Jarmo House Model

7500 BC - 7000 BC
Plaster
Jarmo
18 cm x 41 cm x 38 cm
C1638

Oriental Institute Museum

Artifact Description

Jarmo House Model

This is a model of part of a house found at the site of Jarmo, Iraq. During the early Neolithic period, Jarmo is believed to have had a population of 150-200 people occupying 20-30 houses like this one, spread over an area of 1.3 hectares (3.2 acres). The houses at Jarmo were multi-roomed rectangular structures built of mud (known as tauf), which was plentiful in the region. The thick mud-brick walls helped to keep the houses cool in summer and warm in winter. The floors were made of earth compacted on beds of reeds, while the roofs were made of reed mats and clay laid over logs that spanned the rooms. Clay-lined depressions in the floors may have served as hearths or ovens. Some houses had domed ovens, built of mud with clay chimneys, that were used outside in the walled courtyard.

Multimedia

A House from Jarmo
Learn more about daily life after examining this model of a house from the ancient Neolithic settlement of Jarmo.

Life in Ancient Mesopotamia
What was life like in ancient Mesopotamia? Find out in this video featuring Oriental Institute Assyriologist Dr. Martha Roth.

Web Links

Information on the Oriental Institute archaeologist, Robert Braidwood, who excavated the site of Jarmo

Information on the archaeological site of Jarmo

Suggested Readings

Leacroft, Helen and Richard. The Buildings of Ancient Mesopotamia. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., 1974.

Leick, Gwendolyn. A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Architecture. London: Routledge, 1988.

Scarre, Chris. Smithsonian Timelines of the Ancient World. London: Dorling Kindersley, 1993.

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