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result(s) for
"Late Bronze Age"
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Kaliska I: a Late Bronze Age metal hoard from Pomerania (Poland)
by
Niedzielski, Przemysław
,
Betyna, Kamila
,
Grześkowiak, Marek
in
Antiquities
,
Archaeology
,
Bronze Age
2022
In the spring of 2017, amateur metal detectorists discovered a Late Bronze Age hoard near the village of Kaliska, Poland. Comprising over 120 artefacts, it is one of the most impressive Bronze Age finds within Pomerania. The authors discuss the hoard's contents and context, as well as its chronology.
Journal Article
TOWARDS A RADIOCARBON-BASED CHRONOLOGY OF URBAN NORTHERN MESOPOTAMIA IN THE EARLY TO MID-SECOND MILLENNIUM BC: INITIAL RESULTS FROM KURD QABURSTAN
2023
Radiocarbon (14C) data for 2nd millennium BC urban sites in northern Mesopotamia have been lacking until recently. This article presents a preliminary dataset and Bayesian model addressing the Middle and early Late Bronze Age (Old Babylonian and pre/early Mittani) strata of Kurd Qaburstan—one of the largest archaeological sites on the Erbil plain of Iraqi Kurdistan. The results place the large, densely occupied and fortified Middle Bronze Age city in the first part of the 18th century BC, an outcome consistent with the site’s tentative identification as ancient Qabra. A long occupation gap (up to two centuries) probably ensued, before a smaller town confined to the high mound and part of the northeastern lower town resumed in the late 16th and early 15th centuries BC, possibly before this region became part of the Late Bronze Age kingdom of Mittani.
Journal Article
PLOMAT: plotting material flows of ‘commonplace’ Late Bronze Age seals in western Eurasia
by
Maynard, Glynnis
,
Russo, Sergio G.
,
Tsouparopoulou, Christina
in
20th century
,
Archaeology
,
Bronze Age
2024
Since the mid-twentieth century, the study of designs on seals has often focused on exotica and elite items. The PLOMAT project investigates visual and material communication outside of elite exchange networks during the Late Bronze Age in western Eurasia. The authors present results from plotting flows of ‘commonplace’ cylinder seals and those classified as ‘Common-Style Mittani’.
Journal Article
The Sacred Lake Project: preliminary findings from the Lusatian site of Papowo Biskupie, Poland
by
Gackowski, Jacek
,
Lorkiewicz, Wiesław
,
Purowski, Tomasz
in
19th century
,
Archaeology
,
Bronze Age
2024
In 2023, prospection of a dried-out lake near Papowo Biskupie in north-central Poland identified substantial deposits of bronze artefacts. Excavation revealed further deposits and dozens of human skeletons that date from 1000–400 BC, suggesting that the site held particular significance as a place for sacrificial offerings in the Lusatian culture.
Journal Article
Canaanite Literary Culture Before the Bible, a View from the Canaanite Amarna Letters
2025
The present study highlights how the Canaanite Amarna Letters offer unique insight into Canaanite literary culture in the Late Bronze Age. The letters represent the diplomatic acumen of scribes writing letters for local elites that were sent to the Egyptian court in the mid-fourteenth century BCE. Yet they also preserve the earliest evidence of Canaanite literary forms and compositional practices. The letters include memorized formulae and expressions, word pairs, poetic devices, and the use of repetition to frame poetic units, which are common in the practices of later first-millennium scribes working in this same region, including those who wrote the Hebrew Bible. The letters also offer insight into the ways that the scribes combined memorized units into new narrative contexts. Such features added literary texture to the letters, but also contributed to their rhetorical aims. While some poetic passages in the letters may be novel compositions, there is also evidence that literary forms and expressions were integral to Canaanite scribal education by the Amarna period. The Canaanite Letters therefore set an important precedent for literary creation, and for the scribes’ bricolage practices in the process of creating new diplomatic letters.
Journal Article
Inequalities in wealth distribution within Imperial Assyrian graves
2024
Across more than seven centuries (c. 1350–600 BC), the Assyrian Empire established political dominance and cultural influence over many settlements in the Ancient Near East. Assyrian policies of resource extraction, including taxation and tribute, have been extensively analysed in textual and art historical sources. This article assesses the impact of these policies on patterns of wealth within mortuary material—one of the most conservative forms of culture, deeply rooted in group identity. The author argues that a trend of decreasing quality and quantity of grave goods over time supports models emphasising the heavy economic burden of Assyrian administration on its subjects.
Journal Article
Tracing Late Bronze Age transitions in the Eastern Carpathian Basin: insights from a new Cruceni–Belegiš type settlement from Dumbrăvița–Parohia Ortodoxă III (Timiș County, Romania)
2025
This study presents the results of preventive archaeological investigations of the prehistoric settlement Dumbrăvița–Parohia Ortodoxă III, one of many sites identified in the peri-urban area of Timișoara. The site is one of the few settlements attributed to the Cruceni–Belegiš ceramic style, known from central Banat. This style developed across a wide area that includes present-day Romania, Serbia, and Croatia during the Late Bronze Age (LBA) of the eastern Carpathian Basin (ca. 1600–1200 BC).No dwellings were found during the excavation. However, the presence of daub fragments with wattle impressions indicates the existence of architectural structures at the site. Among the many refuse pits, a small but informative pottery assemblage was found, along with five beads and a metal artefact. The ceramics were analysed for manufacturing technology, vessel typology and ornamentation. This analysis provided information for the relative chronology of the site and facilitated comparison with the LBA settlement of Giroc–Mescal (Timiş county) using multivariate statistics. Additionally, an AMS radiocarbon date provided absolute chronological context for the assemblage, establishing a firmer timeline for the site.The main contribution of the Dumbrăvița–Parohia Ortodoxă III discoveries is in documenting a transitional chronological sequence. Certain regional LBA I traits were abandoned, others persisted, and new elements were adopted. The ceramic assemblage reveals transformations from the old to the newer phase of the discussed ceramic style. The discovery of beads in the Cruceni–Belegiš cultural area is unique so far. Also, the metal artefact – a saw blade – provides insights into metal utilisation on this site.
Journal Article
Miners and mining in the Late Bronze Age: a multidisciplinary study from Austria
2011
The extraction and processing of metal ores, particularly those of copper and tin, are regarded as among the principal motors of Bronze Age society. The skills and risks of mining lie behind the weapons, tools and symbols that drove political and ideological change. But we hear much less about the miners themselves and their position in society. Who were these people? Were they rich and special, or expendable members of a hard-pressed workforce? In this study the spotlight moves from the adits, slags and furnaces to the bones and seeds, providing a sketch of dedicated prehistoric labourers in their habitat. The Mauken miners were largely dependent on imported meat and cereals, and scarcely hunted or foraged the resources of the local forest. They seem to be the servants of a command economy, encouraged to keep their minds on the job.
Journal Article
Banatian DeathMetals: Radiocarbon Dating of Cremation Burials of the Setting Bronze Age and Dawning Iron Age
2023
The lack of radiocarbon measurements of funerary contexts is a major shortcoming of the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age of the Eastern Carpathian Basin, especially in the Banat region. The present batch of samples tries to address these drawbacks, by detailing sampling strategies, employed pre-treatment and by providing a robust and coherent dataset of radiocarbon measurements. Implications of the new radiocarbon dates is discussed from a supra-regional perspective, while keeping aspects of typo-chronology, circulation of goods, and social nuances of employment of Bronze Age bronzes in the forefront. Ten burials were selected from four Banatian burial grounds according to the occurrence of metal finds in the funerary inventories. Beyond establishing a broad frame of absolute chronology for these sites of interment, the radiocarbon data provide reliable arguments for the precise attribution of metal discoveries. In addition, the data allow us to challenge some previously stated chronological assignments.
Journal Article