portrays two individuals, along with their goods, in a dugout canoe.[7] Both of the anthropomorphic figures in the watercraft are paddling.[8] The Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe may indicate that Nok people utilized dugout canoes to transport cargo, along tributaries (e.g., Gurara River) of the Niger River, and exchanged them in a regional trade network.[8] The Nok terracotta depiction of a figure with a seashell on its head may indicate that the span of these riverine trade routes may have extended to the Atlantic coast.[8] In the maritime history of Africa, there is the earlier Dufuna canoe, which was constructed approximately 8000 years ago in the northern region of Nigeria; as the second earliest form of water vessel known in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe was created in the central region of Nigeria during the first millennium BCE.[8]

Based on evidence from the sites of Nok archaeological culture, such as considerable quantities of charcoal layered among Nok sculptures, goods (e.g., technically crafted ceramics, numerous stone-beaded necklaces) found in burial pits that support the view of them serving as grave sites, difference in soil coloring of burial pits and their immediate geographic area, and burial pits containing materials from organic substances, this supports the conclusion that Nok sculptures were part of a complex funerary culture.[6]

Latter artistic traditions of West AfricaBura of Niger (3rd century CE – 10th century CE), Koma of Ghana (7th century CE – 15th century CE), Igbo-Ukwu of Nigeria (9th century CE – 10th century CE), Jenne-Jeno of Mali (11th century CE – 12th century CE), and Ile Ife of Nigeria (11th century CE – 15th century CE) – may have been shaped by the earlier West African clay terracotta tradition of the Nok culture.[9]

Archaeology edit

The first Nok terracotta was discovered in 1928 by Colonel Dent Young,[18] a co-owner of a mining partnership, near the village of Nok in Kaduna State, Nigeria.[19] The terracotta was accidentally unearthed at a level of 24 feet (7 m) from an alluvial tin mine. Young presented the sculptures to the Museum of the Department of Mines in Jos.[20]

Fifteen years later, in 1943 near the village of Nok, in the center of Nigeria, a new series of clay figurines were discovered by accident while mining tin. A clerk in charge of the mine had found a head and had taken it back to his home for use as a scarecrow, a role that it filled (successfully) for a year in a yam field. This scarecrow was eventually noticed by Bernard Fagg who at the time was an administrative officer who had studied archaeology at the University of Cambridge. Fagg noticed that the head on the scarecrow looked similar to the sculpture that Young had found. He traveled to Jos where Young showed Fagg other recently uncovered terracotta figures. Eventually it became clear that the tin mining in Nok and Jema'a areas was revealing and destroying archaeological material.[20]

 
 
class=notpageimage|
Map of Nigeria showing the major sites of the Nok culture (clickable map)

Preliminary excavations at the beginning of January 1961 began near a remote valley named Taruga near the village of Takushara. The trial excavations took place during a period of eight days. The finds included objects of wrought iron, a quantity of iron slag, fragments of tuyere, pottery, figurine fragments, red ocher, quartz hammer-stones, and small concentrations of charcoal. The most famous finds at the site were the pottery graters which were shallow, flat-bottomed dishes which were deeply scored inside with diced patterns to produce a sharp abrasive surface. These pottery graters were probably used for food preparation. In the preliminary excavation a proton magnetometer survey was used to try and locate furnaces. The survey revealed a total of 61 magnetic anomalies which were mostly located in a flat, central area which probably indicated the limits of actual occupation. Twenty of the anomalies revealed concentrations of slag and nine of them contained in situ structures of furnace walls and bases. The most common type of artefact found was domestic pottery which can be divided into two different types. One type are bowls or shallow basins without lips and the other are globular pots which have averted lips. Because of this preliminary excavation, the Nok Culture would start being regarded as belonging to the Iron Age.[21]

In 1989, German scientists were working in northeastern Nigeria's Chad Basin as part of a cooperative project between the University of Maiduguri located in Borno State, Nigeria, and archaeologists of Goethe University Frankfurt. This project examined the beginnings of sedentary farming societies in the Chad Basin. Questions arose about whether there were other societies like those in the Chad Basin, and these questions led the team to investigate the Nok Culture. In the early steps of the Frankfurt Nok Project, researchers had difficulty finding sites to excavate. The team began collaborating with Umaru Yusuf Potiskum and they started finding distinct Nok culture sites, although most were looted.[22] Scientific field work began in 2005 to systematically investigate Nok archaeological sites and to better understand Nok terracotta sculptures within their Iron Age archaeological context,[17][23][24] and was subsequently concluded in 2021.[3]

Settlements and architecture edit

In the central region of Nigeria, Nok archaeological sites are determined to be settlement sites, on the basis of archaeological evidence discovered at the surface level of the sites, and determined to be of the Nok culture, on the basis of the type of archaeological evidence discovered, specifically, Nok terracotta remnants and Nok pottery.[10] Nok settlement sites have been found in flat plains, on hilltops, and on the slopes and summits of mountains. There appears to have been a preference for specific topographic features like elevations and gentle slopes, possibly because they provided favourable drainage during the rainy season.[25] In a preliminary study published in 2005, Rupp et al. stated that the foundation of a wall had been carved out of the underlying granite at the settlement site of Kochio, and that a 'megalithic stone fence' had been erected around a central area in the settlement.[10] However in a subsequent study published in 2016 the authors concluded that these were in fact misinterpreted natural geological features, and that there was no evidence for any stone architecture at Nok sites, apart from the rare exception of the circular stone foundation of a hut discovered in Puntun Dutse.[26] The archaeological evidence indicates that Nok houses were built primarily of organic materials like wood, plant stalks, grasses, and animal hides, which decomposed without leaving visible traces in the soil.[25] Typical Nok settlements were either hamlets or single compounds, similar in size to modern farmsteads found in the same area. There is no indication of agglomerations of people above village level, thus "no evidence that would warrant the existence of communities of a size that would be necessary to develop social stratification, which is regarded as one of the attributes of social complexity."[27] Numerous excavations and prospections have indicated that no towns or any kind of urban environments existed in the Nok culture, and no evidence has been found for special buildings or areas occupied by high-ranking community members. The lack of substantial stratigraphies or evidence of mound formation processes further indicates that Nok sites had brief occupation episodes. In sum, the evidence indicates that Nok culture communities were small-scaled and organised in locally autonomous groups. According to Rupp et al. (2016):

"Rather than attributes of social complexity like signs of inequality, hierarchy, nucleation of settlement systems, communal and public monuments, or alternative African versions of complexity discussed in recent years, it has become apparent that the Nok Culture, no matter which concept is followed, developed complexity only in terms of ritual."[28]

Iron metallurgy edit

Iron metallurgy may have developed in the Nok culture between 750 BCE and 550 BCE.[3][11][12] Nok people may have independently invented iron metallurgy in the 9th century BCE or 8th century BCE.[13]

Stone tools edit

The shapes of stone tools found at Nok sites change little throughout the entire span of the Nok Culture. What tends to strike researchers is a lack of cutting tools. Apart from stone axes, no tools with a cutting edge have been found. Projectile points made of either iron or stone are also absent from Nok sites.

Grinding tools are very common at Nok sites. They are rarely preserved in one piece, but can still illustrate the different shapes and sizes of tools used throughout the Nok Culture. Grinding stones were made of quartzite, granitic, or metamorphic rock. At the site of Ungwar Kura, grinding stones seem to have been placed in a certain order, and at the site of Ido huge grinding slabs were arranged in an upright position with pots and stone beads next to them. This context is assumed to have been ritual in some way. Most of the grinders are merely hand-sized. Throughout Nok sites, there is an abundance of grinding slabs but there seems to be a low number of hand stones. It is possible that members of the Nok Culture used these grinders until they reached a certain state of wear, and then repurposed them as pestles.[22]

Ground stone axes were another tool commonly used by the Nok. They were typically made from fine-grained volcanic rock (siliceous rock is also sometimes seen), and may have been used in food preparation. These ax blades tend to be smallish in size, the largest reaching 20 centimeters. Stone balls are found at almost every Nok site and are approximately palm-sized. They were probably used as hammerstones or for roughening the surface of a grinding stone. Not all of them are ball shaped, however, and many have chipping marks all over or at least in one place. These stone balls likely would have served as mobile grinding stones.[22]

Stone rings have also been found at Nok Culture sites. They are normally found as fragments but can be identified as rings because of their flat, oval or triangular cross-sections and their shapes. These stone rings are very rare and their purpose is unknown, but their use as currency or a medium of exchange has been suggested. Another rare find is stone beads, which are typically found as if strung on strings. Beads tend to be carefully made out of hard siliceous rock such as quartz, chalcedony, jasper, or carnelian. There are three different bead shapes: cylindrical, which is the most common shape, as well as rod and ring-shaped.[22]

Ceramics edit

Potsherds (pottery shards) are the most abundant archaeological artifacts at Nok sites. Since 2009, excavated pottery has been undergoing systematic analysis with a central aim to try and establish a chronology. Certain attributes of the pottery such as decoration, shape, and size appear with an increasing frequency and then disappear, being replaced with different pottery attributes. This change can sometimes allow one to divide the progression into different intervals based on the different attributes. In total approximately 90,000 potsherds have been collected, of which 15,000 have been considered diagnostic, meaning that they are decorated, sherds from the rim or the bottom of the vessel, or they have handles or holes in them. The results of the pottery analysis can be delineated into three distinct time periods: Early, Middle, and Late.

Early Nok Period ceramics edit

From approximately c. 1500–900 BC the pottery of the Early Nok Period are mostly small and not very well preserved. They seem to be richly decorated with various elaborate patterns directly below the vessels' rims and covering a large part of the ceramic body. The lines made on the pottery seem to be remarkably fine or curving lines. There tend to be many lines that are close together and some even have crisscrossing lines beneath the rim. Pottery frequently had everted and broad, thick rims.

Middle Nok Period ceramics edit

The Middle Nok Period is approximately from c. 900–300 BC and in this time period there is a dramatic increase of sites, terracotta fragments and iron objects. Instead of the early period's decoration, which tended to cover most of the pot, instead, there is a decorative band which is bordered by deep horizontal lines. This band appears on the pots' upper half or directly under the rim of the bowls. Some bands have sharp ends as well as impressed zigzag lines or an incised wave or arc. Unlike the Early Nok period the Middle Nok ceramics tend to have more variety in the rim with everted rims, open bowls, bowls with inverted rims and incised line ornaments on the rims' lips.

Late Nok Period ceramics edit

The Late Nok period is from approximately c. 300–1 BC and has only a few known sites. There is little pottery available for analysis but from the pottery that was found there is a decrease in the strictness of the ornamental band. While bands are still used, they are more complexly decorated with additional patterning. There also tends to be a returning pattern of body decoration. The variety of rim sizes and types seem to be increasing even more than in the Middle Nok period.

Farming edit

 
Map of the world in 400 BC showing the Nok culture

Akin to the peoples of the Chad Basin and Kintampo culture, the people of the Nok culture employed a mixed cropping method of cultivating cowpeas and pearl millet as well as utilized oleaginous fruits.[29] At Pangwari, pearl millet was domesticated and cultivated, cowpeas were cultivated, and various forms of vegetation (e.g., Caesalpinioideae, Canarium schweinfurthii, Combretaceae, Phyllanthaceae, Vitex) were utilized.[7] Hunting-gathering was another subsistence pattern followed by the Nok people.[7]

Grains edit

Nok peoples may have migrated into the central region of Nigeria and brought into the area the agricultural knowledge of cultivating tamed pearl millet between 1500 BCE and 900 BCE.[30] At almost all Nok sites, there are charred plant remains consisting of firewood and plant material for cooking.[31] Remains of pearl millet, one of Africa's oldest grain crops, are commonly found. Pearl millet is highly productive and resistant to adverse growing conditions, including drought. Cowpeas, valued for their high protein content, are also found at some sites. So far, pearl millet and cowpeas are the only crops known to have been cultivated by the Nok people. It is unclear whether they ate or farmed tubers of any kind. The numerous grinding stones found at Nok sites suggest that the grains were ground into flour and made into a type of porridge.[22]

Fruit edit

Hard pits from wild fruits have been found at many Nok sites. At some sites, fruit and seeds of other wild plants such as grasses and legumes were discovered. Overall there is not a huge selection of plant remains, but this could simply mean they were not preserved.[22] More recent evidence of Carbonized plant remains of the Nok suggest that they foraged for tree fruits.[32]

Trees and farming edit

The Nok people probably used an agroforestry system, combining cultivated crops with useful trees on the same plot of land. These plots are ecologically sustainable and inter-cropping of trees and several cultivated plant species were common from the savannas to the rain forest, with the origins of the practice going back to the first millennium BC, right at the time of the Nok culture. Most West African trees are not domesticated but are part of the wild vegetation which is left after farmers clear their fields of their crops. Because they are left to grow they multiply naturally without needing to be planted. Trees can produce food, medicine and animal feed.[22]

Animals edit

Because of the acidic soil, no animal bones from the Nok culture have been preserved, leaving no direct evidence of what species they might have domesticated (or hunted). The only evidence for animals during the Nok culture period is the depictions of animals as figurines or terracotta sculptures.[22]

Food edit

As of 3500 years ago, Nok agriculturalists gathered and utilized bee products (e.g., gathered honey in pottery).[33] The honey may have been utilized by Nok agriculturalists to add to West African cuisines.[34] As evidenced by remnants of beeswax and fats from animals on ceramics, the pottery may have been utilized to store meat, along with honey utilized for preservation purposes.[34]

Looting and repatriation edit

Since the 1970s, Nok terracotta figures have been heavily looted. Even larger-scale looting commenced in the Nok cultural area in 1994, and by 1995 two main local traders emerged. Each of the main traders could employ approximately 1,000 diggers to unearth terracottas every day. Although the majority of the terracottas were fragmented, some were intact and sellable.[35] Because of this, hundreds of Nok Culture sites have been illegally dug in search of these terracotta sculptures. Valuable information about the Nok Culture is lost when these objects are taken from out of the ground and removed from their archaeological contexts.[22]

In 1979, Nigeria's National Commission of Museums and Monuments Decree established the National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM), which is used to manage Nigeria's cultural heritage. NCMM Decree number 77 made it illegal for anyone other than authorized personnel to buy or sell antiquities within Nigeria or export an antiquity without a permit from the NCMM.[35] Towards the end of the 1990s the federal government of Nigeria implemented the NCMM, which initiated a series of actions to work out strategies for combating the problems of looting and to map out a plan of action. The general consensus was that laws governing antiquities and penalties for offenders needed to be strictly enforced and that all archaeological sites should be monitored. The NCMM also recommended more aggressive public enlightenment campaigns as well as a series of sensitization programs across the nation. These programs are considered a success in terms of increased awareness by law enforcement agents, as well as the Nigerian customs authorities and Interpol.[22] However, not all of the recommendations were implemented, because the Nigerian government did not have the resources to face the large scale of some of the challenges. For example, the government did not have the resources to place monitors at all archaeological sites, and terracotta figures still slip through Nigeria's borders.

Today, the terracotta sculptures are very highly sought after on the international art market, and so artifacts continue to be dug up without documentation of the contexts in which they were buried. A lack of extensive archaeological study has also severely limited our understanding of the Nok cultures.[36][37] A joint research project with Goethe University and the National Commission for Museums and Monuments conducted since 2005 showed that more than 90% of Nok Culture sites known in the research area have been illegally looted. Art historical studies carried out shows that over 1,000 Nok terracotta sculptures have been illegally excavated and smuggled into Europe, the USA, Japan, and elsewhere. In February 2013, Daily Trust reported that the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Information and National Orientation repossessed five Nok statuettes looted by a French thief in August 2010. The pieces had been seized by French customs agents and were repatriated following a Nigerian Government Directive.[38] What further complicates the problem are the many workshops which fake Nok sculptures and then put them on the market as authentic.[22]

Descendants edit

As each share cultural and artistic similarity with the Nok culture found in Nok, Sokoto, and Katsina, the Niger-Congo-speaking Yoruba, Jukun, or Dakakari peoples may be descendants of the Nok peoples.[39] Based on stylistic similarities with the Nok terracottas, the bronze figurines of the Yoruba Ife Empire and the Bini kingdom of Benin may also be continuations of the traditions of the earlier Nok culture.[40]

See also edit

References edit

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  24. ^ Breunig, Peter; Kahlheber, Stefanie; Rupp, Nicole (June 2008). "Exploring the Nok enigma". Antiquity. 82 (316).
  25. ^ a b Breunig, Peter; Rupp, Nicole (13 Dec 2016). "An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture". Journal of African Archaeology. 14 (3): 247. JSTOR 44295241.
  26. ^ Breunig, Peter; Rupp, Nicole (13 Dec 2016). "An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture". Journal of African Archaeology. 14 (3): 247. JSTOR 44295241. we at first misinterpreted geological phenomena as constructional components of large-scale stone structures (Rupp et al. 2005: 287). Until today we have not come across any structure that resembles any kind of large-scale stone building and therefore we claim that the Nok Culture erected no stone architecture, apart from the rare exception of the circular stone foundation of a hut discovered in Puntun Dutse
  27. ^ Breunig, Peter; Rupp, Nicole (13 Dec 2016). "An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture". Journal of African Archaeology. 14 (3): 251. JSTOR 44295241.
  28. ^ Breunig, Peter; Rupp, Nicole (13 Dec 2016). "An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture". Journal of African Archaeology. 14 (3): 237. JSTOR 44295241.
  29. ^ Kahlheber, S; et al. "Archaeobotanical Studies at Nok sites: an Interim Report". ResearchGate. Nyame Akuma.
  30. ^ Kay, Andrea U. (2019). "Diversification, Intensification and Specialization: Changing Land Use in Western Africa from 1800 BC to AD 1500". Journal of World Prehistory. 32 (2): 179–228. doi:10.1007/s10963-019-09131-2. S2CID 134223231.
  31. ^ "AFRICA | 101 Last Tribes - Nok people". www.101lasttribes.com. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  32. ^ Dunne, Julie; Höhn, Alexa (14 January 2022). "Making the invisible visible: tracing the origins of plants in West African cuisine through archaeobotanical and organic residue analysis". Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. 14. doi:10.1007/s12520-021-01476-0. hdl:1983/aeae6475-7998-4929-ae38-ea5d7cce36e2. S2CID 245917579.
  33. ^ Dunne, Julie B.; et al. (2021). "Honey-collecting in prehistoric West Africa from 3500 years ago". Nature Communications. 12 (1): 2227. Bibcode:2021NatCo..12.2227D. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22425-4. PMC 8047003. PMID 33854053.
  34. ^ a b Dunne, Julie; et al. (2021). "Honey-collecting in prehistoric West Africa from 3500 years ago". Nature Communications. 12 (1): 2227. Bibcode:2021NatCo..12.2227D. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22425-4. PMC 8047003. PMID 33854053.
  35. ^ a b Brodie, Neil, and Donna Yates. 2012. Nok Terracottas. Trafficking Culture: Researching the Global Traffic in Looted Cultural Objects.
  36. ^ Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. 2000. Nok Terracotta (500 B.C.–200 A.D.). The Met’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History.
  37. ^ Anon. 2015. Research continues into 3000 year-old Nok culture of sub-Saharan Africa. Adventures in Archaeology. Archaeology News from Past Horizons, February 8.
  38. ^ Mustapha Suleiman (February 3, 2013), France Hands Over Stolen Nigerian Artifacts Daily Trust.
  39. ^ Lamp, Frederick John (2011). "Ancient Terracotta Figures from Northern Nigeria". Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin: 55. ISSN 0084-3539. JSTOR 41421509. OCLC 9972665249.
  40. ^ Shillington (2005), p. 39

Bibliography edit

  • Shillington, Kevin (2005). History of Africa (2nd ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780333599570.

Further reading edit

  • Atwood, R. (2011). The NOK of Nigeria. Archaeology July/August 2011, 34-38.
  • Breunig, P., ed. (2014). Nok | African Sculpture in Archaeological Context. Frankfurt: Africa Magna Verlag. ISBN 9783937248462. ISBN 978-3-937248-46-2
  • Breunig, P. & Rupp, N. (2006). Nichts als Kunst. Archäologische Forschungen zur früheisenzeitlichen Nok-Kultur in Zentral-Nigeria. Forschung Frankfurt 2-3, 73-76.
  • Boullier, C.; A. Person; J.-F. Saliège & J. Polet (2001). Bilan chronologique de la culture Nok et nouvelle datations sur des sculptures. Afrique: Archéologie & Arts 2, 9-28.
  • Fagg, A. (1972). A preliminary report on an occupation site in the Nok valley, Nigeria: Samun Dukiya, AF/70/1. West African Journal of Archaeology 2, 75-79.
  • Fagg, B. (1959). The Nok Culture in prehistory. Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 1 (4), 288-293.
  • Fagg, B. (1968). The Nok Culture: Excavations at Taruga. The West African Archaeological Newsletter 10, 27-30.
  • Fagg, B. (1969). Recent work in West Africa: new light on the Nok Culture. World Archaeology 1 (1), 41-50.
  • Fagg, B., (1990): Nok terracottas. Lagos: National Commission for Museums and Monuments.
  • Jemkur, J. (1992). Aspects of the Nok Culture. Zaria.
  • Rupp, N.; Ameje, J.; Breunig, P. (2005). New studies on the Nok Culture of Central Nigeria. Journal of African Archaeology 3, 2: 283-290.
  • Rupp, N.; Breunig, P.; Kahlheber, S. (2008). Exploring the Nok enigma. Antiquity, Project gallery.
  • Shaw, T., (1981). The Nok sculptures of Nigeria. Scientific American 244(2): 154-166.
  • Tylecote, R. (1975a). The origin of iron smelting in Africa. Westafrican Journal of Archaeology. 5, 1-9.
  • Tylecote, R. (1975b). Iron smelting at Taruga, Nigeria. Journal of Historical Metallurgy 9 (2), 49-56.
  • Olubunmi A.O. (2007) The Rise and Fall of The Yoruba Race, The 199 Publishing Palace ISBN 978-2457-38-8
  • Olubunmi A.O. (2009) On Ijesa Racial Purity, The 199 Publishing Palace ISBN 978-2458-17-1
  • Ayoade J.O. (1983) Introduction To Climatology For The Tropics, John Wiley & Sons ltd UK ISBN 0-471-10407-8

External links edit

  •   Media related to Nok culture at Wikimedia Commons

culture, water, spirits, neck, water, spirit, nigerian, village, other, uses, geographical, rangewest, africaperiodneolithic, iron, agedatesc, 1500, bctype, sitenokmajor, sitesnok, villagejama, asamun, dukiyatarugajosfollowed, bykwararafathe, population, whose. For the water spirits see Neck water spirit For the Nigerian village see Nok For other uses see NOK 9 30 N 8 0 E 9 500 N 8 000 E 9 500 8 000 Nok cultureGeographical rangeWest AfricaPeriodNeolithic Iron AgeDatesc 1500 BC c 1 BCType siteNokMajor sitesNok villageJama aSamun DukiyaTarugaJosFollowed byKwararafaThe Nok culture is a population whose material remains are named after the Ham village of Nok in southern Kaduna State of Nigeria where their terracotta sculptures were first discovered in 1928 1 2 The Nok people and the Gajiganna people may have migrated from the Central Sahara along with pearl millet and pottery diverged prior to arriving in the northern region of Nigeria and thus settled in their respective locations in the region of Gajiganna and Nok 3 Nok people may have also migrated from the West African Sahel to the region of Nok 4 Nok culture may have emerged in 1500 BCE and continued to persist until 1 BCE 3 Nok people may have developed terracotta sculptures through large scale economic production 5 as part of a complex funerary culture 6 that may have included practices such as feasting 3 The earliest Nok terracotta sculptures may have developed in 900 BCE 3 Some Nok terracotta sculptures portray figures wielding slingshots as well as bows and arrows which may be indicative of Nok people engaging in the hunting or trapping of undomesticated animals 7 A Nok sculpture portrays two individuals along with their goods in a dugout canoe 7 Both of the anthropomorphic figures in the watercraft are paddling 8 The Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe may indicate that Nok people used dugout canoes to transport cargo along tributaries e g Gurara River of the Niger River and exchanged them in a regional trade network 8 The Nok terracotta depiction of a figure with a seashell on its head may indicate that the span of these riverine trade routes may have extended to the Atlantic coast 8 In the maritime history of Africa there is the earlier Dufuna canoe which was constructed approximately 8000 years ago in the northern region of Nigeria as the second earliest form of water vessel known in Sub Saharan Africa the Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe was created in the central region of Nigeria during the first millennium BCE 8 Latter artistic traditions of West Africa Bura of Niger 3rd century CE 10th century CE Koma of Ghana 7th century CE 15th century CE Igbo Ukwu of Nigeria 9th century CE 10th century CE Jenne Jeno of Mali 11th century CE 12th century CE and Ile Ife of Nigeria 11th century CE 15th century CE may have been shaped by the earlier West African clay terracotta tradition of the Nok culture 9 Nok settlement sites are often found on mountaintops 10 Iron metallurgy may have independently developed in the Nok culture between 750 BCE and 550 BCE 3 11 12 13 Contents 1 Origin 2 Sculptures 3 Archaeology 3 1 Settlements and architecture 3 2 Iron metallurgy 3 3 Stone tools 3 4 Ceramics 3 4 1 Early Nok Period ceramics 3 4 2 Middle Nok Period ceramics 3 4 3 Late Nok Period ceramics 3 5 Farming 3 5 1 Grains 3 5 2 Fruit 3 5 3 Trees and farming 3 5 4 Animals 3 5 5 Food 4 Looting and repatriation 5 Descendants 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksOrigin editBreunig and Rupp 2016 stated Their origin is unknown but since the plants they used as crops especially millet are indigenous to the Sahel region a northern homeland is more probable than any other 14 Breunig 2017 expounded The people of the Nok culture must have come from somewhere else So far however we have not found out what region though we suspect the Sahel zone in West Africa 4 Champion et al 2022 suggested that they may have come from the Central Sahara and stated The cultivation of pearl millet diffused from the desiccating West and Central Sahara into the West African savanna zone after 2500 BCE in the context of southwards population movements Ozainne et al 2014 Neumann 2018 Fuller et al 2021 The presence of pearl millet without roulette decorations or chaff temper as seen in the Nok and early Gajiganna sites suggests that the third diffusion originated directly from the central Sahara and possibly split before reaching northern Nigeria accounting for the differences in Nok and Gajiganna pottery Fig 8 and see Champion 2020 p 462 3 nbsp West African sites with archaeobotanical remains from third to first millennium cal bc The arrows indicate directions of pearl millet diffusion into sub Saharan West Africa including 5 Nok region sites Sculptures editNok sculptures nbsp Nok sculpture terracotta Louvre nbsp Nok male figure 500 BC 500 AD terracotta 49 5 cm 22 2 cm 16 8 cm 19 5 in 8 7 in 6 6 in from northern Nigeria Kimbell Art Museum Fort Worth Texas USA nbsp Female statue 48 cm tall age 900 to 1 500 years nbsp Nok rider and horse 53 cm tall age 1 400 to 2 000 years The function of Nok terracotta sculptures is still unknown For the most part the terracotta is preserved in the form of scattered fragments That is why Nok art is well known today only for the heads both male and female whose hairstyles are particularly detailed and refined The statues are in fragments because the discoveries are usually made from alluvial mud in terrain made by the erosion of water The terracotta statues found there are hidden rolled polished and broken Rarely are works of great size conserved intact making them highly valued on the international art market 15 The terracotta figures are hollow coil built nearly life sized human heads and bodies that are depicted with highly stylized features abundant jewelry and varied postures Because of the homogeneous composition of the scultptures across the Nok cultural in contrast to the varying compositions of Nok pottery it is thought that Nok sculpture was made from a few clay deposits suggesting a centralized and specialized production 16 Little is known of the original function of the pieces but theories include ancestor portrayal grave markers and charms to prevent crop failure infertility and illness Also based on the dome shaped bases found on several figures they could have been used as finials for the roofs of ancient structures Margaret Young Sanchez Associate Curator of Art of the Americas Africa and Oceania in The Cleveland Museum of Art explains that most Nok ceramics were shaped by hand from coarse grained clay and subtractively sculpted in a manner that suggests an influence from wood carving After some drying the sculptures were covered with slip and burnished to produce a smooth glossy surface The figures are hollow with several openings to facilitate thorough drying and firing The firing process most likely resembled that used today in Nigeria in which the pieces are covered with grass twigs and leaves and burned for several hours As a result of natural erosion and deposition Nok terracottas were scattered at various depths throughout the Sahel grasslands causing difficulty in the dating and classification of the mysterious artifacts Luckily two archaeological sites Samun Dukiya and Taruga were found containing Nok art that had remained unmoved Radiocarbon and thermo luminescence tests dated the sculptures to a range of dates between about 2 900 and 2 000 years ago making them some of the oldest in Western Africa Many further dates were retrieved in the course of new archaeological excavations extending the beginnings of the Nok tradition even further back in time 17 Because of the similarities between the two sites archaeologist Graham Connah believes that Nok artwork represents a style that was adopted by a range of iron using farming societies of varying cultures rather than being the diagnostic feature of a particular human group as has often been claimed Nok people may have developed terracotta sculptures through large scale economic production 5 Among Nok terracotta sculptures at Pangwari there are sculptures portraying a large teeth bearing therianthropic human feline figure and the torso of a seated figure wearing a belt around their waist and a necklace which had added features e g bows knots there are also sculptures portraying the head of a human figure that has a bird beak and the head of a male figure with a seashell on it which may have been created by the same sculptor 7 Additionally there are sculptures portraying figures wielding slingshots as well as bows and arrows which may be indicative of Nok people engaging in the hunting or trapping of untamed animals 7 A Nok sculpture portrays two individuals along with their goods in a dugout canoe 7 Both of the anthropomorphic figures in the watercraft are paddling 8 The Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe may indicate that Nok people utilized dugout canoes to transport cargo along tributaries e g Gurara River of the Niger River and exchanged them in a regional trade network 8 The Nok terracotta depiction of a figure with a seashell on its head may indicate that the span of these riverine trade routes may have extended to the Atlantic coast 8 In the maritime history of Africa there is the earlier Dufuna canoe which was constructed approximately 8000 years ago in the northern region of Nigeria as the second earliest form of water vessel known in Sub Saharan Africa the Nok terracotta depiction of a dugout canoe was created in the central region of Nigeria during the first millennium BCE 8 Based on evidence from the sites of Nok archaeological culture such as considerable quantities of charcoal layered among Nok sculptures goods e g technically crafted ceramics numerous stone beaded necklaces found in burial pits that support the view of them serving as grave sites difference in soil coloring of burial pits and their immediate geographic area and burial pits containing materials from organic substances this supports the conclusion that Nok sculptures were part of a complex funerary culture 6 Latter artistic traditions of West Africa Bura of Niger 3rd century CE 10th century CE Koma of Ghana 7th century CE 15th century CE Igbo Ukwu of Nigeria 9th century CE 10th century CE Jenne Jeno of Mali 11th century CE 12th century CE and Ile Ife of Nigeria 11th century CE 15th century CE may have been shaped by the earlier West African clay terracotta tradition of the Nok culture 9 Archaeology editThe first Nok terracotta was discovered in 1928 by Colonel Dent Young 18 a co owner of a mining partnership near the village of Nok in Kaduna State Nigeria 19 The terracotta was accidentally unearthed at a level of 24 feet 7 m from an alluvial tin mine Young presented the sculptures to the Museum of the Department of Mines in Jos 20 Fifteen years later in 1943 near the village of Nok in the center of Nigeria a new series of clay figurines were discovered by accident while mining tin A clerk in charge of the mine had found a head and had taken it back to his home for use as a scarecrow a role that it filled successfully for a year in a yam field This scarecrow was eventually noticed by Bernard Fagg who at the time was an administrative officer who had studied archaeology at the University of Cambridge Fagg noticed that the head on the scarecrow looked similar to the sculpture that Young had found He traveled to Jos where Young showed Fagg other recently uncovered terracotta figures Eventually it became clear that the tin mining in Nok and Jema a areas was revealing and destroying archaeological material 20 nbsp nbsp Taruga nbsp Josclass notpageimage Map of Nigeria showing the major sites of the Nok culture clickable map Preliminary excavations at the beginning of January 1961 began near a remote valley named Taruga near the village of Takushara The trial excavations took place during a period of eight days The finds included objects of wrought iron a quantity of iron slag fragments of tuyere pottery figurine fragments red ocher quartz hammer stones and small concentrations of charcoal The most famous finds at the site were the pottery graters which were shallow flat bottomed dishes which were deeply scored inside with diced patterns to produce a sharp abrasive surface These pottery graters were probably used for food preparation In the preliminary excavation a proton magnetometer survey was used to try and locate furnaces The survey revealed a total of 61 magnetic anomalies which were mostly located in a flat central area which probably indicated the limits of actual occupation Twenty of the anomalies revealed concentrations of slag and nine of them contained in situ structures of furnace walls and bases The most common type of artefact found was domestic pottery which can be divided into two different types One type are bowls or shallow basins without lips and the other are globular pots which have averted lips Because of this preliminary excavation the Nok Culture would start being regarded as belonging to the Iron Age 21 In 1989 German scientists were working in northeastern Nigeria s Chad Basin as part of a cooperative project between the University of Maiduguri located in Borno State Nigeria and archaeologists of Goethe University Frankfurt This project examined the beginnings of sedentary farming societies in the Chad Basin Questions arose about whether there were other societies like those in the Chad Basin and these questions led the team to investigate the Nok Culture In the early steps of the Frankfurt Nok Project researchers had difficulty finding sites to excavate The team began collaborating with Umaru Yusuf Potiskum and they started finding distinct Nok culture sites although most were looted 22 Scientific field work began in 2005 to systematically investigate Nok archaeological sites and to better understand Nok terracotta sculptures within their Iron Age archaeological context 17 23 24 and was subsequently concluded in 2021 3 Settlements and architecture edit In the central region of Nigeria Nok archaeological sites are determined to be settlement sites on the basis of archaeological evidence discovered at the surface level of the sites and determined to be of the Nok culture on the basis of the type of archaeological evidence discovered specifically Nok terracotta remnants and Nok pottery 10 Nok settlement sites have been found in flat plains on hilltops and on the slopes and summits of mountains There appears to have been a preference for specific topographic features like elevations and gentle slopes possibly because they provided favourable drainage during the rainy season 25 In a preliminary study published in 2005 Rupp et al stated that the foundation of a wall had been carved out of the underlying granite at the settlement site of Kochio and that a megalithic stone fence had been erected around a central area in the settlement 10 However in a subsequent study published in 2016 the authors concluded that these were in fact misinterpreted natural geological features and that there was no evidence for any stone architecture at Nok sites apart from the rare exception of the circular stone foundation of a hut discovered in Puntun Dutse 26 The archaeological evidence indicates that Nok houses were built primarily of organic materials like wood plant stalks grasses and animal hides which decomposed without leaving visible traces in the soil 25 Typical Nok settlements were either hamlets or single compounds similar in size to modern farmsteads found in the same area There is no indication of agglomerations of people above village level thus no evidence that would warrant the existence of communities of a size that would be necessary to develop social stratification which is regarded as one of the attributes of social complexity 27 Numerous excavations and prospections have indicated that no towns or any kind of urban environments existed in the Nok culture and no evidence has been found for special buildings or areas occupied by high ranking community members The lack of substantial stratigraphies or evidence of mound formation processes further indicates that Nok sites had brief occupation episodes In sum the evidence indicates that Nok culture communities were small scaled and organised in locally autonomous groups According to Rupp et al 2016 Rather than attributes of social complexity like signs of inequality hierarchy nucleation of settlement systems communal and public monuments or alternative African versions of complexity discussed in recent years it has become apparent that the Nok Culture no matter which concept is followed developed complexity only in terms of ritual 28 Iron metallurgy edit Iron metallurgy may have developed in the Nok culture between 750 BCE and 550 BCE 3 11 12 Nok people may have independently invented iron metallurgy in the 9th century BCE or 8th century BCE 13 Stone tools edit The shapes of stone tools found at Nok sites change little throughout the entire span of the Nok Culture What tends to strike researchers is a lack of cutting tools Apart from stone axes no tools with a cutting edge have been found Projectile points made of either iron or stone are also absent from Nok sites Grinding tools are very common at Nok sites They are rarely preserved in one piece but can still illustrate the different shapes and sizes of tools used throughout the Nok Culture Grinding stones were made of quartzite granitic or metamorphic rock At the site of Ungwar Kura grinding stones seem to have been placed in a certain order and at the site of Ido huge grinding slabs were arranged in an upright position with pots and stone beads next to them This context is assumed to have been ritual in some way Most of the grinders are merely hand sized Throughout Nok sites there is an abundance of grinding slabs but there seems to be a low number of hand stones It is possible that members of the Nok Culture used these grinders until they reached a certain state of wear and then repurposed them as pestles 22 Ground stone axes were another tool commonly used by the Nok They were typically made from fine grained volcanic rock siliceous rock is also sometimes seen and may have been used in food preparation These ax blades tend to be smallish in size the largest reaching 20 centimeters Stone balls are found at almost every Nok site and are approximately palm sized They were probably used as hammerstones or for roughening the surface of a grinding stone Not all of them are ball shaped however and many have chipping marks all over or at least in one place These stone balls likely would have served as mobile grinding stones 22 Stone rings have also been found at Nok Culture sites They are normally found as fragments but can be identified as rings because of their flat oval or triangular cross sections and their shapes These stone rings are very rare and their purpose is unknown but their use as currency or a medium of exchange has been suggested Another rare find is stone beads which are typically found as if strung on strings Beads tend to be carefully made out of hard siliceous rock such as quartz chalcedony jasper or carnelian There are three different bead shapes cylindrical which is the most common shape as well as rod and ring shaped 22 Ceramics edit Potsherds pottery shards are the most abundant archaeological artifacts at Nok sites Since 2009 excavated pottery has been undergoing systematic analysis with a central aim to try and establish a chronology Certain attributes of the pottery such as decoration shape and size appear with an increasing frequency and then disappear being replaced with different pottery attributes This change can sometimes allow one to divide the progression into different intervals based on the different attributes In total approximately 90 000 potsherds have been collected of which 15 000 have been considered diagnostic meaning that they are decorated sherds from the rim or the bottom of the vessel or they have handles or holes in them The results of the pottery analysis can be delineated into three distinct time periods Early Middle and Late Early Nok Period ceramics edit From approximately c 1500 900 BC the pottery of the Early Nok Period are mostly small and not very well preserved They seem to be richly decorated with various elaborate patterns directly below the vessels rims and covering a large part of the ceramic body The lines made on the pottery seem to be remarkably fine or curving lines There tend to be many lines that are close together and some even have crisscrossing lines beneath the rim Pottery frequently had everted and broad thick rims Middle Nok Period ceramics edit The Middle Nok Period is approximately from c 900 300 BC and in this time period there is a dramatic increase of sites terracotta fragments and iron objects Instead of the early period s decoration which tended to cover most of the pot instead there is a decorative band which is bordered by deep horizontal lines This band appears on the pots upper half or directly under the rim of the bowls Some bands have sharp ends as well as impressed zigzag lines or an incised wave or arc Unlike the Early Nok period the Middle Nok ceramics tend to have more variety in the rim with everted rims open bowls bowls with inverted rims and incised line ornaments on the rims lips Late Nok Period ceramics edit The Late Nok period is from approximately c 300 1 BC and has only a few known sites There is little pottery available for analysis but from the pottery that was found there is a decrease in the strictness of the ornamental band While bands are still used they are more complexly decorated with additional patterning There also tends to be a returning pattern of body decoration The variety of rim sizes and types seem to be increasing even more than in the Middle Nok period Farming edit nbsp Map of the world in 400 BC showing the Nok cultureAkin to the peoples of the Chad Basin and Kintampo culture the people of the Nok culture employed a mixed cropping method of cultivating cowpeas and pearl millet as well as utilized oleaginous fruits 29 At Pangwari pearl millet was domesticated and cultivated cowpeas were cultivated and various forms of vegetation e g Caesalpinioideae Canarium schweinfurthii Combretaceae Phyllanthaceae Vitex were utilized 7 Hunting gathering was another subsistence pattern followed by the Nok people 7 Grains edit Nok peoples may have migrated into the central region of Nigeria and brought into the area the agricultural knowledge of cultivating tamed pearl millet between 1500 BCE and 900 BCE 30 At almost all Nok sites there are charred plant remains consisting of firewood and plant material for cooking 31 Remains of pearl millet one of Africa s oldest grain crops are commonly found Pearl millet is highly productive and resistant to adverse growing conditions including drought Cowpeas valued for their high protein content are also found at some sites So far pearl millet and cowpeas are the only crops known to have been cultivated by the Nok people It is unclear whether they ate or farmed tubers of any kind The numerous grinding stones found at Nok sites suggest that the grains were ground into flour and made into a type of porridge 22 Fruit edit Hard pits from wild fruits have been found at many Nok sites At some sites fruit and seeds of other wild plants such as grasses and legumes were discovered Overall there is not a huge selection of plant remains but this could simply mean they were not preserved 22 More recent evidence of Carbonized plant remains of the Nok suggest that they foraged for tree fruits 32 Trees and farming edit The Nok people probably used an agroforestry system combining cultivated crops with useful trees on the same plot of land These plots are ecologically sustainable and inter cropping of trees and several cultivated plant species were common from the savannas to the rain forest with the origins of the practice going back to the first millennium BC right at the time of the Nok culture Most West African trees are not domesticated but are part of the wild vegetation which is left after farmers clear their fields of their crops Because they are left to grow they multiply naturally without needing to be planted Trees can produce food medicine and animal feed 22 Animals edit Because of the acidic soil no animal bones from the Nok culture have been preserved leaving no direct evidence of what species they might have domesticated or hunted The only evidence for animals during the Nok culture period is the depictions of animals as figurines or terracotta sculptures 22 Food edit As of 3500 years ago Nok agriculturalists gathered and utilized bee products e g gathered honey in pottery 33 The honey may have been utilized by Nok agriculturalists to add to West African cuisines 34 As evidenced by remnants of beeswax and fats from animals on ceramics the pottery may have been utilized to store meat along with honey utilized for preservation purposes 34 Looting and repatriation editSince the 1970s Nok terracotta figures have been heavily looted Even larger scale looting commenced in the Nok cultural area in 1994 and by 1995 two main local traders emerged Each of the main traders could employ approximately 1 000 diggers to unearth terracottas every day Although the majority of the terracottas were fragmented some were intact and sellable 35 Because of this hundreds of Nok Culture sites have been illegally dug in search of these terracotta sculptures Valuable information about the Nok Culture is lost when these objects are taken from out of the ground and removed from their archaeological contexts 22 In 1979 Nigeria s National Commission of Museums and Monuments Decree established the National Commission for Museums and Monuments NCMM which is used to manage Nigeria s cultural heritage NCMM Decree number 77 made it illegal for anyone other than authorized personnel to buy or sell antiquities within Nigeria or export an antiquity without a permit from the NCMM 35 Towards the end of the 1990s the federal government of Nigeria implemented the NCMM which initiated a series of actions to work out strategies for combating the problems of looting and to map out a plan of action The general consensus was that laws governing antiquities and penalties for offenders needed to be strictly enforced and that all archaeological sites should be monitored The NCMM also recommended more aggressive public enlightenment campaigns as well as a series of sensitization programs across the nation These programs are considered a success in terms of increased awareness by law enforcement agents as well as the Nigerian customs authorities and Interpol 22 However not all of the recommendations were implemented because the Nigerian government did not have the resources to face the large scale of some of the challenges For example the government did not have the resources to place monitors at all archaeological sites and terracotta figures still slip through Nigeria s borders Today the terracotta sculptures are very highly sought after on the international art market and so artifacts continue to be dug up without documentation of the contexts in which they were buried A lack of extensive archaeological study has also severely limited our understanding of the Nok cultures 36 37 A joint research project with Goethe University and the National Commission for Museums and Monuments conducted since 2005 showed that more than 90 of Nok Culture sites known in the research area have been illegally looted Art historical studies carried out shows that over 1 000 Nok terracotta sculptures have been illegally excavated and smuggled into Europe the USA Japan and elsewhere In February 2013 Daily Trust reported that the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Information and National Orientation repossessed five Nok statuettes looted by a French thief in August 2010 The pieces had been seized by French customs agents and were repatriated following a Nigerian Government Directive 38 What further complicates the problem are the many workshops which fake Nok sculptures and then put them on the market as authentic 22 Descendants editAs each share cultural and artistic similarity with the Nok culture found in Nok Sokoto and Katsina the Niger Congo speaking Yoruba Jukun or Dakakari peoples may be descendants of the Nok peoples 39 Based on stylistic similarities with the Nok terracottas the bronze figurines of the Yoruba Ife Empire and the Bini kingdom of Benin may also be continuations of the traditions of the earlier Nok culture 40 See also edit nbsp Nigeria portal nbsp Traditional African religion portalEarly Nigerian historyReferences edit Nok Retrieved 25 February 2022 Obikili Nonso 2018 State Formation in Precolonial Nigeria PDF In Levan Carl Ukata Patrick eds The Oxford Handbook of Nigerian Politics Oxford University Press p 35 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780198804307 013 1 ISBN 9780198804307 OCLC 1076346474 S2CID 202374677 a b c d e f g h Champion Louis et al 15 December 2022 A question of rite pearl millet consumption at Nok culture sites Nigeria second first millennium BC Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 32 3 263 283 doi 10 1007 s00334 022 00902 0 S2CID 254761854 a b Breunig Peter January 2017 Exploring the Nok Culture PDF Goethe University p 24 a b Sun Z J et al 2017 Instrumental neutron activation analysis INAA of Nok sculptures in I P Stanback Museum Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry 313 85 92 doi 10 1007 s10967 017 5297 8 ISSN 0236 5731 OCLC 7062772522 S2CID 98924415 a b Breunig Peter 2022 Prehistoric Developments In Nigeria In Falola Toyin Heaton Matthew M eds The Oxford Handbook of Nigerian History Oxford University Press pp 123 124 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780190050092 013 5 ISBN 978 0 19 005009 2 OCLC 1267402325 S2CID 249072850 a b c d e f g Franke Gabriele et al 2020 Pits pots and plants at Pangwari Deciphering the nature of a Nok Culture site Azania Archaeological Research in Africa 55 2 129 188 doi 10 1080 0067270X 2020 1757902 ISSN 0067 270X OCLC 8617747912 S2CID 219470059 a b c d e f g h Mannel Tanja M Breunig Peter 12 Jan 2016 The Nok Terracotta Sculptures of Pangwari Journal of African Archaeology 14 3 321 doi 10 3213 2191 5784 10300 inactive 1 August 2023 ISSN 1612 1651 JSTOR 44295244 OCLC 8512545149 S2CID 164688675 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of August 2023 link a b Ramsamy Edward Elliott Carolyn M Seybolt Peter J January 5 2012 Part I Prehistory To 1400 Cultural Sociology of the Middle East Asia and Africa An Encyclopedia SAGE Publications p 8 doi 10 4135 9781452218458 ISBN 978 1 4129 8176 7 OCLC 809773339 S2CID 158838141 a b c Rupp Nicole Ameje James Breunig Peter 2005 New Studies on the Nok Culture of Central Nigeria Journal of African Archaeology 3 2 287 doi 10 3213 1612 1651 10056 ISSN 1612 1651 JSTOR 43135381 OCLC 5919406005 S2CID 162190915 a b Miller Duncan E Van Der Merwe N J 1994 Early Metal Working in Sub Saharan Africa Journal of African History 35 1 36 doi 10 1017 s0021853700025949 S2CID 162330270 a b Stuiver Minze van der Merwe N J 1968 Radiocarbon Chronology of the Iron Age in Sub Saharan Africa Current Anthropology 9 1 54 58 JSTOR 2740446 a b Ehret Christopher 2023 African Firsts in the History of Technology Ancient Africa A Global History to 300 CE Princeton University Press p 19 doi 10 2307 j ctv34kc6ng 5 ISBN 9780691244105 JSTOR j ctv34kc6ng 5 OCLC 1330712064 Breunig Peter Rupp Nicole 2016 An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture PDF Journal of African Archaeology 14 3 242 247 doi 10 3213 2191 5784 10298 inactive 1 August 2023 ISSN 1612 1651 JSTOR 44295241 OCLC 8512542846 S2CID 56195865 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of August 2023 link The Ancient Nok Culture Kaduna State Nigeria Information amp Guide Retrieved 2022 02 04 Breunig Peter 2014 Nok African Sculpture in Archaeological Context Frankfurt am Main Africa Magna ISBN 9783937248462 a b Breunig Peter 2014 Nok African Sculpture in Archaeological Context Frankfurt am Main Africa Magna ISBN 9783937248462 Nok art of Ancient Nigeria September 28 2011 Chesi G amp Merzeder G 2006 The Nok Culture Art in Nigeria 2500 Years Ago a b Shaw Thurstan 1981 The Nok sculptures of Nigeria Scientific American 244 2 154 166 Bibcode 1981SciAm 244b 154S doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0281 154 Fagg Bernard 1969 Recent work in west Africa New light on the Nok culture World Archaeology 1 1 41 50 doi 10 1080 00438243 1969 9979425 a b c d e f g h i j k Breunig Peter editor 2014 Nok African sculpture in archaeological context Africa Magna Verlag Germany October 15 Breunig Peter 2013 Nok Ein Ursprung afrikanischer Skulptur Frankfurt am Main Africa Magna ISBN 9783937248387 Breunig Peter Kahlheber Stefanie Rupp Nicole June 2008 Exploring the Nok enigma Antiquity 82 316 a b Breunig Peter Rupp Nicole 13 Dec 2016 An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture Journal of African Archaeology 14 3 247 JSTOR 44295241 Breunig Peter Rupp Nicole 13 Dec 2016 An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture Journal of African Archaeology 14 3 247 JSTOR 44295241 we at first misinterpreted geological phenomena as constructional components of large scale stone structures Rupp et al 2005 287 Until today we have not come across any structure that resembles any kind of large scale stone building and therefore we claim that the Nok Culture erected no stone architecture apart from the rare exception of the circular stone foundation of a hut discovered in Puntun Dutse Breunig Peter Rupp Nicole 13 Dec 2016 An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture Journal of African Archaeology 14 3 251 JSTOR 44295241 Breunig Peter Rupp Nicole 13 Dec 2016 An Outline of Recent Studies on the Nigerian Nok Culture Journal of African Archaeology 14 3 237 JSTOR 44295241 Kahlheber S et al Archaeobotanical Studies at Nok sites an Interim Report ResearchGate Nyame Akuma Kay Andrea U 2019 Diversification Intensification and Specialization Changing Land Use in Western Africa from 1800 BC to AD 1500 Journal of World Prehistory 32 2 179 228 doi 10 1007 s10963 019 09131 2 S2CID 134223231 AFRICA 101 Last Tribes Nok people www 101lasttribes com Retrieved 2022 02 25 Dunne Julie Hohn Alexa 14 January 2022 Making the invisible visible tracing the origins of plants in West African cuisine through archaeobotanical and organic residue analysis Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 14 doi 10 1007 s12520 021 01476 0 hdl 1983 aeae6475 7998 4929 ae38 ea5d7cce36e2 S2CID 245917579 Dunne Julie B et al 2021 Honey collecting in prehistoric West Africa from 3500 years ago Nature Communications 12 1 2227 Bibcode 2021NatCo 12 2227D doi 10 1038 s41467 021 22425 4 PMC 8047003 PMID 33854053 a b Dunne Julie et al 2021 Honey collecting in prehistoric West Africa from 3500 years ago Nature Communications 12 1 2227 Bibcode 2021NatCo 12 2227D doi 10 1038 s41467 021 22425 4 PMC 8047003 PMID 33854053 a b Brodie Neil and Donna Yates 2012 Nok Terracottas Trafficking Culture Researching the Global Traffic in Looted Cultural Objects Department of the Arts of Africa Oceania and the Americas 2000 Nok Terracotta 500 B C 200 A D The Met s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Anon 2015 Research continues into 3000 year old Nok culture of sub Saharan Africa Adventures in Archaeology Archaeology News from Past Horizons February 8 Mustapha Suleiman February 3 2013 France Hands Over Stolen Nigerian Artifacts Daily Trust Lamp Frederick John 2011 Ancient Terracotta Figures from Northern Nigeria Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin 55 ISSN 0084 3539 JSTOR 41421509 OCLC 9972665249 Shillington 2005 p 39 Bibliography edit Shillington Kevin 2005 History of Africa 2nd ed Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780333599570 Further reading editAtwood R 2011 The NOK of Nigeria Archaeology July August 2011 34 38 Breunig P ed 2014 Nok African Sculpture in Archaeological Context Frankfurt Africa Magna Verlag ISBN 9783937248462 ISBN 978 3 937248 46 2 Breunig P amp Rupp N 2006 Nichts als Kunst Archaologische Forschungen zur fruheisenzeitlichen Nok Kultur in Zentral Nigeria Forschung Frankfurt 2 3 73 76 Boullier C A Person J F Saliege amp J Polet 2001 Bilan chronologique de la culture Nok et nouvelle datations sur des sculptures Afrique Archeologie amp Arts 2 9 28 Fagg A 1972 A preliminary report on an occupation site in the Nok valley Nigeria Samun Dukiya AF 70 1 West African Journal of Archaeology 2 75 79 Fagg B 1959 The Nok Culture in prehistory Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 1 4 288 293 Fagg B 1968 The Nok Culture Excavations at Taruga The West African Archaeological Newsletter 10 27 30 Fagg B 1969 Recent work in West Africa new light on the Nok Culture World Archaeology 1 1 41 50 Fagg B 1990 Nok terracottas Lagos National Commission for Museums and Monuments Jemkur J 1992 Aspects of the Nok Culture Zaria Rupp N Ameje J Breunig P 2005 New studies on the Nok Culture of Central Nigeria Journal of African Archaeology 3 2 283 290 Rupp N Breunig P Kahlheber S 2008 Exploring the Nok enigma Antiquity Project gallery Shaw T 1981 The Nok sculptures of Nigeria Scientific American 244 2 154 166 Tylecote R 1975a The origin of iron smelting in Africa Westafrican Journal of Archaeology 5 1 9 Tylecote R 1975b Iron smelting at Taruga Nigeria Journal of Historical Metallurgy 9 2 49 56 Olubunmi A O 2007 The Rise and Fall of The Yoruba Race The 199 Publishing Palace ISBN 978 2457 38 8 Olubunmi A O 2009 On Ijesa Racial Purity The 199 Publishing Palace ISBN 978 2458 17 1 Ayoade J O 1983 Introduction To Climatology For The Tropics John Wiley amp Sons ltd UK ISBN 0 471 10407 8External links edit nbsp Media related to Nok culture at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nok culture amp oldid 1183662830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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