Bronze Age Connections  
Cultural Contact in Prehistoric Europe
Author(s): Peter Clark
Published by Oxbow Books
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781782973164
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781782973164 Price: INR 2713.99
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New and exciting discoveries on either side of the English Channel in recent years have begun to show that people living in the coastal zones of Belgium, southern Britain, northern France and the Netherlands shared a common material culture during the Bronze Age, between three and four thousand years ago. They used similar styles of pottery and metalwork, lived in the same kind of houses and buried their dead in the same kind of tombs, often quite different to those used by their neighbours further inland. The sea did not appear to be a barrier to these people but rather a highway, connecting communities in a unique cultural identity; the 'People of La Manche'.


Symbolic of these maritime Bronze Age Connections is the iconic Dover Bronze Age boat, one of Europe's greatest prehistoric discoveries and testament to the skill and technical sophistication of our Bronze Age ancestors. This monograph presents papers from a conference held in Dover in 2006 organised by the Dover Bronze Age Boat Trust, which brought together scholars from many different countries to explore and celebrate these ancient seaborne contacts. Twelve wide-ranging chapters explore themes of travel, exchange, production, magic and ritual that throw new light on our understanding of the seafaring peoples of the second millennium BC.
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New and exciting discoveries on either side of the English Channel in recent years have begun to show that people living in the coastal zones of Belgium, southern Britain, northern France and the Netherlands shared a common material culture during the Bronze Age, between three and four thousand years ago. They used similar styles of pottery and metalwork, lived in the same kind of houses and buried their dead in the same kind of tombs, often quite different to those used by their neighbours further inland. The sea did not appear to be a barrier to these people but rather a highway, connecting communities in a unique cultural identity; the 'People of La Manche'.


Symbolic of these maritime Bronze Age Connections is the iconic Dover Bronze Age boat, one of Europe's greatest prehistoric discoveries and testament to the skill and technical sophistication of our Bronze Age ancestors. This monograph presents papers from a conference held in Dover in 2006 organised by the Dover Bronze Age Boat Trust, which brought together scholars from many different countries to explore and celebrate these ancient seaborne contacts. Twelve wide-ranging chapters explore themes of travel, exchange, production, magic and ritual that throw new light on our understanding of the seafaring peoples of the second millennium BC.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of contributors
  • Chapter 1: Introduction: Building New Connections
  • Chapter 2: Encompassing the Sea: ‘Maritories’ and Bronze Age maritime interactions
  • Chapter 3: From Picardy to Flanders: Transmanche connections in the Bronze Age
  • Chapter 4: British immigrants killed abroad in the seventies: The rise and fall of a Dutch culture
  • Chapter 5: The Canche Estuary (Pas-de-Calais, France) from the early Bronze Age to the emporium of Quentovic: A traditional trading place between south east England and the continent
  • Chapter 6: Looking forward: Maritime contacts in the first millennium BC
  • Chapter 7: Copper mining and production at the beginning of the British Bronze Age
  • Chapter 8: The demise of the flint tool industry
  • Chapter 9: Land at the other end of the sea? Metalwork circulation, geographical knowledge and the significance of British/Irish imports in the Bronze Age of the Low Countries
  • Chapter 10: The master(y) of hard materials: Thoughts on technology, materiality and ideology occasioned by the Dover boat
  • Chapter 11: Exploring the ritual of travel in prehistoric Europe: The Bronze Age sewn-plank boats in context
  • Chapter 12: In his hands and in his head: The Amesbury Archer as a metalworker
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