Presenting Counterpoints to the Dominant Terrestrial Narrative of European Prehistory

Author:   John T. Koch ,  Mikael Fauvelle ,  Barry Cunliffe ,  Johan Ling
Publisher:   Casemate Publishers
ISBN:  

9798888571842


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 March 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Presenting Counterpoints to the Dominant Terrestrial Narrative of European Prehistory


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Overview

This book is the first in the multi-author series Maritime Encounters, outputs of the major six-year (2022–2028) international research initiative, funded by Sweden's central bank. Our programme is based on a maritime perspective, a counterpoint to prevailing land-based vantages on Europe's prehistory. In the Maritime Encounters project a highly international cross-disciplinary team has embarked on a diverse range of research goals to provide a more detailed and nuanced story of how prehistoric societies realised major and minor sea crossings, organised long-distance exchange, and adapted to ways of life by the sea in prehistory. Recent advances with ancient DNA have brought migration back into archaeological explanation, but little attention has been paid to maritime aspects of these movements or the maritime legacies inherited from indigenous cultures. The formation of the populations, cultures and languages of Europe are now seen largely as consequences of three great prehistoric migrations: hunter-gatherers repopulating the post-glacial landscape, followed by farmers spreading from Anatolia, and then Indo-European-speaking pastoralists from the steppe. There is a significant gap in this current model that we sense most acutely in Scandinavia and the British Isles. Unanswered questions include: How these groups reached the islands and peninsulas of Atlantic Europe? What types of boats were used? How many people and animals could they carry? To what extent did indigenous coastal peoples contribute traditions and knowledge of boats, boat building, seaways, navigation, and subsistence in coastal environments. How was the long-distance trade in metals organised during the European Bronze Age? And what was the impact of this sea-crossing network on the cultures, languages, and populations of the producers and consumers of bronze? AUTHORS: John T. Koch is Research Professor at the University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies in Aberystwyth. A historical linguist specialising in early Celtic languages with a unique multidisciplinary profile, Koch's research includes Indo-European origins of Celtic names, words, and grammar. Mikael Fauvelle is a researcher in the department of archaeology and ancient history at Lund University. He is an anthropological archaeologist specialising in early complex economic systems and the emergence of maritime trade networks. His research has focused on topics including the origins of money, the innovation of ancient watercraft, and the formation of early chiefdoms. He has directed archaeological field projects in North America, Central America, and Scandinavia. Sir Barry Cunliffe is Professor Emeritus of European Prehistory in the University of Oxford. A phenomenally prolific author and excavator, his publications include highly readable synthetic overviews that encompass long chronological sweeps of the archaeology of Britain, Eurasia, the Celtic world, and the Atlantic façade. Johan Ling is Professor of Archaeology at the Department of Historical Studies, Gothenburg University and is Director of the Rock Art research Archives (SHFA). He is a specialist in Bronze Age archaeology with a focus on Scandinavian rock art and maritime trade. 120 colour and b/w illustrations

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Author:   John T. Koch ,  Mikael Fauvelle ,  Barry Cunliffe ,  Johan Ling
Publisher:   Casemate Publishers
Imprint:   Casemate Publishers
ISBN:  

9798888571842


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   15 March 2025
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Maritime memoria: navigating through Bronze Age rock art Cecilia Lindhé 2. The Maritime mode of production in relation to self-sufficiency, reciprocity, comparative advantages Johan Ling and Christian Horn 3. Late Bronze Age copper mining in southern Iberia: preliminary results of fieldwork at Las Minillas (Granja de Torrehermosa, Badajoz, Spain) Mark Hunt Ortiz, Juan Latorre-Ruiz, Jacobo Vázquez Paz, Miguel Ángel de Dios Pérez, Marta Díaz-Guardamino and Johan Ling 4. The origins of secret societies and their contribution to the rise of social complexity R. Chacon, D. Dye, B. Hayden, Johan Ling and Y. Chacon 5. Chalcolithic and Bronze Age metalwork from Atlantic France and Ireland: local developments and long-distance procurement Aurélien Burlot 6. Millennium of war – Violent encounters during the 4th and 3rd millennium BC in the Western Baltic Sea Christian Horn and Sebastian Schultrich 7. Archaeology and science: impact of lead isotope analyses on the archaeological discourse of metal trade for the Scandinavian and British communities in the 3rd–1st millennia BC Zofia Anna Stos-Gale, Aurélien Burlot and Johan Ling 8. Larger boats, longer voyages, and powerful leaders: comparing maritime modes of production in Scandinavia and California Mikael Fauvelle and Johan Ling 9. Cross-disciplinary considerations: ‘hedge’, ‘hull’, ‘fool’, and the triumph of linguistic palaeontology John T. Koch 10. Convergence in situ: the formation of the Indo-European branches and the Bronze-Iron transition John T. Koch 11. What genetics can say about Iron Age and Bronze Age Britain Nick Patterson 12. Using direct and indirect evidence of boats and boatbuilding for understanding the nature of seafaring in Atlantic Europe c. 5000–500 BC Boel Bengtsson Index

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Author Information

John T. Koch is Research Professor at the University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies in Aberystwyth. A historical linguist specialising in early Celtic languages with a unique multidisciplinary profile, Koch’s research includes Indo-European origins of Celtic names, words, and grammar. Mikael Fauvelle is a researcher in the department of archaeology and ancient history at Lund University. He is an anthropological archaeologist specialising in early complex economic systems and the emergence of maritime trade networks. His research has focused on topics including the origins of money, the innovation of ancient watercraft, and the formation of early chiefdoms. He has directed archaeological field projects in North America, Central America, and Scandinavia. Sir Barry Cunliffe is Professor Emeritus of European Prehistory in the University of Oxford. A phenomenally prolific author and excavator, his publications include highly readable synthetic overviews that encompass long chronological sweeps of the archaeology of Britain, Eurasia, the Celtic world, and the Atlantic façade. Johan Ling is Professor of Archaeology at the Department of Historical Studies, Gothenburg University and is Director of the Rock Art research Archives (SHFA). He is a specialist in Bronze Age archaeology with a focus on Scandinavian rock art and maritime trade.

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