− | The earliest categorized period of Japanese history extending from roughly 8,500 BCE to 300 BCE.<ref>Some sources give starting dates as early as 14,500 BCE; Schirokauer, et al., 6.</ref> The period is named for pottery bearing cord marks<ref>''Jô'' 縄 meaning "cord" or "rope," and ''mon'' 文 meaning "markings"</ref> from this period. The Jômon period in the Japanese islands may have seen the earliest invention (discovery) of [[pottery]] (ceramics) technology in the world. | + | The earliest categorized period of Japanese history extending from roughly 8,500 BCE to 300 BCE.<ref>Some sources give starting dates as early as 14,500 BCE; Schirokauer, et al., 6. Some evidence has also been found for human habitation going back as far as 200,000 years ago, or even earlier. David Lu, ''Sources of Japanese History'', New York: McGraw Hill (1973), 3.</ref> The period is named for pottery bearing cord marks<ref>''Jô'' 縄 meaning "cord" or "rope," and ''mon'' 文 meaning "markings"</ref> from this period. The Jômon period in the Japanese islands may have seen the earliest invention (discovery) of [[pottery]] (ceramics) technology in the world. |
| The majority of Jômon pottery was, of course, quite simple and utilitarian in style and design. However, for a brief period towards the end of the Jômon period, some communities created exceptional vessels with flamboyant flame-like shapes, in a rather impractical design. Wide-eyed doll-like figures known as ''[[dogu|dôgu]]'' are also oft-cited examples of Jômon pottery; typically found broken in particular ways, archaeologists have surmised that these doll-like figures may have played a ritual purpose, being deliberately broken as part of the ritual of activating the object, in order to provide healing, or perhaps some other effect. | | The majority of Jômon pottery was, of course, quite simple and utilitarian in style and design. However, for a brief period towards the end of the Jômon period, some communities created exceptional vessels with flamboyant flame-like shapes, in a rather impractical design. Wide-eyed doll-like figures known as ''[[dogu|dôgu]]'' are also oft-cited examples of Jômon pottery; typically found broken in particular ways, archaeologists have surmised that these doll-like figures may have played a ritual purpose, being deliberately broken as part of the ritual of activating the object, in order to provide healing, or perhaps some other effect. |