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Chapter Six - Bronze Weaponry and Cultural Mobility in Late Bronze Age Southeast Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2018

Christian Horn
Affiliation:
Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel, Germany
Kristian Kristiansen
Affiliation:
Göteborgs Universitet, Sweden

Summary

Myth and legend from the Classical world told us of the existence of an earlier complex society: The Mycenaeans. Echoes of Atlantis may well be found in the Minoan world. Tales of the Dorians and returning Heraclids are, however, not popular. In this paper, I address the increased engagement by Mycenaean peoples with groups from the north and west peripheries of their world, and consider the impacts this had on the military material culture of the central and southern Balkans. There was a strong military component to these interactions, and they extended north to the Danube as well as south to Mycenae. In charting potential movement of peoples and / or ideas, de-coupling handmade pottery, bow-fibulae and sword types (traditionally viewed together) is essential if we are to characterise the different pathways they followed. The movement of warriors can be very short term, high impact, yet difficult to define archaeologically. It is argued in this paper that the above areas, along with southern Italy, witnessed increased mobility of warrior groups that had a profound effect on the Late Bronze Age Aegean world and beyond.

Information

Figure 0

6.1: Number of rivet holes in each shoulder of Naue II swords showing intra- and inter-regional variation. Top: Central and West Balkan peninsula; Middle: South Balkan peninsula; Bottom: Peninsular Italy.

Figure 1

6.2: Classic (top) and faux-midrib Naue II swords, from Siteia and Graditsa, respectively.

Figure 2

6.3: Length of Naue II classic and faux-midrib and Type Fii swords from Greece, FYRO Macedonia and Albania.

Figure 3

6.4: Distribution of classic and faux-midrib Naue II swords.

Figure 4

6.5: Albano-Epirote violin-form spearhead and Balkan flame-shaped spearhead, from ‘Thebes’, Greece and Bingula Divoš, Serbia, respectively.

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