Paths Towards a New World  
Published by Oxbow Books
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781782972587
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Covering the approximately 6,500 years from the beginning of the Late Mesolithic to the transition to the Bronze Age, Mats Larsson takes the reader on a journey through the development of Swedish prehistoric society and culture set against the backdrop of climatic and landscape change. Using examples selected from a wealth of archaeological sites, artefacts and palaeo-environmental studies he explores a series of chronological themes: such as how the relationship between land and water influenced people’s lives in many ways and the development of often long-distance cultural and exchange networks, as reflected in the occurrence of ‘foreign’ stone axes, flint, copper and pottery. He describes how innovations, such as the introduction of agriculture, spread rapidly during the Neolithic, incorporating characteristics of extensive northern European cultural groups, beginning with the Funnel Beaker Culture with its array of distinctive objects, settlements and burial monuments, while retaining some specific regional and local expressions in material culture. Later, certain characteristics of the Pitted Ware Culture, such as specific types of pottery decoration, were taken up in some areas while the emergence of some regional groups can be seen as a step in the ideological and social changes that led to what we today call the Battle Axe Culture. Towards the end of the Stone Age the battle axe was replaced by the dagger as a symbol of the male warrior as a more stable society emerged in many parts of the country, concentrated around large farms with longhouses. It was only at this late stage that agriculture and the raising of livestock gained a firm hold, and the landscape was opened up permanently.
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Covering the approximately 6,500 years from the beginning of the Late Mesolithic to the transition to the Bronze Age, Mats Larsson takes the reader on a journey through the development of Swedish prehistoric society and culture set against the backdrop of climatic and landscape change. Using examples selected from a wealth of archaeological sites, artefacts and palaeo-environmental studies he explores a series of chronological themes: such as how the relationship between land and water influenced people’s lives in many ways and the development of often long-distance cultural and exchange networks, as reflected in the occurrence of ‘foreign’ stone axes, flint, copper and pottery. He describes how innovations, such as the introduction of agriculture, spread rapidly during the Neolithic, incorporating characteristics of extensive northern European cultural groups, beginning with the Funnel Beaker Culture with its array of distinctive objects, settlements and burial monuments, while retaining some specific regional and local expressions in material culture. Later, certain characteristics of the Pitted Ware Culture, such as specific types of pottery decoration, were taken up in some areas while the emergence of some regional groups can be seen as a step in the ideological and social changes that led to what we today call the Battle Axe Culture. Towards the end of the Stone Age the battle axe was replaced by the dagger as a symbol of the male warrior as a more stable society emerged in many parts of the country, concentrated around large farms with longhouses. It was only at this late stage that agriculture and the raising of livestock gained a firm hold, and the landscape was opened up permanently.
Table of contents
  • Cover Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1 Environmental History
    • Geological archives
    • Methods of analysis
      • Pollen analysis
      • Plant microfossil analysis
      • Analysis of bone and shell remains
      • Insect analysis
    • Dating
    • Examples of palaeoecological applications
    • Suggested readings
  • 2 The Mesolithic Period and Stone Age hunters
    • The last hunters
    • The Late Mesolithic - a few trends
    • Suggested readings
  • 3 From Hunter to Farmer
    • Northern Europe
    • Paths towards a new world
    • The early farmers and their contemporaries
    • Time and artefacts
    • What was life like for the early farmers?
    • Settlement trends
    • What did they eat?
    • Stone Age food
  • 4 The Dead and the Afterlife
    • Long barrows
    • Flat graves
    • Dolmens
    • Döygg (Dolmen Ridge)
    • Meeting places for the living and the dead - Sarup structures
    • Burnt axes and ceremonial deposits
    • The Early Neolithic - a few trends
    • Suggested readings
  • 5 Science and the Neolithic
    • Domestication
    • Adaptation
    • Kinship
    • The future
    • Isotopes
    • Diet
    • Mobility
    • The future
    • Suggested readings
  • 6 A Time of Change
    • Farmers and seal hunters
    • Time and objects
    • Settlements and houses
    • The dead and the afterlife
    • Sarup structures
    • Seal hunters
    • The settlement at Åby
    • Fräkenrönningen
    • The afterlife
    • Seal hunters or...?
    • The Alvastra pile dwelling
    • So, who were these seal hunters?
    • Changes and new times
  • 7 New Manners and Customs
    • The Battle Axe Culture
    • Events in North Sweden
    • Graves, dwellings and battle axes
      • Flint and stone
      • Preparing the dead -burial customs
      • Houses for the dead
      • Houses for the living
    • Trends in settlements
    • Palisades and timber circles
    • Crop growing and livestock
    • Suggested readings
  • 8 Longhouses and Stone Cists
    • Daggers, sickles and arrowheads
    • House and home
    • Late Neolithic dwellings - main features
    • Colonization phase or...?
    • Stone cists and earthen graves
    • Cremation graves
    • Flat ground graves
    • Late Neolithic trends
    • Suggested readings
  • Epilogue
  • References
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