The Organisation and Practice of Metal Smithing in Later Bronze Age Europe

被引:20
|
作者
Molloy, Barry [1 ]
Modlinger, Marianne [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Coll Dublin, UCD Sch Archaeol, Lab Artefact Biographies, Dublin, Ireland
[2] Univ Genoa, Dipartimento Chim & Chim Ind, Genoa, Italy
基金
奥地利科学基金会;
关键词
Bronze Age; Prehistoric craft; Archaeometallurgy; Metalwork; Prehistoric Europe; WEAR ANALYSIS; MOVING METALS; LEAD-ISOTOPE; TECHNOLOGY; ARTIFACTS; WORKSHOP; OBJECTS; COMBAT; LIFE;
D O I
10.1007/s10963-020-09141-5
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
During the later Bronze Age in Europe (c. 1500-800 BC), the archaeological visibility of the production and consumption of bronze increases substantially. Yet there remains a significant imbalance between the vast number of finished artefacts that survive and the evidence for where, how, and by whom they were produced. At the centre of these questions is the metal smith, who has been variously regarded in scholarship as nomadic, a reviled outsider, elite in status, a mediator of wealth, a shaman or a proto-scientist. In most cases, however, the social role of the smith is seen as central to the functioning of Bronze Age societies This paper provides a new cross-regional study that evaluates current theoretical paradigms in the light of empirical evidence. It does this through contextual analyses of metalworking traces, focussing on case studies primarily from Atlantic, Nordic, Urnfield and Balkan regions of Europe. Our work breaks down the production cycle into various practical steps, and the material evidence for each step is evaluated. This enables similarities and differences on the broader European scale to be identified and discussed. Through this, our aim is to better characterise the modes of participation in smithing and the identities of those involved, and consequently to improve our understanding of the material patterns related to smithing activities that occur archaeologically. These patterns range from discard or deposition at settlements, the construction of identity in mortuary practice, technological choices in alloy design and treatment, and the quality of finished metalwork objects. Concerning the question of the single smith, it is argued that the material evidence in many regions indicates that metalworking was more broadly embedded in society; this might be through cross-craft interaction, the location of metalworking activities, and the reuse of casting debris and moulds. We argue that crafting metal was a commonplace and socially visible activity, which was in many regions a venue for enhancing social integration and stability.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 232
页数:64
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Later prehistoric vegetation dynamics and Bronze Age agriculture at Hobbister, Orkney, Scotland
    Farrell, Michelle
    VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY, 2015, 24 (04) : 467 - 486
  • [22] Bronze Age Globalisation and Eurasian Impacts on Later Jōmon Social Change
    Mark J. Hudson
    Ilona R. Bausch
    Martine Robbeets
    Tao Li
    J. Alyssa White
    Linda Gilaizeau
    Journal of World Prehistory, 2021, 34 : 121 - 158
  • [23] Later prehistoric vegetation dynamics and Bronze Age agriculture at Hobbister, Orkney, Scotland
    Michelle Farrell
    Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 2015, 24 : 467 - 486
  • [24] Modeling Expansive Phenomena in Early Complex Societies: the Transition from Bronze Iron Age in Prehistoric Europe
    J. A. Barceló
    G. Capuzzo
    I. Bogdanović
    Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 2014, 21 : 486 - 510
  • [25] Modeling Expansive Phenomena in Early Complex Societies: the Transition from Bronze Iron Age in Prehistoric Europe
    Barcelo, J. A.
    Capuzzo, G.
    Bogdanovic, I.
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL METHOD AND THEORY, 2014, 21 (02) : 486 - 510
  • [26] Late Bronze Age Metal Exploitation and Trade: Sardinia and Cyprus
    Sabatini, Serena
    Lo Schiavo, Fulvia
    MATERIALS AND MANUFACTURING PROCESSES, 2020, 35 (13) : 1501 - 1518
  • [27] Iron Metallurgy in the Bronze Age of Eastern Europe. The archaological Sources and their Interpretation
    Kasuba, Maja
    Lehnhardt, Enrico
    Sramko, Irina
    Zadnikov, Stanislav
    PRAEHISTORISCHE ZEITSCHRIFT, 2019, 94 (01) : 158 - 209
  • [28] EARLY BRONZE AGE POTTERY AT HASCHERKELLER IN BAVARIA: VISUALITY, ECOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, AND THE PRACTICE OF DEPOSITION IN BRONZE AGE A2/B1
    Wells, Peter S.
    ARCHAOLOGISCHES KORRESPONDENZBLATT, 2010, 40 (02): : 191 - 205
  • [29] STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF TRACE ELEMENT CONTENT IN NEOLITHIC, ENEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGE METAL ARTEFACTS FROM CENTRAL AND SOUTH-EASTERN EUROPE
    Smigielska, Urszula
    STUDIJNE ZVESTI ARCHEOLOGICKEHO USTAVU SLOVENSKEJ AKADEMIE VIED, 2022, 69 (02): : 261 - 284
  • [30] Organic residue analysis reveals the function of bronze age metal daggers
    Caricola, Isabella
    Charles, Alasdair
    Tirillo, Jacopo
    Charlton, Fraser
    Barton, Huw
    Breglia, Francesco
    Rossi, Alberto
    Deflorian, Maria Chiara
    De Marinis, Anna Maria
    Harris, Susanna
    Pellegrini, Alessio
    Scacchetti, Federico
    Boccuccia, Paolo
    Miari, Monica
    Dolfini, Andrea
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)