KUNIN FORTRESS AND THE KUNIN ROCK-CUT TOMBS


Tanyürek Ö., Coşkun İ.

Amisos, cilt.10, sa.19, ss.282-301, 2025 (Hakemli Dergi)

  • Yayın Türü: Makale / Tam Makale
  • Cilt numarası: 10 Sayı: 19
  • Basım Tarihi: 2025
  • Dergi Adı: Amisos
  • Derginin Tarandığı İndeksler: ERIHPlus, Sobiad Atıf Dizini
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.282-301
  • Hakkari Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

The Kunin Fortress and its associated multi-chambered rock-cut tombs in southeastern Anatolia form a significant dataset for understanding how Urartian architectural and administrative principles were applied in frontier regions. Constructed on a rocky elevation overlooking the Karasu Valley, the fortress displays a controlled northwest entrance, a three-tiered spatial layout, and horizontally aligned masonry comparable to Van Fortress, Ayanis, and Zernaki Tepe. Ceramic finds—including fine ware, highly polished bowls, and stamped storage vessels—reflect elite consumption patterns and production traditions linked to central workshops. Their distribution across the western slope indicates organized activity zones connected to administrative and ritual functions. The rock-cut tombs on the eastern slope, Kunin I and Kunin II, illustrate provincial adaptations of royal Urartian funerary architecture. Their eastward orientation, multi-room plans, niches, stepped entrances, and ritual platforms parallel the design logic of the royal necropolis at Van Fortress. The façades, chisel marks, and symmetrical interior arrangements demonstrate adherence to standardized Urartian technical practices. The spatial connection between the fortress and necropolis suggests an integrated plan in which administrative authority and funerary tradition were expressed through a unified architectural composition. Ceramic assemblages from the tomb zone reinforce this interpretation. Fine-textured vessels, stamped rims, and high-temperature firings display clear similarities to Ayanis and Karmir-Blur ceramics, supporting centralized supply or provincially supervised production. Their presence in both domestic and ritual contexts indicates multifunctional activity within an elite-controlled settlement. Kunin’s strategic position along Urartu’s southeastern frontier provided oversight of regional routes extending toward the Hakkari–Zagros corridor. Architectural and ceramic evidence shows that Kunin functioned as a high-status administrative center with a funerary complex modeled on royal prototypes. The site demonstrates the continued application of Urartian ideological and architectural standards in remote territories, offering a concise provincial example of monumentality and elite identity.