PaleoRevenge
Well-known member
- Messages
- 1,522
- Reaction score
- 1,339
- Points
- 113
Some new paper from the fall team and a related news article.
journals.plos.org
Resilience, innovation and collapse of settlement networks in later Bronze Age Europe: New survey data from the southern Carpathian Basin
Societies of the later Early to Middle Bronze Age (ca. 2200–1600 BC) in the Carpathian Basin exhibited complex, hierarchical and regionally influential socio-political organisation that came to an abrupt end in the 16th century BC. Considered a collapse by some, this change was characterised by...
In the LBA, Belegiš I ceramics emerge as a stylistic tradition ca. 1600 BC and were related to the Vatin and Maros traditions [55–57]. The second phase, Belegiš II emerged in the late 15th century and is closely related to pre-Gava styles in Hungary [38, 56, 58–61]. These ceramics were consumed throughout the lower Pannonian network, but also as far east as the foothills of the Transylvanian plateau and past the Sava-Drava confluence in the west. They are found less commonly south of the Danube prior to 1200 BC [62]. Notably, the co-occurrence of Belegiš I and SDŽB at TSG settlements, and the common use of incised and / or encrusted decoration, suggests our division between the two, based primarily on cemetery assemblages, is perhaps sharper than would have been viewed in prehistory. When the Belegiš II pottery style emerged, many features such as hanging garland decoration, cylindrical necks with everted rims and four equispaced protomes derived from the Belegiš I style. These features were shared also in a modified format on later SDŽB pottery, demonstrating entanglement of concepts even when broader decorative techniques were adhered to.
Beyond serving as typo-chronological markers, these trends show that the TSG communities were emerging when distinctive pottery styles of Belegiš, SDŽB and tumulus cultural traditions were consumed together. This demonstrated incorporation of the preceding Vatin and Maros traditions, of influences from the Danube and Mureș hinterlands, as well as of styles from non-adjacent areas from farther to the north. The image gained from earlier LBA craftwork / domestic wares is that communities were permeable enough to accommodate influences from varied networks. By the onset of the LBA 2 period ca. 1400 BC, there was increasingly widespread use of Belegiš II style, suggesting that material culture had become a vehicle for cultural integration, bucking a long-standing trend for it to be used to embody difference. Research in the Carpathian Basin and Balkans has often been dominated by culture history / typo-chronological frameworks. It is important to avoid slippage between speaking of ceramic groups as material culture categories with spatial and temporal relevance and the people who made the pots [63, 64]. Ceramic groups cannot viewed as direct proxies for ethnic or cultural identity and political boundaries, but represent expressions of choice and knowledge [65]. Nonetheless, ceramic traditions are linked to geographic spaces and between shape, decoration and function they structured the experiences / habitus of people using them. They were one among many features of daily life that embodied difference between groups. It is important because societies of the Carpathian Basin during the MBA and LBA produced a rich array of ceramic traditions. In aiming to explain, as well as describe, why distribution patterns change in temporal and geographic space we must account for choices and their implications for the materiality of communities. Pots may not equal people, but in this area they could and did express difference.
Vatin (Vatin Bela Bara) is an oddity as it should be documented as a tell-like settlement because it is largely flat in today’s landscape, but with over 2 metres of stratigraphy, it conforms to Gogâltan’s definition of a tell [66]. An original settlement plan associated with Vatin pottery was reconfigured at a time when later MBA Crvenka- Cornești (1850–1600 BC) pottery was adopted. This created complex stratigraphic relations, compounded by a coarse sandy geology which made phasing of occupation horizons difficult. Occasional finds of Chalcolithic pottery are known from the site, but the earliest architectural features identified were built ca. 1900 BC. The small excavation windows at Vatin indicate it was densely occupied and served as a central site for its immediate hinterland. The results of recent excavations are being prepared for publication by one of the present authors (DJ) and we can state here that the site was abandoned in the last decades of the 17th century calBC. After that, a cemetery of LBA date was established immediately above parts of the MBA settlement, with burial pits commonly dug into the ruins of houses. The earliest burial was an inhumation with metalwork including a sword, a miniature battle axe and a needle datable to the 15th century BC [103–105]. A second LBA cemetery (Vatin-Selo) was created on the right bank of the river about 0.5 km to the northwest. Nonetheless, no LBA settlement has been located nearby. Finds from the cemetery reveal continued occupation of the hinterland, with vessels of both SDŽB and Belegiš I-II styles recovered.
Last edited: