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→Early Development of Iron
==Early Development of Iron==
The exact origins of iron smelting are debated. It is possible this occurred already by the mid-third millennium BCE in Anatolia (modern Turkey), where a Hattic weapon made of iron was found and appeared to have derived from a smelted source. By the mid-second millennium BCE, iron tools were increasingly found in Anatolia, Mesopotamia, and Egypt. In fact, in the Late Bronze Age, from around 1400-1300 BCE, iron weapons are found in tombs. Some of the most famous are from the tomb of Tutankhamun. Although the gold and jewelry from his tomb are the most famous, the iron objects found have puzzled archaeologists. However, recent studies have shown that one of these weapons was made of meteoric iron, indicating that if iron smelting existed then it was very rare.
In effect, the Late Bronze Age (1600-1200 BCE) was probably a period in which iron smelting was developing. We know Anatolia must have been an important source for iron and iron making, as texts from the ancient city of Amarna indicate a desire by the Egyptians to import iron from the Hittites, who may have been the first society to master iron making. Iron making was still very rare and trade for it was mostly done at the elite level rather than it being traded similarly as common metals such as bronze.
Undoubtedly, the Iron Age, which first began in 1200 BCE in the Near East and spread to parts of Africa and the eastern Mediterranean, saw many new developments and mastery of iron making. Furnaces used for smelting iron, called a bloomery, now became well developed, where craftsmen were better able to control heating technologies to smelt iron and raise temperatures over 1000 degrees centigrade. After this time, and throughout the 1st millennium BCE, iron making technology spread throughout the Old World, reaching China by the 5th century BCE
==Later Developments==