4.3 Article

Establishing the Middle Sea: The Late Bronze Age of Mediterranean Europe (1700-900 BC)

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 30, Issue 3, Pages 371-445

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10814-021-09165-1

Keywords

Late Bronze Age; Mediterranean; Networks; Society; Mobility; Collapse

Funding

  1. project Landscape of Mobility and Memory of the Montalcini Program of the Italian Ministry of University and Research

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The Late Bronze Age was a highly dynamic period for Mediterranean Europe, with a comparative study covering over half a millennium from Greece to Iberia, revealing broad trends in social organization, trade, transcultural phenomena, and human mobility. The study also examines how interaction networks became a defining aspect of the Middle Sea during this time, influencing communities along its northern shore and highlighting the importance of interdisciplinary research for a better understanding of comparable dynamics.
The Late Bronze Age (1700-900 BC) represents an extremely dynamic period for Mediterranean Europe. Here, we provide a comparative survey of the archaeological record of over half a millennium within the entire northern littoral of the Mediterranean, from Greece to Iberia, incorporating archaeological, archaeometric, and bioarchaeological evidence. The picture that emerges, while certainly fragmented and not displaying a unique trajectory, reveals a number of broad trends in aspects as different as social organization, trade, transcultural phenomena, and human mobility. The contribution of such trends to the processes that caused the end of the Bronze Age is also examined. Taken together, they illustrate how networks of interaction, ranging from the short to the long range, became a defining aspect of the Middle Sea during this time, influencing the lives of the communities that inhabited its northern shore. They also highlight the importance of research that crosses modern boundaries for gaining a better understanding of broad comparable dynamics.

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