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The warrior' is often presented as an unproblematic concept, yet the ideas and interpretations behind it are seldom fully examined. What is meant and understood by the term is subject to considerable variation – ranging anywhere between describing those engaging in combat to indicating the symbolic role. Several key assumptions are often made, explicitly or implicitly, of the 'warrior': most frequently, that this person is male, of an elite social class, and that this is their sole or dominant identity.
Research into the weapons of northern Britain during the Late Bronze Age (c. 1250 – 750 BC) indicates that this might not be an accurate representation, and has often been subject to oversimplification. This paper will discuss the construction of a warrior identity: who might create one and why, and how it might be developed and expressed. The possibility is presented that this identity is not necessarily related to functional activity, and is one of many identities an individual could adopt. Some of the most visible Late Bronze Age phenomena, primarily weapon hoard deposition and the 'killing' of weapons, may partially have served as a mechanism to balance multiple identities in both the public and private domains.
The Levant is one of the centres of early metallurgy and can boast one of the richest inventories of Bronze Age weaponry. However in contrast to the well researched weapons of the Middle and Late Bronze Age, the amount of information on Early Bronze and Chalcolithic weapons in the Levant is limited.
The paper wants to explore the appearance of specialised combat weapons in the 5th – 3rd Millennium BC, thereby focusing on the contexts and possible meanings of weapons. Even though the available information is sparse, a number of weapons finds and their depictions are available. I will present new dating evidence for the oldest finds and discuss their apparent interconnection with the emergence of trade and urbanism.
Recent studies often saw grave changes with the transition from Early to Middle Bronze Age, but I will argue that this view cannot be upheld after a source-critical analysis. In contrast, I will argue that the evidence speaks for changes with warfare which are contemporary with a new quality of trade and power starting around 3600 BC.
For a long time, burials with weaponry were identified as "warrior graves". This chapter reviews anthropological data from Mycenaean tombs. It reveals that there are a number of deceased interred with weaponry that do not exhibit violence related trauma and a substantial group that possesses such trauma, but did not receive a weapon in their tombs. As a result, this chapter argues that every burial with weapons should not be called a warrior grave, instead it argues in favor of more complex categories and a re-examination of the skeletal material from older excavations.
The warrior is presumed to marshal novel elements of material culture with physical prowess together with an elevated social status. Within the Sintashta cultural phenomenon of the Southern Trans-Urals, the presence of warfare, chariots and metallurgy are elements that have been seen to support the idea of an emergent warrior class. Increasing visibility in the burial record is equated with an increase in violent conflict. However, the development of the so-called “Sintashta warrior” remains poorly understood. The chapter argues that the concept of a warrior is intimately connected to craft production and that “warrior graves” are one context available to investigate the idea of the “warrior”, highlighting the connection between innovation, production and consumption of markers of the warrior identity. Through exploring the role of metal production, and its extensive chaîne opératoire, we seek to examine the development and construction of the Sintashta warrior.
The Nordic Bronze Age is thought of as being organised into chiefdoms which were in part rivals to each other. A multitude of swords from burial mounds supports this notion and led to the interpretation of these swords as an important symbol of the ruling chiefs and their retinue.
The chapter seeks to re-evaluate these assumptions based on an in-depth analysis of Bronze Age swords and their contexts. In particular, the rank and function of the swordfighter will be questioned. First the results of a functional analysis of full-hilted swords in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein will be used to argue that – contrary to other suggestions – full-hilted swords are mainly fully functional for combat use. A statistical evaluation of associated finds of swords allows for a reconsideration of the different roles of ritual chiefs and warrior chiefs. Finally, an estimation of the total amount of swords that may have been present in the Nordic area is confronted with other archaeological sources in order to evaluate the rank of the swordfighter in society.
Finds of carp’s-tongue swords, dating from the beginning of the first millennium BC, are distributed over a wide geographical area. They comprise contexts of different cultural influences and feature a range of morphological variations, including great differences in length that we are going to exemplify with the Puertollano (Ciudad Real, Spain) hoard. In this work, the physical and technological characteristics of carp’s tongue swords, associated to their use as tools for combat, are going to be analyzed and related to their typological variants. By focusing in the shared traits that define their performance rather than in the different ways in which their functional objectives are achieved, an underlying common usage is proposed for this kind of weapon, spanning their whole area of exchange. This provides an additional tool to classify different features and help distinguishing between the technological improvements and cultural traits for these objects.
This chapter introduces the reader to the content of the book and the individual chapters. The history of research on various aspects related to warfare and fighting is summarized, such as combat, demography, etc. It is argued that studies have shown that warfare becomes increasingly professionalized, and that there is a need to contextualize this process within studies of social institutions.
Based on the contributions in this volume, this chapter reviews recent research on warfare. It is argued that warrior fraternities may be intrinsic agents of social change especially at peak points of violent interaction. Future studies have to examine the degree of involvement of these groups in making history by studying three major concerns for which the groundwork is laid in this volume: 1) preludes to war, 2) the peaks of violent encounters, and 3) the cultural management of war-related violence, not least post-war situations.
The Scandinavian rock art ships show, beyond any doubt, clear antagonistic dimensions which we should not deny or be blind to. Most of the depicted warriors and combat scenes have been made close or adjacent to a contemporary ship depiction, and the warriors should therefore be discussed against this maritime background and be defined as maritime warriors. Moreover, several ship scenes show that codes of social inequality were formulated and performed in the ships. Many rock-art scenes depict smaller ship images positioned around a larger ship, as if they were in support. Thus, in a real conflict it may have been more rational to attack an enemy with several smaller ships than just one large vessel, since this would have constituted a less vulnerable and more mobile and effective force. It is further argued that the praxis of pecking ships could have served to manifest the agency of the maritime social world and, to some extent, to make this ideology more dominant.
In research on prehistoric times, the displacement of objects is usually contributed to exchange, which is largely imagined to have been a peaceful activity. By looking at the natural environment and evidence related to exchange and warfare in Southern Scandinavia during the transition from the Late Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age, a closer relationship between both interactive social processes is suggested. Both activities – exchange and warfare – were possibly facilitated by waterborne mobility. In spite of the elusiveness of archaeological remains, first elaborations towards an integrative approach on the relationship between these two modes of social interaction are presented here by taking various early specialized weapons as indicators of conflict, and boats as signifiers of waterborne mobility and exchange into consideration.
The unknown and exotic North fascinated European minds in the early modern period. A land of natural and supernatural wonders, and of the indigenous Sámi people, the northern margins of Europe stirred up imagination and a plethora of cultural fantasies, which also affected early antiquarian research and the period understanding of the past. This article employs an alleged runestone discovered in northernmost Sweden in the seventeenth century to explore how ancient times and northern margins of the continent were understood in early modern Europe. We examine how the peculiar monument of the Vinsavaara stone was perceived and signified in relation to its materiality, landscape setting, and the cultural-cosmological context of the Renaissance–Baroque world. On a more general level, we use the Vinsavaara stone to assess the nature and character of early modern antiquarianism in relation to the period's nationalism, colonialism and classicism.
Knowledge of the origin and spread of farming has been revolutionised in recent years by the application of new scientific techniques, especially the analysis of ancient DNA from human genomes. In this book, Stephen Shennan presents the latest research on the spread of farming by archaeologists, geneticists and other archaeological scientists. He shows that it resulted from a population expansion from present-day Turkey. Using ideas from the disciplines of human behavioural ecology and cultural evolution, he explains how this process took place. The expansion was not the result of 'population pressure' but of the opportunities for increased fertility by colonising new regions that farming offered. The knowledge and resources for the farming 'niche' were passed on from parents to their children. However, Shennan demonstrates that the demographic patterns associated with the spread of farming resulted in population booms and busts, not continuous expansion.
The Aboriginal cultural traditions of Australia, their histories, philosophies and characteristics, have fascinated and intrigued European observers and scholars for a very long time. This paper explores some implications of recent ethnographic information and engagements related to the themes of Indigenous rock art, knowledge and the understanding of Country in the Kimberley region, Western Australia, for the interpretation of archaeological evidence. It is argued that the Aboriginal understanding of cultural features and practices, rock art and the natural environment is best described within a framework of relational ontology. This orientation has important consequences for the conceptualization of a range of interrelated key themes, most importantly ‘space and place’, ‘story and narrative’ and ‘knowledge and representation’. Thus, the paper calls for the development of opportunities of intellectual engagement and exchange as well as collaborative and creative responses, which should also include new forms of expression in academic contexts that themselves reflexively engage with the limitations of writing and representation.
Warfare in Bronze Age Society takes a fresh look at warfare and its role in reshaping Bronze Age society. The Bronze Age represents the global emergence of a militarized society with a martial culture, materialized in a package of new efficient weapons that remained in use for millennia to come. Warfare became institutionalized and professionalized during the Bronze Age, and a new class of warriors made their appearance. Evidence for this development is reflected in the ostentatious display of weapons in burials and hoards, and in iconography, from rock art to palace frescoes. These new manifestations of martial culture constructed the warrior as a 'Hero' and warfare as 'Heroic'. The case studies, written by an international team of scholars, discuss these and other new aspects of Bronze Age warfare. Moreover, the essays show that warriors also facilitated mobility and innovation as new weapons would have quickly spread from the Mediterranean to northern Europe.
This article presents evidence for prehistoric rice cultivation on the island of Jeju (Jejudo), Korea. It also discusses sociopolitical contexts in which the people of this island decided to incorporate rice into their lifeways. Although Jejudo is culturally closely related to the southern region of the Korean peninsula, the nearest landmass to the island, their environmental conditions are radically different. Jejudo is not suitable for intensive rice cultivation. Archaeobotanical research at Yerae-dong nonetheless confirmed that rice was consumed earlier than the emergence of institutionalized social hierarchy on the island. The evidence for status competition and exchange networks contemporaneous with rice remains raises the suggestion that rice was initially incorporated as an exotic and luxurious food, rather than a daily necessity. The earliest rice on Jejudo is unlikely to have been transferred to the island as a result of tributary trade between ancient states. Rather, this study demonstrated that the main agents of rice cultivation were the emergent local elites who attempted to express status and consolidate hierarchy with foreign objects.