Ritual Chequers

The astonishing Neolithic city of Catal Huyuk iun Turkey has long been known for its beautiful pottery and its complex housing arrangements. French archaelogists of the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, working in northern Syria, have uncovered what may the world's oldest house painting.

Directed by Eric Coqueugniot, the team has been working at Djade al-Mughara, where they have uncovered a Neolithic settlement whose inhabitants do not appear to have invented agriculture but instead lived as hunter-gatherers. Mind you, why would anyone go in for the hard life of a farmer if the pleasures of the chase were all they needed for sustenance? It would be a mistake to assume that the lack of agriculture indicated that these people were primitive or unsophisticated - and the painting appears to bear this out.

What the archaeologists have found is an underground circular room 24' in diameter which had a single pillar in the centre to support the roof poles. The pillar and the walls were decorated with a geometric pattern of squares that reminded some of the team of the modern painter Paul Klee, though less artistic members dubbed it a "chequer board". The colours are red from crushed haematite, black charcoal and white lime.

The size of the room as well as its underground location suggest to the excavators that it was not a domestic building but point towards a ritual use and, being French, they have come up with a wonderful theory about how a chequerboard "marks the borders of the spiritual realm within a world-view that is cosmologically defined". Perhaps it sounds better - and possibly even makes sense - in French.

Personally I am happy to consider that the room may indeed have had a ritual purpose. People commonly went to considerable lengths to beautify their places of worship. I doubt, however, that the pattern had any importance other than the aesthetic and is just as likely to reflect a desire not to depict any figure that could be worshipped. An abstract pattern would not "make an image of anything in heaven above nor in the earth beneath nor in the waters under the earth", to quote the Second Commandment of the Decalogue.

© Kendall K. Down 2009