Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Aspects of the Bronze Age in the Atlantic Archipelago and Beyond: Proceedings from the Belfast Bronze Age Forum, 910 November 2013 [Kõva köide]

Edited by
  • Formaat: Hardback, 404 pages, kõrgus x laius: 297x210 mm, kaal: 1920 g, 217 figures, 31 tables (some colour throughout)
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Nov-2025
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 1805831291
  • ISBN-13: 9781805831297
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 404 pages, kõrgus x laius: 297x210 mm, kaal: 1920 g, 217 figures, 31 tables (some colour throughout)
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Nov-2025
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 1805831291
  • ISBN-13: 9781805831297
Teised raamatud teemal:
Aspects of the Bronze Age in the Atlantic Archipelago and Beyond presents twenty-one contributions, mostly originating from the Belfast Bronze Age Forum of 2013, supplemented with new research to create an unusually coherent collection of peer-reviewed studies. Far more than typical conference proceedings, this volume offers a benchmark exploration of the Bronze Age in Ireland, Britain, and its wider European context.













Organised into three thematic sectionsConcepts, Chronologies and Connections; Mining, Metalworking and Artefact Studies; and Landscape, Settlement and Rock Artthe book traces the threads of technology, exchange, and identity that ran throughout Atlantic Europe. In the introductory contribution, the editor revisits the influential notion of the Atlantic Bronze Age, charting how this concept evolved and morphed over time, while also questioning models such as the Celtic from the West hypothesis. Other contributions highlight the significance of local dynamics within this broader zone: the Isles of Scilly, the Isle of Man, and Irelands western reaches emerge as striking case studies of communities negotiating contact, isolation, and innovation.













The volume also showcases cutting-edge archaeological science, from tracing copper sources at the Great Orme and at Derrycarhoon, to analyses of cauldrons, razors, halberds and sword moulds, revealing both technological sophistication and ritual dimensions of material culture. Papers on hillforts, burnt mounds, and reused rock art further illuminate places of gathering, memory, and transformation in the Bronze Age landscape.













Praised by one of its reviewers as a vital reference point for Atlantic Bronze Age studies, this volume combines breadth with depth, presenting fresh discoveries alongside critical reflections on old debates. Reissued here in a new edition, it remains indispensable for students, researchers, and anyone interested in the social and cultural worlds of Bronze Age Europe.
Concepts, Chronologies and Connections


Dirk Brandherm Almost lost between the lines: the concept of the Atlantic
Bronze Age


Sabine Gerloff and Brendan OConnor A scheme for the British Bronze Age by
C.F.C. Hawkes


Katharine Sawyer Dating the entrance graves and cists of the Isles of
Scilly


Rachel J. Crellin The emergence of a Bronze Age on the Isle of Man


Alice Rogers One foot in sea, and one on shore: movement along the British
North Sea coastline in the Early Bronze Age


Catriona Gibson, Peter Bray, Kerri Cleary, Fernando Fernández Palacios and
John T. Koch Mapping the flow: introduction to Atlantic Europe and the
Metal Ages project


 


Mining, Metalworking and Artefact Studies


Simon Timberlake and Peter Marshall The Bronze Age mines dating project and
some new ideas on ore extraction and smelting


William OBrien Derrycarhoon mine and the supply of copper in later Bronze
Age Ireland


R. Alan Williams Linking ore to metal: characterizing the ores and tracing
the metal from the Great Orme Bronze Age copper mine in north Wales


Andrew P. Fitzpatrick Mining, making, and stone tools: the earliest metal
objects in Britain and Ireland


Linda Boutoille Cushion stones and company: British and Irish finds of
stone metalworking implements from the Bell Beaker period to the Late Bronze
Age


Tobias Mörtz Once unburied, yet unfound: a survey of the moulds for casting
swords in Late Bronze Age Britain


Katharine Leonard Commensality and casting: a discussion of Irish Late
Bronze Age cauldrons


David Bell  Bronze Age halberds: use-wear and functionality


David Mullin Return to the source: the use of stone in pottery in later
Bronze Age Britain


Ros Ó Maoldúin Well shaved travellers: Irish and Scottish Early Bronze Age
razors


Oliver Dietrich and Tobias Mörtz Sockets full of scrap? Remarks on
deliberate fragmentation in Late Bronze Age metal deposits in south-eastern
and north-western Europe


 


Landscape, Settlement and Rock Art


James ODriscoll The Baltinglass hillfort cluster in the context of the
Irish hillfort phenomenon: an initial view


Alan Hawkes The re-use of prehistoric burnt mounds in Ireland: the
importance of social memory, identity and place


Rebecca Aroon Enlander Chronologies and connections: exploring the re-use
of rock art and geological choice in Bronze Age Ireland


Martin Rundkvist Bronze Age landscape rules of deposition around Lakes
Mälaren and Hjälmaren, Sweden


 


Indices and Appendices


Index of place names (in alphabetical order)


Index of place names (by country)


List of contributors


2013 Bronze Age Forum programme
Dirk Brandherm is Reader in Prehistory at Queens University Belfast and current President of the UISPPs Metal Ages commission. His research interests are primarily concerned with exploring the dynamics of societal change in later prehistory, particularly in the Chalcolithic and in the Bronze and Iron Ages of Western Europe and the Mediterranean.