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Bell Beaker culture

The Bell Beaker culture, also known as the Bell Beaker complex or Bell Beaker phenomenon, is an archaeological culture named after the inverted-bell beaker drinking vessel used at the very beginning of the European Bronze Age, arising from around 2800 BC. Bell Beaker culture lasted in Britain from c. 2450 BC, with the appearance of single burial graves,[1] until as late as 1800 BC,[2][3] but in continental Europe only until 2300 BC, when it was succeeded by the Unetice culture. The culture was widely dispersed throughout Western Europe, being present in many regions of Iberia and stretching eastward to the Danubian plains, and northward to the islands of Great Britain and Ireland, and was also present in the islands of Sardinia and Sicily and some coastal areas in north-western Africa. The Bell Beaker phenomenon shows substantial regional variation, and a study[4] from 2018 found that it was associated with genetically diverse populations.

The Bell Beaker culture was partly preceded by and contemporaneous with the Corded Ware culture, and in north-central Europe preceded by the Funnelbeaker culture. The name Glockenbecher was coined for its distinctive style of beakers by Paul Reinecke in 1900. The term's English translation Bell Beaker was introduced by John Abercromby in 1904.[5]

In its early phase, the Bell Beaker culture can be seen as the western contemporary of the Corded Ware culture of Central Europe. From about 2400 BC the Beaker folk culture expanded eastwards, into the Corded Ware horizon.[6] In parts of Central and Eastern Europe, as far east as Poland, a sequence occurs from Corded Ware to Bell Beaker. This period marks a period of cultural contact in Atlantic and Western Europe following a prolonged period of relative isolation during the Neolithic.

In its mature phase, the Bell Beaker culture is understood as not only a collection of characteristic artefact types, but a complex cultural phenomenon involving metalwork in copper and gold, long-distance exchange networks, archery, specific types of ornamentation, and (presumably) shared ideological, cultural and religious ideas, as well as social stratification and the emergence of regional elites.[7][8] A wide range of regional diversity persists within the widespread late Beaker culture, particularly in local burial styles (including incidences of cremation rather than burial), housing styles, economic profile, and local ceramic wares (Begleitkeramik). Nonetheless, according to Lemercier (2018) the mature phase of the Beaker culture represents "the appearance of a kind of Bell Beaker civilization of continental scale".[9]

Origins and expansion edit

Origins edit

 
Bell Beaker artefacts from Spain: ceramics, metal daggers, axe and javelin points, stone wristguards and arrowheads

The Bell Beaker artefacts (at least in their early phase) are not distributed across a contiguous area, as is usual for archaeological cultures, but are found in insular concentrations scattered across Europe. Their presence is not associated with a characteristic type of architecture or of burial customs. However, the Bell Beaker culture does appear to coalesce into a coherent archaeological culture in its later phase.

The origin of the "Bell Beaker" artefacts has been traced to the early 3rd millennium, with early examples of the "maritime" Bell Beaker design having been found at the Tagus estuary in Portugal, radiocarbon dated to c. 28th century BC.[3][10][11] The inspiration for the Maritime Bell Beaker is argued to have been the small and earlier Copoz beakers that have impressed decoration and which are found widely around the Tagus estuary in Portugal.[12] Turek sees late Neolithic precursors in northern Africa, arguing the Maritime style emerged as a result of seaborne contacts between Iberia and Morocco in the first half of the third millennium BC.[13]

More recent analyses of the "Beaker phenomenon", published since the 2000s, have persisted in describing the origin of the "Beaker phenomenon" as arising from a synthesis of elements, representing "an idea and style uniting different regions with different cultural traditions and background."[14][15]

Expansion and Corded Ware contacts edit

 
Model of the Castro of Zambujal, Portugal

The initial moves from the Tagus estuary were maritime. A southern move led to the Mediterranean where 'enclaves' were established in south-western Spain and southern France around the Golfe du Lion and into the Po Valley in Italy, probably via ancient western Alpine trade routes used to distribute jadeite axes. A northern move incorporated the southern coast of Armorica. The enclave established in southern Brittany was linked closely to the riverine and landward route, via the Loire, and across the Gâtinais Valley to the Seine Valley, and thence to the lower Rhine. This was a long-established route reflected in early stone axe distributions, and via this network, Maritime Bell Beakers first reached the Lower Rhine in c. 2600 BC.[3][16]

 
Reconstruction of a Bell Beaker burial, Spain.[17]

Another expansion brought Bell Beaker to Csepel Island in Hungary by about 2500 BC. In the Carpathian Basin, the Bell Beaker culture came in contact with communities such as the Vučedol culture (c. 3000–2200 BC), which had evolved partly from the Yamnaya culture (c. 3300–2600 BC).[note 1] In contrast to the early Bell Beaker preference for the dagger and bow, the favourite weapon in the Carpathian Basin during the first half of the third millennium was the shaft-hole axe.[19] Here, Bell Beaker people assimilated local pottery forms such as the polypod cup. These "common ware" types of pottery then spread in association with the classic bell beaker.[20]

The Rhine was on the western edge of the vast Corded Ware zone (c. 3100 – c. 2350 BC), forming a contact zone with the Bell Beaker culture. From there, the Bell Beaker culture spread further into Eastern Europe, replacing the Corded Ware culture up to the Vistula (Poland).[21][note 2]

 
Corded Ware, Yamnaya and Sintashta cultures

A review in 2014 revealed that single burial, communal burial, and reuse of Neolithic burial sites are found throughout the Bell Beaker zone.[22] This overturns a previous conviction that single burial was unknown in the early or southern Bell Beaker zone, and so must have been adopted from Corded Ware in the contact zone of the Lower Rhine, and transmitted westwards along the exchange networks from the Rhine to the Loire,[23][24] and northwards across the English Channel to Britain.[3][25]

The earliest copper production in Ireland, identified at Ross Island in the period 2400–2200 BC, was associated with early Beaker pottery.[3][26] Here, the local sulpharsenide ores were smelted to produce the first copper axes used in Britain and Ireland.[3] The same technologies were used in the Tagus region and in the west and south of France.[3][27] The evidence is sufficient to support the suggestion that the initial spread of Maritime Bell Beakers along the Atlantic and into the Mediterranean, using sea routes that had long been in operation, was directly associated with the quest for copper and other rare raw materials.[3]

Migration vs. acculturation edit

While Bell Beaker (Glockenbecher) was introduced as a term for the artefact type at the beginning of the 20th century, recognition of an archaeological Bell Beaker culture has long been controversial. Its spread has been one of the central questions of the migrationism vs. diffusionism debate in 20th-century archaeology, variously described as due to migration, possibly of small groups of warriors, craftsmen or traders, or due to the diffusion of ideas and object exchange.[28]

Migration edit

 
Sewn-plank boat from Ferriby, Britain, c. 2000 BC
 
Gold lunula from Ireland, c. 2000 BC

Given the unusual form and fabric of Beaker pottery, and its abrupt appearance in the archaeological record, along with a characteristic group of other artefacts, known as the Bell Beaker "package", the explanation for the Beaker culture until the last decades of the 20th century was to interpret it as the migration of one group of people across Europe.

Gordon Childe interpreted the presence of its characteristic artefact as the intrusion of "missionaries" expanding from Iberia along the Atlantic coast, spreading knowledge of copper metallurgy. Stephen Shennan interpreted the artefacts as belonging to a mobile cultural elite imposing itself over the indigenous substrate populations. Similarly, Sangmeister (1972) interpreted the "Beaker folk" (Glockenbecherleute) as small groups of highly mobile traders and artisans. Christian Strahm (1995) used the term "Bell Beaker phenomenon" (Glockenbecher-Phänomen) as a compromise in order to avoid the term "culture".[29]

Heyd (1998) concluded that the Bell Beaker culture was intrusive to southern Germany, and existed contemporarily with the local Corded Ware culture.[30]

The burial ritual which typified Bell Beaker sites appears to be intrusive to Western Europe, from Central Europe. Individual inhumations, often under tumuli with the inclusion of weapons contrast markedly to the preceding Neolithic traditions of often collective, weaponless burials in Atlantic/Western Europe. Such an arrangement is rather derivative of Corded Ware traditions.[13]

Cultural diffusion edit

 
Bell Beakers from Thuringia (Germany) and Tököl (Hungary), c. 2500-2200 BC

British and American archaeology since the 1960s have been sceptical about prehistoric migration in general, so the idea of "Bell Beaker Folk" lost ground. A theory of cultural contact de-emphasizing population movement was presented by Colin Burgess and Stephen Shennan in the mid-1970s.[31]

Under the "pots, not people" theory, the Beaker culture was seen as a 'package' of knowledge (including religious beliefs, as well as methods of copper, bronze, and gold working) and artefacts (including copper daggers, v-perforated buttons, and stone wrist-guards) adopted and adapted by the indigenous peoples of Europe to varying degrees. This new knowledge may have come about by any combination of population movements and cultural contact. An example might be as part of a prestige cult related to the production and consumption of beer, or trading links such as those demonstrated by finds made along the seaways of Atlantic Europe. Palynological studies including analysis of pollen, associated with the spread of beakers, certainly suggests increased growing of barley, which may be associated with beer brewing. Noting the distribution of Beakers was highest in areas of transport routes, including fording sites, river valleys and mountain passes, Beaker 'folk' were suggested to be originally bronze traders, who subsequently settled within local Neolithic or early Chalcolithic cultures, creating local styles. Close analysis of the bronze tools associated with beaker use suggests an early Iberian source for the copper, followed subsequently by Central European and Bohemian ores.[citation needed]

AOO and AOC Beakers appear to have evolved continually from a pre-Beaker period in the lower Rhine and North Sea regions, at least for Northern and Central Europe.[32]

Renewed emphasis on migration edit

 
Illustration of early Bronze Age horse bridles from Britain. Horses were domesticated on the Pontic-Caspian steppe.[33]

Investigations in the Mediterranean and France recently moved the discussion to re-emphasise the importance of migration to the Bell Beaker story. Instead of being pictured as a fashion or a simple diffusion of objects and their use, the investigation of over 300 sites showed that human groups actually moved in a process that involved explorations, contacts, settlement, diffusion, and acculturation/assimilation.

 
Illustration of a Bell Beaker period wagon[34]

Some elements show the influence from the north and east, and other elements reveal the south-east of France to be an important crossroad on an important route of communication and exchange spreading north. A distinctive 'barbed wire' pottery decoration is thought to have migrated through central Italy first. The pattern of movements was diverse and complicated, along the Atlantic coast and the northern Mediterranean coast, and sometimes also far inland. The prominent central role of Portugal in the region and the quality of the pottery all across Europe are forwarded as arguments for a new interpretation that denies an ideological dimension.[35]

Genetic findings also lend support to the migratory hypothesis. An strontium isotope analysis of 86 people from Bell Beaker graves in Bavaria, suggests that 18–25% of all graves were occupied by people who came from a considerable distance outside the area.[36] This was true of children and adults, indicative of some significant migration wave. Given the similarities with readings from people living on loess soils, the general direction of the local movement is from the northeast to the southwest.[36]

Archaeogenetics studies of the 2010s have been able to resolve the "migrationist vs. diffusionist" question to some extent. The study by Olalde et al. (2017) found only "limited genetic affinity" between individuals associated with the Beaker complex in Iberia and in Central Europe, suggesting that migration played a limited role in its early spread. However, the same study found that the further dissemination of the mature Beaker complex was very strongly linked to migration. This is true especially for Britain, where the spread of the Beaker culture introduced high levels of steppe-related ancestry, resulting in a near-complete transformation of the local gene pool within a few centuries, to the point of replacement of about 90% of the local Neolithic-derived lineages.[37]

Bell Beaker artefacts edit

The two main international bell beaker styles are: the All Over Ornamented (AOO), patterned all over with impressions, of which a subset is the All Over Corded (AOC), patterned with cord-impressions, and the Maritime type, decorated with bands filled with impressions made with a comb or cord. Later, other characteristic regional styles developed.[38]

The beakers are suggested to have been designed for the consumption of alcohol, and the introduction of the substance to Europe may have fuelled the beakers' spread.[39] Beer and mead content have been identified from certain examples. However, not all Beakers were drinking cups. Some were used as reduction pots to smelt copper ores, others have some organic residues associated with food, and still others were employed as funerary urns.[40] They were used as status display amongst disparate elites.[citation needed]

Postulated linguistic connections edit

As the Beaker culture left no written records, all theories regarding the language or languages they spoke remain conjectural. It has been suggested as a candidate for an early Indo-European culture, or as the origin of the Vasconic substrate.

James Mallory (2013) notes that the Beaker culture was associated with a hypothetical cluster of Indo-European dialects termed "North-West Indo-European," a cluster which includes the (predecessors of) Celtic, Italic, Germanic and Balto-Slavic branches.[42]

Earlier theories suggested a link to the hypothesised Italo-Celtic, or Proto-Celtic languages.[43]

Physical anthropology edit

 
Anthropomorphic stele from Sion, Switzerland, 2700–2150 BC
 
Stele fragment depicting patterned clothing, Switzerland, 2700-2150 BC

Historical craniometric studies found that the Beaker people appeared to be of a different physical type than those earlier populations in the same geographic areas. They were described as tall, heavy boned and brachycephalic. The early studies on the Beakers which were based on the analysis of their skeletal remains, were craniometric. This apparent evidence of migration was in line with archaeological discoveries linking Beaker culture to new farming techniques, mortuary practices, copper-working skills, and other cultural innovations. However, such evidence from skeletal remains was brushed aside as a new movement developed in archaeology from the 1960s, which stressed cultural continuity. Anti-migrationist authors either paid little attention to skeletal evidence or argued that differences could be explained by environmental and cultural influences. Margaret Cox and Simon Mays sum up the position: "Although it can hardly be said that craniometric data provide an unequivocal answer to the problem of the Beaker folk, the balance of the evidence would at present seem to favour a migration hypothesis."[44]

Non-metrical research concerning the Beaker people in Britain also cautiously pointed in the direction of migration.[45] Subsequent studies, such as one concerning the Carpathian Basin,[46] and a non-metrical analysis of skeletons in central-southern Germany,[47] have also identified marked typological differences with the pre-Beaker inhabitants.

Jocelyne Desideri examined the teeth in skeletons from Bell Beaker sites in Northern Spain, Southern France, Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Hungary. Examining dental characteristics that have been independently shown to correlate with genetic relatedness, she found that only in Northern Spain and the Czech Republic were there demonstrable links between immediately previous populations and Bell Beaker populations. Elsewhere there was a discontinuity.[48]

Genetics edit

 
Bell Beaker burial from Shrewton, England, 2470–2210 BC

Lee et al. (2012) detected R1b two male skeletons from a German Bell Beaker site dated to 2600–2500 BC at Kromsdorf, one of which tested positive for M269 but negative for its U106 subclade (note that the P312 subclade was not tested for), while for the other skeleton the M269 test was unclear.[49]

Two studies published in 2015 (Haak et al. 2015, Mathieson et al. 2015) found that Bell Beaker individuals from Germany and the Czech Republic had high proportions of Steppe-related ancestry, showing that they derived from mixtures of populations from the Steppe (such as Corded Ware and Yamnaya) and the preceding Neolithic farmers of Europe.[50][51][52] The Y-chromosome composition of Beaker-associated males was dominated by R1b-M269, a lineage associated with the arrival of Steppe migrants in central Europe after 3000 BC.[53] Bell Beaker individuals from Germany analysed by Haak et al. (2015) were found to have less Steppe ancestry than the earlier Corded Ware culture.[51]

Allentoft et al. (2015) found the people of the Bell Beaker culture to be closely genetically related to the Corded Ware culture, the Unetice culture and the Nordic Bronze Age.[54]

A study published in Nature in 2018 confirmed a massive population turnover in western Europe associated with the Bell Beaker culture.[55] In Britain the spread of the Bell Beaker culture introduced high levels of Steppe-related ancestry and was associated with a replacement of ~90% of the gene pool within a few hundred years. British Beaker-associated individuals showed strong similarities to central European Beaker-associated individuals in their genetic profile.[56] Both men and women with Steppe ancestry participated in the turnover in Neolithic Britain, as evidenced by the rise of the paternal haplogroup R1b and maternal haplogroups I, R1a and U4. The paternal haplogroup R1b was completely absent in Neolithic individuals, but represented more than 90% of the Y-chromosomes during Copper and Bronze Age Britain.[57] The study also found that the Bell Beaker arrivals in Neolithic Britain had significantly higher genetic variants associated with light skin and eye pigmentation than the local population, but low frequencies of the SNP associated with lactase persistance in modern Europeans.[58]

 
The Amesbury Archer, Stonehenge, England, c. 2300 BC

The earliest Bell Beaker samples in Iberia lacked Steppe ancestry,[55] but between ~2500 and 2000 BC there was a replacement of 40% of Iberia’s ancestry and nearly 100% of its Y-chromosomes by people with Steppe ancestry.[59] Y-chromosome lineages common in Copper Age Iberia (I2, G2, H) were nearly completely replaced by one lineage, R1b-M269.[59] The most plausible source population for this genetic influx was found to be Germany Bell Beaker.[60] The earliest samples with Steppe ancestry were located in northern Spain and were modelled as deriving 60.2% of their ancestry from Germany Bell Beaker and 39.8% from the Iberian Copper Age, whilst Iberian Bronze Age samples from c. 2000 BC were modelled as 39.6% Germany Bell Beaker and 60.4% Iberia Copper Age.[61] Some Iberian samples had up to 100% Central European Bell Beaker ancestry.[62] A higher percentage of the genetic influx was due to men than women.[63]

Villalba-Mouco et al. (2021) analysed genome-wide data from 136 southern Iberian individuals dating from the Late Neolithic (3300 cal BCE) to the Late Bronze Age (1200/1000 cal BCE). They found that Bronze Age populations, including those from the El Argar culture were "shifted toward populations with steppe-related ancestry from central Europe" compared to preceding Copper Age groups. After 2100 cal BCE, all individuals from all sites carried steppe-related ancestry, in line with R1b-P312 [R1b-M269] becoming the predominant Y-chromosomal lineage. The major additional ancestry source resembled central European Bell Beaker groups, which first contributed ancestry to northern Iberia, followed by a southward spread. According to the authors, "R1b-Z195, the most common Y lineage in BA Iberia, ultimately derives from a common ancestor R1b-P312 in central Europe." The authors propose that the El Argar culture "likely formed from a mixture of new groups arriving from north-central Iberia, which already carried central European steppe-related ancestry (and the predominant Y-chromosome lineage) and local southeastern Iberian CA groups that differed from other regions in Iberian in that they carried excess Iran_N-like ancestry similar to eastern and/or central Mediterranean groups."[64]

Furtwängler et al. (2020) analysed 96 ancient genomes from Switzerland, Southern Germany, and the Alsace region in France, covering the Middle/Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age. They confirmed that R1b arrived in the region during the transitory Bell Beaker period (2800-1800 BC), along with Steppe-related ancestry. The vast majority of Bell Beaker R1b samples belonged to the U152 > L2 clade (11 out of 14; the other being P312 or L51).[65]

 
Burial mounds (barrows), Britain

Papac et al. (2021) found that the earliest Bell Beaker individuals from Bohemia in the Czech Republic had a similar genetic composition to Corded Ware individuals. A closer phylogenetic relationship was observed between the Y-chromosome lineages found in early Corded Ware and Bell Beaker than in either late Corded Ware or Yamnaya and Bell Beaker. R1b-L151 was the most common Y-lineage among early Corded Ware males in Bohemia, and was ancestral to R1b-P312, the dominant Y-lineage found in Bell Beaker males.[66]

Allentoft et al. (2024) found that individuals from Denmark dating from the 'Dagger Period' (c. 4300–3700 BCE) clustered with central and western European Late Neolithic-Bronze Age individuals dominated by males with lineages of R1b-M269/L51, matching the appearance of Bell Beaker material culture in Denmark at this time.[67] [68]

Olalde et al. (2018) analysed three Bell Beaker-associated individuals (one male and two females) from northern Italy (Parma), dating from 2200 to 1930 BC. Two of the individuals were found to have around 25% Early Bronze Age Steppe-related ancestry whilst one had none.[69] The male belonged to Y-haplogroup R1b1a1a2a1a2 (R1b-M269/P312).[70]

A study by Saupe et al. (2021) found that Bronze Age populations from Northern and Central Italy were characterised by a mix of earlier Chalcolithic ancestry and Steppe-related ancestry. The study found an autosomal affinity of North and Central Italian Bronze Age groups to Late Neolithic Germany, suggesting that Steppe-related ancestry could have arrived through Bell Beaker groups from Central Europe, such as Germany Bell Beaker. Three out of the four Italian Bronze Age males for which the paternal haplogroup could be determined belonged to haplogroup R1, and two of those were of the R1b-L11 lineage, which was absent in earlier Chalcolithic samples but is common in modern Western Europe and in ancient male Bell-Beaker burials.[71]

Posth et al. (2021) found that Iron Age Etruscans from central Italy could be modelled as deriving 50% of their ancestry from Central European Bell Beakers (represented by Germany Bell Beaker), with around 25% steppe ancestry. Two Etruscan samples were modelled as having 80% Germany Bell Beaker ancestry. Overall, the Etruscan samples showed ~75% frequency of the Y-haplogroup R1b, mostly represented by R1b-P312 and its derived R1b-L2 lineage "that diffused across Europe alongside steppe-related ancestry in association with the Bell Beaker complex." According to the authors, the Etruscans carried "a local genetic profile shared with other neighboring populations such as the Latins from Rome and its environs despite the cultural and linguistic differences between the two neighboring groups."[72] Antonio et al. (2019) similarly found that 5 out of 7 male Iron Age Roman samples belonged to the R1b-M269 Y-haplogroup, consistent with "the arrival of Steppe ancestry, via migration of Steppe pastoralists or intermediary populations in the preceding Bronze Age.” The Iron Age Roman population showed a clear ancestry shift from the earlier Copper Age, modelled as an introduction of ~30 to 40% steppe ancestry, which was indicative of "large-scale immigration before the Iron Age."[73]

According to Chintalapatia et al. (2022) a majority of Bronze Age samples from Sardinia lacked steppe-related ancestry, though evidence for steppe-related ancestry was found in a few individuals. This ancestry is estimated to have arrived in Sardinia ~2600 BC.[74]

In a 2020 review Fregel et al. identified European Bronze Age ancestry (including Steppe ancestry) in the Guanches from the Canary Islands, which could be explained by "the presence of Bell-Beaker pottery in the North African archaeological record" and "the expansion of European Bronze Age populations in North Africa".[75] Serrano et al. 2023 analysed genome-wide data from 49 Guanche individuals, whose ancestry was modelled as comprising 73.3% Morocco Late Neolithic, 6.9% Morocco Early Neolithic, 13.4% Germany Bell Beaker and 6.4% Mota, on average. Germany Bell Beaker ancestry reached 16.2% and 17.9% in samples from Gran Canaria and Lanzarote respectively.[76] Bell Beaker-related haplogroups identified in the Guanches include Y-DNA R1b-M269, mtDNA U5 and mtDNA H4a1.[77][78][79][80] These haplogroups have also been identified in mummies from Ancient Egypt.[81][82][83][84][85]

Extent and impact edit

 
Copper dagger, gold diadem and wristguard, Spain.[86]

Bell Beaker people took advantage of transport by sea and rivers, creating a cultural spread extending from Ireland to the Carpathian Basin and south along the Atlantic coast and along the Rhône valley to Portugal, North Africa, and Sicily, even penetrating northern and central Italy.[87] Its remains have been found in what is now Portugal, Spain, France (excluding the central massif), Ireland and Great Britain, the Low Countries and Germany between the Elbe and Rhine, with an extension along the upper Danube into the Vienna Basin (Austria), Hungary and the Czech Republic, with Mediterranean outposts on Sardinia and Sicily; there is less certain evidence for direct penetration in the east.

Beaker-type vessels remained in use longest in the British Isles; late beakers in other areas are classified as early Bronze Age (Barbed Wire Beakers in the Netherlands, Giant Beakers (Riesenbecher)). The new international trade routes opened by the Beaker people became firmly established and the culture was succeeded by a number of Bronze Age cultures, among them the Únětice culture in Central Europe, the Elp culture and Hilversum culture in the Netherlands, the Atlantic Bronze Age in the British Isles and the Atlantic coast of Europe, and by the Nordic Bronze Age, a culture of Scandinavia and northernmost Germany–Poland.

Iberian Peninsula edit

 
Bell Beaker from Ciempozuelos, Spain

The Bell Beaker phenomenon in the Iberian Peninsula defines the late phase of the local Chalcolithic and even intrudes in the earliest centuries of the Bronze Age.[88] A review of radiocarbon dates for Bell Beaker across Europe found that some of the earliest were found in Portugal, where the range from Zambujal and Cerro de la Virgen (Spain) ran c. 2900–2500 BC, in contrast to the rather later range for Andalusia (c. 2500–2200 BC).[89]

 
Los Millares, Spain

At present, no internal chronology for the various Bell Beaker-related styles has been achieved yet for Iberia.[90] Peninsular corded Bell Beakers are usually found in coastal or near coastal regions in three main regions: the western Pyrenees, the lower Ebro and adjacent east coast, and the northwest (Galicia and northern Portugal).[91] A corded-zoned Maritime variety (C/ZM), proposed to be a hybrid between AOC and Maritime Herringbone, was mainly found in burial contexts and expanded westward, especially along the mountain systems of the Meseta.

With some notable exceptions, most Iberian early Bell Beaker "burials" are at or near the coastal regions. As for the settlements and monuments within the Iberian context, Beaker pottery is generally found in association with local Chalcolithic material and appears most of all as an "intrusion" from the third millennium in burial monuments whose origin may go back to the fourth or fifth millennia BC.

Very early dates for Bell Beakers were found in Castelo Velho de Freixo de Numão in Guarda, central Portugal. The site was located on the summit of a spur. A short-lived first occupation of pre-Bell Beaker building phase at c. 3000 BC revealed the remains of a tower, some pavings, and structures for burning. After a break of one or two centuries, Bell Beaker pottery was introduced in a second building phase that lasted to the Early Bronze Age, c. 1800 BC. A third building phase followed directly and lasted to c. 1300 BC, after which the site was covered with layers of stone and clay, apparently deliberately, and abandoned.

The second building phase was dominated by a highly coherent group of pottery within the regional Chalcolithic styles, representing Maritime Bell Beakers of the local (northern Portuguese), penteada decoration style in various patterns, using lines of points, incision or impression. Three of them were carbon dated to the first half of the third millennium BC. The site demonstrates a notable absence of more common Bell Beaker pottery styles such as Maritime Herringbone and Maritime Lined varieties found in nearby sites such as Castanheiro do Vento and Crasto de Palheiros. One non-local Bell Beaker sherd, however, belonging to the upper part of a beaker with a curved neck and thin walls, was found at the bedrock base of this second phase. The technique and patterning are classic forms in the context of pure European and Peninsular corded ware. In the Iberian Peninsula, this AOC type was traditionally restricted to half a dozen scattered sites in the western Pyrenees, the lower Ebro, and the Spanish east coast; especially a vessel at Filomena at Villarreal, Castellón (Spain), has parallels with the decoration. In Porto Torrão, at inner Alentejo (southern Portugal), a similar vessel was found having a date ultimately corrected to c.2823–2658 BC. All pottery was locally made. The lack or presence of Bell Beaker elements is the basis for the division of Los Millares and Vila Nova cultures into two periods: I and II.

A gold lunula with two gold discs was found in Cabeceiras de Basto, Portugal, dating from the Bell Beaker period.[92][93]

In 2016 archaeologists discovered a large circular earthwork enclosure in southern Spain near Carmona (Sevilla), dating from the Bell Beaker period, c.2600–2200 BC. The complex of concentric rings, known as 'La Loma del Real Tesoro II' may have been used for holding rituals.[94][95] Circular earth and timber enclosures are also known from Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands in this period, as well as Stonehenge in England.

Balearic Islands edit

 
Beaker with Sun cross on the base.[98]

Radiocarbon dating currently indicates a 1,200-year duration for the use of the Beaker pottery on the Balearic Islands, between about 2475 and 1300 BC.[99] Some evidence exists of all-corded pottery in Mallorca, generally considered the most ancient Bell Beaker pottery, possibly indicating an even earlier Beaker settlement at c. 2700 BC.[100] However, in several regions, this type of pottery persisted long enough to permit other possibilities. Suárez Otero (1997) postulated this corded Beakers entered the Mediterranean by routes both through the Atlantic coast and eastern France. Bell Beaker pottery has been found in Mallorca and Formentera, but has not been observed in Menorca or Ibiza. Collective burials in dolmen structures in Ibiza could be contrasted against the individual burials in Mallorca. In its latest phase (c.1750–1300 cal BC) the local Beaker context became associated with the distinctive ornamented Boquique pottery[101] demonstrating clear maritime links with the (megalithic) coastal regions of Catalonia, also assessed to be directly related to the late Cogotas complex. In most of the areas of the mainland, Boquique pottery falls into the latter stages of the Bell Beaker complex, as well. Along with other evidence during the earlier Beaker period in the Balearics, c. 2400–2000 BC, as shown by the local presence of elephant ivory objects together with significant Beaker pottery and other finds,[102] this maritime interaction can be shown to have a long tradition. The abundance of different cultural elements that persisted towards the end of the Bronze Age, show a clear continuity of different regional and intrusive traditions.

The presence of perforated Beaker pottery, traditionally considered to be used for making cheese, at Son Ferrandell-Oleza [103] and at Coval Simó [104] confirms the introduction of production and conservation of dairy. Also, the presence of spindles at sites like Son Ferrandell-Oleza [105] or Es Velar d'Aprop [106] point to knowledge of making thread and textiles from wool. However, more details on the strategies for tending and slaughtering the domestic animals involved are forthcoming. Being traditionally associated with the introduction of metallurgy, the first traces of copper working in the Balearics were also clearly associated with Bell Beakers.

Central Europe edit

 
Bell Beaker dress with gold ornaments, Czech Republic

In their large-scale study on radiocarbon dating of the Bell Beakers, J. Müller and S. Willingen established that the Bell Beaker Culture in Central Europe started after 2500 BC.[89] Two great coexisting and separate Central European cultures – the Corded Ware with its regional groups and the Eastern Group of the Bell Beaker Culture – form the background to the Late Copper Age and Early Bronze Age. The Makó-Kosihy-Čaka culture, indigenous to the Carpathians, may be included as a third component.[107] Their development, diffusion and long range changes are determined by the great river systems.

 
Gold lunula from Lower Saxony, Germany.[108][109]

The Bell Beaker settlements are still little known, and have proved remarkably difficult for archaeologists to identify. This allows a modern view of them to contradict results of anthropologic research.[46] The late 20th century view is that the Bell Beaker people, far from being the "warlike invaders" as once described by Gordon Childe (1940), added rather than replaced local late Neolithic traditions into a cultural package and as such did not always and evenly abandon all local traditions.[110] More recent extensive DNA evidence, however, suggests a significant replacement of earlier populations.[111]

Bell Beaker domestic ware has no predecessors in Bohemia and Southern Germany, shows no genetic relation to the local Late Copper Age Corded Ware, nor to other cultures in the area, and is considered something completely new. The Bell Beaker domestic ware of Southern Germany is not as closely related to the Corded Ware as would be indicated by their burial rites. Settlements link the Southern German Bell Beaker culture to the seven regional provinces of the Eastern Group, represented by many settlement traces, especially from Moravia and the Hungarian Bell Beaker-Csepel group being the most important. In 2002, one of the largest Bell Beaker cemeteries in Central Europe was discovered at Hoštice za Hanou (Moravia, Czech Republic).[112]

The relationship to the western Bell Beakers groups, and the contemporary cultures of the Carpathian basin to the south east, is much less.[113] Research in northern Poland shifted the north-eastern frontier of this complex to the western parts of the Baltic with the adjacent Northern European plain. Typical Bell Beaker fragments from the site of Ostrikovac-Djura at the Serbian river Morava were presented at the Riva del Garda conference in 1998, some 100 km south-east of the Csepel Beaker sub-group (modern Hungary). Bell Beaker related material has now been uncovered in a line from the Baltic Sea down to the Adriatic and the Ionian Sea, including the modern states comprising Belarus, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia, Albania, North Macedonia and parts of Greece.[114]

 
Stone stele, Switzerland

The Bell Beaker culture settlements in southern Germany and in the East-Group show evidence of mixed farming and animal husbandry, and indicators such as millstones and spindle whorls prove the sedentary character of the Bell Beaker people, and the durability of their settlements.[113] Some especially well equipped child-burials seem to indicate sense of predestined social position, indicating a socially complex society. However, analysis of grave furnishing, position within the cemetery, and size and deepness of grave pits did not lead to any strong conclusions on the social divisions.

 
Bell Beaker, Germany

The Late Copper Age is regarded as a continuous culture system connecting the Upper Rhine valley to the western edge of the Carpathian Basin. Late Copper Age 1 was defined in southern Germany by the connection of the late Cham Culture, Globular Amphora culture, and the older Corded Ware Culture of "beaker group 1" that is also referred to as Horizon A or Step A. Early Bell Beaker Culture intruded[30] into the region at the end of the Late Copper Age 1, around 2600–2550 BC. Middle Bell Beaker corresponds to Late Copper Age 2 and here an east–west Bell Beaker cultural gradient became visible through the difference in the distribution of the groups of beakers with and without handles, cups and bowls, in the three regions Austria–Western Hungary, the Danube catchment area of Southern Germany, and the Upper Rhine/lake Constance/Eastern Switzerland area for all subsequent Bell Beaker periods.[115] This middle Bell Beaker Culture is the main period when almost all the cemeteries in Southern Germany begin. Younger Bell Beaker Culture of Early Bronze Age shows analogies to the Proto-Únětice Culture in Moravia and the Early Nagyrév Culture of the Carpathian Basin.

During the Bell Beaker period, a border ran through southern Germany, which culturally divided a northern from a southern area. The northern area was oriented around the Rhine and the Bell Beaker West Group, while the southern area occupied much of the Danube river system and was mainly settled by the homogeneous Bell Beaker East Group. This latter group overlapped with the Corded Ware Culture and other groups of the Late Neolithic and early Bronze Age. Nevertheless, southern Germany shows some independent developments of itself.[30]

 
Pömmelte circular enclosure, Germany, c. 2300 BC.[116][117][118][119]

Although a broadly parallel evolution with early, middle, and younger Bell Beaker Culture was detected, the Southern Germany middle Bell Beaker development of metope decorations and stamp and furrow engraving techniques do not appear on beakers in Austria-Western Hungary, and handled beakers are completely absent. It is contemporary to Corded Ware in the vicinity, that has been attested by associated finds of middle Corded Ware (chronologically referred to as "beaker group 2" or Step B) and younger Geiselgasteig Corded Ware beakers ("beaker group 3" or Step C). Bell Beaker Culture in Bavaria used a specific type of copper, which is characterised by combinations of trace elements. This same type of copper was spread over the area of the Bell Beaker East Group.

Previously some archaeologists considered the Bell-beaker people to have lived only within a limited territory of the Carpathian Basin and for a short time, without mixing with the local population. Although there are very few evaluable anthropological finds, the appearance of the characteristic planoccipital (flattened back) Taurid type in the populations of some later cultures (e.g. Kisapostag and Gáta–Wieselburg cultures) suggested a mixture with the local population contradicting such archaeological theories. According to archaeology, the populational groups of the Bell-beakers also took part in the formation of the Gáta-Wieselburg culture on the western fringes of the Carpathian Basin, which could be confirmed with the anthropological Bell Beaker series in Moravia and Germany.[46] In accordance with anthropological evidence, it has been concluded the Bell Beakers intruded in an already established form the southern part of Germany as much as the East Group area.[30]

Around 2300 BC, large circular enclosures were built at Pömmelte and nearby Schönebeck in central Germany. These were important ritual sites which remained in use until c. 1900 BC.[120][121] The main entrances of the Pömmelte enclosure were oriented towards sunrise and sunset midway between the solstices and equinoxes, indicating that Pömmelte served as a monument for "ceremonies linked to calendrical rites and seasonal feasting".[122] The Pömmelte and Schönebeck enclosures formed parts of a 'sacral landscape' with origins in an early 3rd millennium BC sanctuary and elite burial of the Corded Ware culture.[123] The Pömmelte enclosure also has an almost identical diameter and a similar ground plan to Stonehenge in England.[124] According to excavators the two monuments were built by "the same culture" with "the same view of the world".[118]

Ireland edit

 
Gold lunula from Blessington, c. 2400 BC

Beakers arrived in Ireland c. 2500 BC and fell out of use c. 1700 BC.[129] The beaker pottery of Ireland was rarely used as a grave good, but is often found in domestic assemblages from the period. This stands in contrast to the rest of Europe where it is frequently found in both roles. The inhabitants of Ireland used food vessels as a grave good instead. The large, communal passage tombs of the Irish Neolithic were no longer being constructed during the Early Bronze Age (although some, such as Newgrange were re-used[130]). The preferred method of burial seems to have been single graves and cists in the east, or in small wedge tombs in the west. Cremation was also common.

The advent of the Bronze Age Beaker culture in Ireland is accompanied by the destruction of smaller satellite tombs at Knowth[131] and collapses of the great cairn at Newgrange,[132] marking an end to the Neolithic culture of megalithic passage tombs.

Beakers are found in large numbers in Ireland, and the technical innovation of ring-built pottery indicates that the makers were also present.[133] Classification of pottery in Ireland and Britain has distinguished a total of seven intrusive[134] beaker groups originating from the continent and three groups of purely insular character having evolved from them. Five out of seven of the intrusive Beaker groups also appear in Ireland: the European bell group, the All-over cord beakers, the Scottish/North Rhine beakers, the Northern British/Middle Rhine beakers and the Wessex/Middle Rhine beakers. However, many of the features or innovations of Beaker society in Britain never reached Ireland.[135] Instead, quite different customs predominated in the Irish record that were apparently influenced by the traditions of the earlier inhabitants.[136] Some features that are found elsewhere in association to later types[137] of Earlier Bronze Age Beaker pottery, indeed spread to Ireland, however, without being incorporated into the same close and specific association of Irish Beaker context.[138] The Wessex/Middle Rhine gold discs bearing "wheel and cross" motifs that were probably sewn to garments, presumably to indicate status and reminiscent of racquet headed pins found in Eastern Europe,[139] enjoy a general distribution throughout the country, however, never in direct association with beakers.

In 1984, a Beaker period copper dagger blade was recovered from the Sillees River near Ross Lough, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.[140] The flat, triangular-shaped copper blade was 171 mm (6.73 in) long, with bevelled edges and a pointed tip, and featured an integral tang that accepted a riveted handle.[140] Flint arrow-heads and copper-blade daggers with handle tangs, found in association with Beaker pottery in many other parts of Europe, have a date later than the initial phase of Beaker People activity in Ireland.[141] Also the typical Beaker wristguards seem to have entered Ireland by cultural diffusion only, after the first intrusions, and unlike English and Continental Beaker burials never made it to the graves. The same lack of typical Beaker association applies to the about thirty found stone battle axes. A gold ornament found in County Down that closely resembles a pair of ear-rings from Ermegeira, Portugal, has a composition that suggests it was imported.[141] Incidental finds suggest links to non-British Beaker territories, like a fragment of a bronze blade in County Londonderry that has been likened to the "palmella" points of Iberia,[134] even though the relative scarcity of beakers, and Beaker-compatible material of any kind, in the south-west are regarded as an obstacle to any colonisation directly from Iberia, or even from France.[134] Their greater concentration in the northern part of the country,[133] which traditionally is regarded as the part of Ireland least blessed with sources of copper,[citation needed] has led many authorities to question the role of Beaker People in the introduction of metallurgy to Ireland. However, indications of their use of stream sediment copper, low in traces of lead and arsenic, and Beaker finds connected to mining and metalworking at Ross Island, County Kerry, provide an escape to such doubts.[142]

 
Gold lunula and discs from Coggalbeg, Ireland, c. 2300 BC.[143]

The featured "food vessels" and cinerary urns (encrusted, collared and cordoned) of the Irish Earlier Bronze Age have strong roots in the western European Beaker tradition. Recently, the concept of these food vessels was discarded and replaced by a concept of two different traditions that rely on typology: the bowl tradition and the vase tradition, the bowl tradition being the oldest[144] as it has been found inserted in existing Neolithic (pre-beaker) tombs, both court tombs and passage tombs. The bowl tradition occurs over the whole country except the south-west and feature a majority of pit graves, both in flat cemeteries and mounds, and a high incidence of uncremated skeletons, often in crouched position.[145] The vase tradition has a general distribution and feature almost exclusively cremation. The flexed skeleton of a man 1.88 meters tall in a cist in a slightly oval round cairn with "food vessel" at Cornaclery, County Londonderry, was described in the 1942 excavation report as "typifying the race of Beaker Folk",[146] although the differences between Irish finds and e.g. the British combination of "round barrows with crouched, unburnt burials" make it difficult to establishes the exact nature of the Beaker People's colonization of Ireland.[135]

 
Timber circle at Newgrange, Ireland, c. 2000 BC

In general, the early Irish Beaker intrusions do not attest[147] the overall "Beaker package" of innovations that, once fully developed, swept Europe elsewhere, leaving Ireland behind.[148] The Irish Beaker period is characterised by the earliness[141] of Beaker intrusions, by isolation[141] and by influences and surviving traditions of autochthons.[149]

Beaker culture introduces the practice of burial in single graves, suggesting an Earlier Bronze Age social organisation of family groups.[150] Towards the Later Bronze Age the sites move to potentially fortifiable hilltops, suggesting a more "clan"-type structure.[151] Although the typical Bell Beaker practice of crouched burial has been observed,[152] cremation was readily adopted[153] in accordance with the previous tradition of the autochthons.[131] In a tumulus the find of the extended skeleton of a woman accompanied by the remains of a red deer and a small seven-year-old stallion is noteworthy, including the hint to a Diana-like religion.[154] A few burials seem to indicate social status, though in other contexts an emphasis to special skills is more likely.[155]

One of the most important sites in Ireland during the Beaker period is Ross Island. A series of copper mines from here are the earliest known in Ireland, starting from c. 2500 BC (O'Brien 2004). A comparison of chemical traces and lead isotope analysis from these mines with copper artefacts strongly suggests that Ross Island was the sole source of copper in Ireland between the dates 2500–2200 BC. In addition, two thirds of copper artefacts from Britain also display the same chemical and isotopic signature, strongly suggesting that Irish copper was a major export to Britain.[156] Traces of Ross Island copper can be found even further afield; in the Netherlands it makes up 12% of analysed copper artefacts, and Brittany 6% of analysed copper artefacts[157] After 2200 BC there is greater chemical variation in British and Irish copper artefacts, which tallies well with the appearance of other mines in southern Ireland and north Wales. After 2000 BC, other copper sources supersede Ross Island. The latest workings from the Ross Island mines is dated to around 1700 BC.

 
Reconstruction of a halberd from Carn.[158]

As well as exporting raw copper/bronze, there were some technical and cultural developments in Ireland that had an important impact on other areas of Europe. Irish food vessels were adopted in northern Britain in c. 2200 BC and this roughly coincides with a decline in the use of beakers in Britain.[129] The 'bronze halberd' (not to be confused with the medieval halberd) was a weapon in use in Ireland from c.2400–2000 BC.[129] They are essentially broad blades that were mounted horizontally on a meter long handle, giving greater reach and impact than any known contemporary weapon.[159] They were subsequently widely adopted in other parts of Europe,[160] possibly showing a change in the technology of warfare.[161]

Solar symbolism edit

Ireland has the greatest concentration of gold lunulae and stone wrist-guards in Europe. However, neither of these items were deposited in graves and they tend to be found isolated and at random.

In some cases gold lunulae have been found with pairs of gold discs, e.g. at Coggalbeg in Ireland and Cabeceiras de Basto in Portugal.[162][163] Both lunulae and discs have been linked to sun worship.[164] Cahill (2015) connects them to a "great solar cult" stretching across western and central Europe to Scandinavia.[165] Cahill suggests that the central part of the lunulae (which is left undecorated) represents a solar boat, which she compares to the gold boat depicted on the Nebra sky disc and to depictions of solar boats from the Nordic Bronze Age, as well as to depictions on pottery from Los Millares in Spain. According to Cahill, pairs of gold discs found with lunulae may therefore represent "the day and night sun", symbolising the movement of the sun from day to night and from east to west.[165] The double-sun motif has also been linked to the mythological Divine Twins,[166][167] as have ritual depositions of twinned objects, including two swords buried with the Nebra sky disc.[168]

Scientific analyses have shown that gold used to make both the Irish lunulae and the Nebra sky disc originated from Cornwall, providing a further link between these artefacts.[164][169] Cornwall was also the likely source of gold used to make artefacts from the Bush Barrow at Stonehenge.[170] Gold used to make discs from western Asturias (northern Spain) dating from the Bell Beaker period, was similarly found to be of non-local origin and possibly from southern Britain.[171]

Britain edit

 
Silbury Hill, England, c. 2400 BC
 
Stonehenge, England, c. 2500 BC

Beakers arrived in Britain in c.2500 BC, with migrations of Yamnaya or Corded Ware-related people, eventually resulting in a near total turnover of the British population.[173] The Beaker-culture declined in use c.2200–2100 BC with the emergence of food vessels and cinerary urns and finally fell out of use around 1700 BC.[129] The earliest British beakers were similar to those from the Rhine,[174] but later styles are most similar to those from Ireland.[175] In Britain, domestic assemblages from this period are very rare, making it hard to draw conclusions about many aspects of society. Most British beakers come from funerary contexts.

Britain's only unique export in this period is thought to be tin. It was probably gathered in streams in Cornwall and Devon as cassiterite pebbles and traded in this raw, unrefined state.[176] It was used to turn copper into bronze from c. 2200 BC and widely traded throughout Britain and into Ireland. Other possible European sources of tin are located in Brittany and Iberia, but it is not thought they were exploited so early as these areas did not have bronze until after it was well established in Britain and Ireland.[177]

The most famous site in Britain from this period is Stonehenge, which had its Neolithic form elaborated extensively. Many barrows surround it and an unusual number of 'rich' burials can be found nearby, such as the Amesbury Archer and the later Bush Barrow.

Close similarities have been noted between Stonehenge and Pömmelte circular enclosure in central Germany, which was built by Bell Beaker people c. 2300 BC.[124] [118]

Silbury Hill was also built in the early Bell Beaker period.[178] It may have originally been a burial mound, though this has never been proven.[179][180] According to Bayliss (2007), the "aggrandisement" of both Stonehenge and Silbury Hill occurred "in close relation to the appearance of novel material culture and practices" introduced by Beaker people.[181] According to Mike Parker Pearson a significantly higher level of labour mobilisation was achieved following the arrival of Beaker people in Britain.[182] The amount of effort that went into building Silbury Hill was "massively more than Stonehenge", and its dates coincide exactly with the appearance of Beaker burials.[183] Beaker people also introduced mummification,[184][185] burial in log coffins[186][187] and cranial deformation to Britain.[188]

Timothy Darvill has proposed that Stonehenge represented a solar calendar, its construction marking spread of solar cosmologies across Northern Europe in the third millennium BC.[189][190] Darvill has suggested that the Stonehenge trilithons may have also represented twin gods or an early form of the Divine Twins.[191]

Another site of particular interest in this period is Ferriby on the Humber Estuary, where Europe's oldest sewn-plank boats were recovered, dating from as early as 2030 BC.[192] These are the oldest known sewn-plank boats in the world outside of Egypt.[193][194] A later example is the Dover Boat from southern England, dating from 1550 BC.[195]

Italian Peninsula edit

 
Bell Beaker sites in Italy

The Italian Peninsula's most affected areas are the Po Valley, in particular the area of Lake Garda, and Tuscany. The bell-shaped vases appear in these areas of central and northern Italy as "foreign elements" integrated in the pre-existing Remedello and Rinaldone cultures.[203]

Graves with Beaker artefacts have been discovered in the Brescia area, like that of Ca' di Marco (Fiesse), while in central Italy, bell-shaped glasses were found in the tomb of Fosso Conicchio (Viterbo).[204]

The Bell Beaker culture was followed by the Polada culture and Proto-Apennine culture.

Sardinia edit

Sardinia has been in contact with extra-insular communities in Corsica, Tuscany, Liguria and Provence since the Stone Age. From the late third millennium BC on, comb-impressed Beaker ware, as well as other Beaker material in Monte Claro contexts, has been found (mostly in burials, such as Domus de Janas), demonstrating continuing relationships with the western Mediterranean. Elsewhere, Beaker material has been found stratigraphically above Monte Claro and at the end of the Chalcolithic period in association with the related Bronze Age Bonnanaro culture (1800–1600 BC), for which C-14 dates calibrate to c. 2250 BC. There is virtually no evidence in Sardinia of external contacts in the early second millennia, apart from late Beakers and close parallels between Bonnannaro pottery and that of the North Italian Polada culture.

Like elsewhere in Europe and in the Mediterranean area, the Bell Beaker culture in Sardinia (2100–1800 BC) is characterised by the typical ceramics decorated with overlaid horizontal bands and associated finds: brassards, V-pierced buttons etc.; for the first time gold items appeared on the island (torc of the tomb of Bingia 'e Monti, Gonnostramatza[205]). The different styles and decorations of the ceramics which succeed through the time allow to split the Beaker culture in Sardinia into three chronological phases: A1 (2100–2000 BC), A2 (2000–1900 BC), B (1900–1800 BC).[206] In these various phases is observable the succession of two components of different geographical origin: the first "Franco-Iberian" and the second "Central European".[207]

It appears likely that Sardinia was the intermediary that brought Beaker culture to Sicily.[208]

Sicily edit

The Beaker was introduced in Sicily from Sardinia and spread mainly in the north-west and south-west of the island. In the northwest and in the Palermo kept almost intact its cultural and social characteristics, while in the south-west there was a strong integration with local cultures.[210] The only known single bell-shaped glass in eastern Sicily was found in Syracuse.[210]

Greece edit

Bell Beaker artefacts appear in mainland Greece and the Aegean from c.2200–2000 BC. According to Heyd (2013) and Maran (1998) this is explained by the movement of people from the Adriatic Cetina culture into Greece at the transition from Early Helladic II to III. The Cetina culture was a "syncretistic Bell Beaker culture", splitting off from the Adriatic variant of the Vučedol culture and at the same time incorporating Bell Beaker elements related to those in northern Italy.[211][212] Kristiansen and Larsson (2005) suggest that migrants from both the Adriatic Cetina culture and the Danube area reached Greece in this period, the latter indicated by close similarities in pottery forms to the Mokrin and Nagyrev cultures.[213] New and more intensive exchange of goods subsequently developed after 1900 BC between Greece and Bell Beaker-derived cultures such as the Unetice culture in central Europe and the Wessex culture in Britain.[213] According to Galaty et al. (2015) a 'warrior culture' including "ideas related to warrior aristocracy" spread from Europe to Greece through contact with the Cetina culture, along with the tradition of tumulus burial.[214]

Scandinavia edit

 
Gold lunula from Grevinge, Denmark, c.2350-1950 BC.[215]
 
Late Neolithic/ Early Bronze Age house, Denmark, c.1900 BC.[216][217]
 
Late Neolithic/ Early Bronze Age house remains, Denmark, c. 1900 BC.[216]

In Denmark, large areas of forested land were cleared to be used for pasture and the growing of cereals during the Single Grave culture and in the Late Neolithic Period. Faint traces of Bell Beaker influence can be recognised already in the pottery of the Upper Grave phase of the Single Grave period, and even of the late Ground Grave phase, such as occasional use of AOO-like or zoned decoration and other typical ornamentation, while Bell Beaker associated objects such as wristguards and small copper trinkets, also found their way into this northern territories of the Corded Ware Culture. Domestic sites with Beakers only appear 200–300 years after the first appearance of Bell Beakers in Europe, at the early part of the Danish Late Neolithic Period (LN I) starting at 2350 BC. These sites are concentrated in northern Jutland around the Limfjord and on the Djursland peninsula, largely contemporary to the local Upper Grave Period. In east central Sweden and western Sweden, barbed wire decoration characterised the period 2460–1990 BC, linked to another Beaker derivation of northwestern Europe.

Stone and copper arms trade edit

 
Reconstruction of a building at Østbirk, Denmark, c. 1800 BC

Northern Jutland has abundant sources of high quality flint, which had previously attracted industrious mining, large-scale production, and the comprehensive exchange of flint objects: notably axes and chisels. The Danish Beaker period, however, was characterised by the manufacture of lanceolate flint daggers, described as a completely new material form without local antecedents in flint and clearly related to the style of daggers circulating elsewhere in Beaker dominated Europe. Presumably Beaker culture spread from here to the remainder of Denmark, and to other regions in Scandinavia and northern Germany as well. Central and eastern Denmark adopted this dagger fashion and, to a limited degree, also archer's equipment characteristic to Beaker culture, although here Beaker pottery remained less common. This period in Scandinavian prehistory, from 2400-1800 BC, is also known as the Dagger Period.[218]

The spread of metallurgy in Denmark is also intimately related to the Beaker representation in northern Jutland. The LN I metalwork is distributed throughout most of Denmark, but a concentration of early copper and gold coincides with this core region, hence suggesting a connection between Beakers and the introduction of metallurgy. Most LN I metal objects are distinctly influenced by the western European Beaker metal industry, gold sheet ornaments and copper flat axes being the predominant metal objects. The LN I copper flat axes divide into As-Sb-Ni copper, recalling so-called Dutch Bell Beaker copper and the As-Ni copper found occasionally in British and Irish Beaker contexts, the mining region of Dutch Bell Beaker copper being perhaps Brittany; and the Early Bronze Age Singen (As-Sb-Ag-Ni) and Ösenring (As-Sb-Ag) coppers having a central European – probably Alpine – origin.

Connections with other parts of Beaker culture edit

 
Bell Beaker, Netherlands

The Beaker group in northern Jutland forms an integrated part of the western European Beaker Culture, while western Jutland provided a link between the Lower Rhine area and northern Jutland. The local fine-ware pottery of Beaker derivation reveal links with other Beaker regions in western Europe, most specifically the Veluwe group at the Lower Rhine (Netherlands). Concurrent introduction of metallurgy shows that some people must have crossed cultural boundaries. Danish Beakers are contemporary with the earliest Early Bronze Age (EBA) of the East Group of Bell Beakers in central Europe, and with the floruit of Beaker cultures of the West Group in western Europe. The latter comprise Veluwe and Epi-Maritime in Continental northwestern Europe and the Middle Style Beakers (Style 2) in insular western Europe.

 
Bronze Age house reconstruction, Netherlands

The interaction between the Beaker groups on the Veluwe Plain and in Jutland must, at least initially, have been quite intensive. All-over ornamented (AOO) and All-over-corded (AOC), and particularly Maritime style beakers are featured, although from a fairly late context and possibly rather of Epi-maritime style, equivalent to the situation in the north of the Netherlands, where Maritime ornamentation continued after it ceased in the central region of Veluwe and were succeeded c. 2300 BC by beakers of the Veluwe and Epi-Maritime style.[24]

Clusters of Late Neolithic Beaker presence similar to northern Jutland appear as pockets or "islands" of Beaker Culture in northern Europe, such as Mecklenburg, Schleswig-Holstein, and southern Norway.[219][220][221][222][223] In northern central Poland Beaker-like representations even occur in a contemporary EBA setting. The frequent occurrence of Beaker pottery in settlements points at a large-scaled form of social identity or cultural identity, or perhaps an ethnic identity.

In 2023 a large circular enclosure dating from c. 2000 BC was discovered near the town of Tiel in the province of Gelderland. Described as the "Stonehenge of the Netherlands", the enclosure consisted of earth banks and ditches with entrances aligned to the solstices and equinoxes. At the centre of the enclosure there was a burial mound containing numerous burials. According to the excavators the enclosure functioned as a solar calendar used to determine "important moments including festival and harvest days". Wooden longhouses and other burial mounds were found in the immediate vicinity of the site. A glass bead from Mesopotamia dating from c. 2000 BC was also found in the enclosure, indicating that long-distance contacts already existed at this time.[224]

Three gold lunulae have been found in Denmark dating from the Bell Beaker period,[225][226] and one in the Netherlands.[227]

Burial practices edit

In eastern Denmark and Scania one-person graves occur primarily in flat grave cemeteries. This is a continuation of the burial custom characterising the Scanian Battle-axe Culture, often to continue into the early Late Neolithic. Also in northern Jutland, the body of the deceased was normally arranged lying on its back in an extended position, but a typical Bell Beaker contracted position occurs occasionally. Typical to northern Jutland, however, cremations have been reported, also outside the Beaker core area, once within the context of an almost full Bell Beaker equipment.

Social transition edit

The introductory phase of the manufacture and use of flint daggers, c. 2350 BC, must all in all be characterised as a period of social change. Apel argued that an institutionalised apprenticeship system must have existed.[229] Craftsmanship was transmitted by inheritance in certain families living in the vicinity of abundant resources of high-quality flint. Debbie Olausson's (1997) examinations indicate that flint knapping activities, particularly the manufacture of daggers, reflect a relatively low degree of craft specialisation, probably in the form of a division of labour between households.

Noteworthy was the adoption of European-style woven wool clothes kept together by pins and buttons in contrast to the earlier usage of clothing made of leather and plant fibres.[230][231] Two-aisled timber houses in Late Neolithic Denmark correspond to similar houses in southern Scandinavia and at least parts of central Scandinavia and lowland northern Germany. In Denmark, this mode of building houses is clearly rooted in a Middle Neolithic tradition. In general, Late Neolithic house building styles were shared over large areas of northern and central Europe.[232] Towards the transition to LN II some farm houses became extraordinarily large.

End of a distinct Beaker culture edit

The cultural concepts originally adopted from Beaker groups at the lower Rhine blended or integrated with local Late Neolithic Culture. For a while the region was set apart from central and eastern Denmark, that evidently related more closely to the early Únětice culture across the Baltic Sea. Before the turn of the millennium the typical Beaker features had gone, their total duration being 200–300 years at the most.

A similar picture of cultural integration is featured among Bell Beakers in central Europe, thus challenging previous theories of Bell Beakers as an elitist or purely super-structural phenomenon.[233][234][235][236][237] The connection with the East Group Beakers of Únětice had intensified considerably in LN II, thus triggering a new social transformation and innovations in metallurgy that would announce the actual beginning of the Northern Bronze Age.[238]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Marija Gimbutas characterized the Bell Beaker culture complex as an amalgam of the Vučedol and Yamna culture, formed after the incursion of the Yamna people into the Vučedol milieu and the interaction of these peoples for three or four centuries, from circa 3000 BC.[18]
  2. ^ See Anthrogenica, Eurogenes Blog: Hungarian Yamnaya > Bell Beakers?, for a number of maps.

References edit

  1. ^ Armit, Ian, and David Reich, (2022). "What do we know about the Beaker Folk", in: Antiquity Journal, Youtube, min: 1:11: "So, the Beaker Complex in terms of the British Isles is from...around 2450 BC, when we see in Britain the appearance of single inhumation graves..."
  2. ^ Bradley 2007, p. 144.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Cunliffe 2010.
  4. ^ Olalde, Iñigo; Brace, Selina; Allentoft, Morten E.; Armit, Ian; Kristiansen, Kristian; Booth, Thomas; Rohland, Nadin; Mallick, Swapan; Szécsényi-Nagy, Anna; Mittnik, Alissa; Altena, Eveline (March 2018). "The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe". Nature. 555 (7695): 190–196. Bibcode:2018Natur.555..190O. doi:10.1038/nature25738. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 5973796. PMID 29466337.
  5. ^ The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology[page needed][need quotation to verify]
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  229. ^ Apel 2001, 42, p. 323 ff
  230. ^ Bender Jørgensen 1992, p. 114
  231. ^ Ebbesen 1995; 2004
  232. ^ Nielsen 2000, pp. 161 ff.
  233. ^ cf. Shennan 1976; 1977
  234. ^ Harrison, R.J. (1980). The Beaker Folk. Thames and Hudson.
  235. ^ Thorpe & Richards 1984
  236. ^ Lohof 1994
  237. ^ Strahm 1998
  238. ^ Vandkilde, Helle (2005). "A Review of the Early Late Neolithic Period in Denmark: Practice, Identity and Connectivity" (PDF). www.jungstein.SITE.de. Retrieved 12 August 2014.

Sources edit

  • Bradley, Richard (2007). The prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521848114.
bell, beaker, culture, also, known, bell, beaker, complex, bell, beaker, phenomenon, archaeological, culture, named, after, inverted, bell, beaker, drinking, vessel, used, very, beginning, european, bronze, arising, from, around, 2800, lasted, britain, from, 2. The Bell Beaker culture also known as the Bell Beaker complex or Bell Beaker phenomenon is an archaeological culture named after the inverted bell beaker drinking vessel used at the very beginning of the European Bronze Age arising from around 2800 BC Bell Beaker culture lasted in Britain from c 2450 BC with the appearance of single burial graves 1 until as late as 1800 BC 2 3 but in continental Europe only until 2300 BC when it was succeeded by the Unetice culture The culture was widely dispersed throughout Western Europe being present in many regions of Iberia and stretching eastward to the Danubian plains and northward to the islands of Great Britain and Ireland and was also present in the islands of Sardinia and Sicily and some coastal areas in north western Africa The Bell Beaker phenomenon shows substantial regional variation and a study 4 from 2018 found that it was associated with genetically diverse populations Bell Beaker cultureDistribution of the area of influence of the Bell Beaker cultureGeographical rangeEurope and Northwest AfricaPeriodChalcolithic Early Bronze AgeDatesc 2800 1800 BCMajor sitesCastro of Zambujal PortugalPreceded byCorded Ware culture Funnelbeaker culture Neolithic British Isles Neolithic France Chalcolithic Iberia Veraza culture Chalcolithic Italy Baden culture Vucedol culture Horgen cultureFollowed byUnetice culture Bronze Age Britain Nordic Bronze Age Bronze Age France Armorican Tumulus culture Rhone culture Bronze Age Ireland Bronze Age Iberia Argaric culture Levantine Bronze Age Pyrenean Bronze Polada culture Nuragic culture Cetina culture Middle Helladic Greece Hilversum culture Elp culture Mierzanowice culture The Bell Beaker culture was partly preceded by and contemporaneous with the Corded Ware culture and in north central Europe preceded by the Funnelbeaker culture The name Glockenbecher was coined for its distinctive style of beakers by Paul Reinecke in 1900 The term s English translation Bell Beaker was introduced by John Abercromby in 1904 5 In its early phase the Bell Beaker culture can be seen as the western contemporary of the Corded Ware culture of Central Europe From about 2400 BC the Beaker folk culture expanded eastwards into the Corded Ware horizon 6 In parts of Central and Eastern Europe as far east as Poland a sequence occurs from Corded Ware to Bell Beaker This period marks a period of cultural contact in Atlantic and Western Europe following a prolonged period of relative isolation during the Neolithic In its mature phase the Bell Beaker culture is understood as not only a collection of characteristic artefact types but a complex cultural phenomenon involving metalwork in copper and gold long distance exchange networks archery specific types of ornamentation and presumably shared ideological cultural and religious ideas as well as social stratification and the emergence of regional elites 7 8 A wide range of regional diversity persists within the widespread late Beaker culture particularly in local burial styles including incidences of cremation rather than burial housing styles economic profile and local ceramic wares Begleitkeramik Nonetheless according to Lemercier 2018 the mature phase of the Beaker culture represents the appearance of a kind of Bell Beaker civilization of continental scale 9 Contents 1 Origins and expansion 1 1 Origins 1 2 Expansion and Corded Ware contacts 1 3 Migration vs acculturation 1 3 1 Migration 1 3 2 Cultural diffusion 1 3 3 Renewed emphasis on migration 2 Bell Beaker artefacts 3 Postulated linguistic connections 4 Physical anthropology 5 Genetics 6 Extent and impact 6 1 Iberian Peninsula 6 2 Balearic Islands 6 3 Central Europe 6 4 Ireland 6 4 1 Solar symbolism 6 5 Britain 6 6 Italian Peninsula 6 7 Sardinia 6 8 Sicily 6 9 Greece 6 10 Scandinavia 6 10 1 Stone and copper arms trade 6 10 2 Connections with other parts of Beaker culture 6 10 3 Burial practices 6 10 4 Social transition 6 11 End of a distinct Beaker culture 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksOrigins and expansion editOrigins edit nbsp Bell Beaker artefacts from Spain ceramics metal daggers axe and javelin points stone wristguards and arrowheads The Bell Beaker artefacts at least in their early phase are not distributed across a contiguous area as is usual for archaeological cultures but are found in insular concentrations scattered across Europe Their presence is not associated with a characteristic type of architecture or of burial customs However the Bell Beaker culture does appear to coalesce into a coherent archaeological culture in its later phase The origin of the Bell Beaker artefacts has been traced to the early 3rd millennium with early examples of the maritime Bell Beaker design having been found at the Tagus estuary in Portugal radiocarbon dated to c 28th century BC 3 10 11 The inspiration for the Maritime Bell Beaker is argued to have been the small and earlier Copoz beakers that have impressed decoration and which are found widely around the Tagus estuary in Portugal 12 Turek sees late Neolithic precursors in northern Africa arguing the Maritime style emerged as a result of seaborne contacts between Iberia and Morocco in the first half of the third millennium BC 13 More recent analyses of the Beaker phenomenon published since the 2000s have persisted in describing the origin of the Beaker phenomenon as arising from a synthesis of elements representing an idea and style uniting different regions with different cultural traditions and background 14 15 Expansion and Corded Ware contacts edit nbsp Model of the Castro of Zambujal Portugal The initial moves from the Tagus estuary were maritime A southern move led to the Mediterranean where enclaves were established in south western Spain and southern France around the Golfe du Lion and into the Po Valley in Italy probably via ancient western Alpine trade routes used to distribute jadeite axes A northern move incorporated the southern coast of Armorica The enclave established in southern Brittany was linked closely to the riverine and landward route via the Loire and across the Gatinais Valley to the Seine Valley and thence to the lower Rhine This was a long established route reflected in early stone axe distributions and via this network Maritime Bell Beakers first reached the Lower Rhine in c 2600 BC 3 16 nbsp Reconstruction of a Bell Beaker burial Spain 17 Another expansion brought Bell Beaker to Csepel Island in Hungary by about 2500 BC In the Carpathian Basin the Bell Beaker culture came in contact with communities such as the Vucedol culture c 3000 2200 BC which had evolved partly from the Yamnaya culture c 3300 2600 BC note 1 In contrast to the early Bell Beaker preference for the dagger and bow the favourite weapon in the Carpathian Basin during the first half of the third millennium was the shaft hole axe 19 Here Bell Beaker people assimilated local pottery forms such as the polypod cup These common ware types of pottery then spread in association with the classic bell beaker 20 The Rhine was on the western edge of the vast Corded Ware zone c 3100 c 2350 BC forming a contact zone with the Bell Beaker culture From there the Bell Beaker culture spread further into Eastern Europe replacing the Corded Ware culture up to the Vistula Poland 21 note 2 nbsp Corded Ware Yamnaya and Sintashta cultures A review in 2014 revealed that single burial communal burial and reuse of Neolithic burial sites are found throughout the Bell Beaker zone 22 This overturns a previous conviction that single burial was unknown in the early or southern Bell Beaker zone and so must have been adopted from Corded Ware in the contact zone of the Lower Rhine and transmitted westwards along the exchange networks from the Rhine to the Loire 23 24 and northwards across the English Channel to Britain 3 25 The earliest copper production in Ireland identified at Ross Island in the period 2400 2200 BC was associated with early Beaker pottery 3 26 Here the local sulpharsenide ores were smelted to produce the first copper axes used in Britain and Ireland 3 The same technologies were used in the Tagus region and in the west and south of France 3 27 The evidence is sufficient to support the suggestion that the initial spread of Maritime Bell Beakers along the Atlantic and into the Mediterranean using sea routes that had long been in operation was directly associated with the quest for copper and other rare raw materials 3 Migration vs acculturation edit While Bell Beaker Glockenbecher was introduced as a term for the artefact type at the beginning of the 20th century recognition of an archaeological Bell Beaker culture has long been controversial Its spread has been one of the central questions of the migrationism vs diffusionism debate in 20th century archaeology variously described as due to migration possibly of small groups of warriors craftsmen or traders or due to the diffusion of ideas and object exchange 28 Migration edit nbsp Sewn plank boat from Ferriby Britain c 2000 BC nbsp Gold lunula from Ireland c 2000 BC Given the unusual form and fabric of Beaker pottery and its abrupt appearance in the archaeological record along with a characteristic group of other artefacts known as the Bell Beaker package the explanation for the Beaker culture until the last decades of the 20th century was to interpret it as the migration of one group of people across Europe Gordon Childe interpreted the presence of its characteristic artefact as the intrusion of missionaries expanding from Iberia along the Atlantic coast spreading knowledge of copper metallurgy Stephen Shennan interpreted the artefacts as belonging to a mobile cultural elite imposing itself over the indigenous substrate populations Similarly Sangmeister 1972 interpreted the Beaker folk Glockenbecherleute as small groups of highly mobile traders and artisans Christian Strahm 1995 used the term Bell Beaker phenomenon Glockenbecher Phanomen as a compromise in order to avoid the term culture 29 Heyd 1998 concluded that the Bell Beaker culture was intrusive to southern Germany and existed contemporarily with the local Corded Ware culture 30 The burial ritual which typified Bell Beaker sites appears to be intrusive to Western Europe from Central Europe Individual inhumations often under tumuli with the inclusion of weapons contrast markedly to the preceding Neolithic traditions of often collective weaponless burials in Atlantic Western Europe Such an arrangement is rather derivative of Corded Ware traditions 13 Cultural diffusion edit nbsp Bell Beakers from Thuringia Germany and Tokol Hungary c 2500 2200 BC British and American archaeology since the 1960s have been sceptical about prehistoric migration in general so the idea of Bell Beaker Folk lost ground A theory of cultural contact de emphasizing population movement was presented by Colin Burgess and Stephen Shennan in the mid 1970s 31 Under the pots not people theory the Beaker culture was seen as a package of knowledge including religious beliefs as well as methods of copper bronze and gold working and artefacts including copper daggers v perforated buttons and stone wrist guards adopted and adapted by the indigenous peoples of Europe to varying degrees This new knowledge may have come about by any combination of population movements and cultural contact An example might be as part of a prestige cult related to the production and consumption of beer or trading links such as those demonstrated by finds made along the seaways of Atlantic Europe Palynological studies including analysis of pollen associated with the spread of beakers certainly suggests increased growing of barley which may be associated with beer brewing Noting the distribution of Beakers was highest in areas of transport routes including fording sites river valleys and mountain passes Beaker folk were suggested to be originally bronze traders who subsequently settled within local Neolithic or early Chalcolithic cultures creating local styles Close analysis of the bronze tools associated with beaker use suggests an early Iberian source for the copper followed subsequently by Central European and Bohemian ores citation needed AOO and AOC Beakers appear to have evolved continually from a pre Beaker period in the lower Rhine and North Sea regions at least for Northern and Central Europe 32 Renewed emphasis on migration edit nbsp Illustration of early Bronze Age horse bridles from Britain Horses were domesticated on the Pontic Caspian steppe 33 Investigations in the Mediterranean and France recently moved the discussion to re emphasise the importance of migration to the Bell Beaker story Instead of being pictured as a fashion or a simple diffusion of objects and their use the investigation of over 300 sites showed that human groups actually moved in a process that involved explorations contacts settlement diffusion and acculturation assimilation nbsp Illustration of a Bell Beaker period wagon 34 Some elements show the influence from the north and east and other elements reveal the south east of France to be an important crossroad on an important route of communication and exchange spreading north A distinctive barbed wire pottery decoration is thought to have migrated through central Italy first The pattern of movements was diverse and complicated along the Atlantic coast and the northern Mediterranean coast and sometimes also far inland The prominent central role of Portugal in the region and the quality of the pottery all across Europe are forwarded as arguments for a new interpretation that denies an ideological dimension 35 Genetic findings also lend support to the migratory hypothesis An strontium isotope analysis of 86 people from Bell Beaker graves in Bavaria suggests that 18 25 of all graves were occupied by people who came from a considerable distance outside the area 36 This was true of children and adults indicative of some significant migration wave Given the similarities with readings from people living on loess soils the general direction of the local movement is from the northeast to the southwest 36 Archaeogenetics studies of the 2010s have been able to resolve the migrationist vs diffusionist question to some extent The study by Olalde et al 2017 found only limited genetic affinity between individuals associated with the Beaker complex in Iberia and in Central Europe suggesting that migration played a limited role in its early spread However the same study found that the further dissemination of the mature Beaker complex was very strongly linked to migration This is true especially for Britain where the spread of the Beaker culture introduced high levels of steppe related ancestry resulting in a near complete transformation of the local gene pool within a few centuries to the point of replacement of about 90 of the local Neolithic derived lineages 37 Bell Beaker artefacts editThe two main international bell beaker styles are the All Over Ornamented AOO patterned all over with impressions of which a subset is the All Over Corded AOC patterned with cord impressions and the Maritime type decorated with bands filled with impressions made with a comb or cord Later other characteristic regional styles developed 38 The beakers are suggested to have been designed for the consumption of alcohol and the introduction of the substance to Europe may have fuelled the beakers spread 39 Beer and mead content have been identified from certain examples However not all Beakers were drinking cups Some were used as reduction pots to smelt copper ores others have some organic residues associated with food and still others were employed as funerary urns 40 They were used as status display amongst disparate elites citation needed nbsp Copper dagger bow shaped pendant and flint arrowhead Czech Republic nbsp Bell Beaker France c 2500 BC nbsp Gold lunula Brittany France nbsp All Over Corded beaker Scotland nbsp Stone wrist guard with gold studs England c 2200 BC nbsp Flint arrowheads France nbsp Bell Beaker bow reconstruction 41 nbsp Gold discs Ireland 2200 1800 BCPostulated linguistic connections editAs the Beaker culture left no written records all theories regarding the language or languages they spoke remain conjectural It has been suggested as a candidate for an early Indo European culture or as the origin of the Vasconic substrate James Mallory 2013 notes that the Beaker culture was associated with a hypothetical cluster of Indo European dialects termed North West Indo European a cluster which includes the predecessors of Celtic Italic Germanic and Balto Slavic branches 42 Earlier theories suggested a link to the hypothesised Italo Celtic or Proto Celtic languages 43 Physical anthropology edit nbsp Anthropomorphic stele from Sion Switzerland 2700 2150 BC nbsp Stele fragment depicting patterned clothing Switzerland 2700 2150 BC Historical craniometric studies found that the Beaker people appeared to be of a different physical type than those earlier populations in the same geographic areas They were described as tall heavy boned and brachycephalic The early studies on the Beakers which were based on the analysis of their skeletal remains were craniometric This apparent evidence of migration was in line with archaeological discoveries linking Beaker culture to new farming techniques mortuary practices copper working skills and other cultural innovations However such evidence from skeletal remains was brushed aside as a new movement developed in archaeology from the 1960s which stressed cultural continuity Anti migrationist authors either paid little attention to skeletal evidence or argued that differences could be explained by environmental and cultural influences Margaret Cox and Simon Mays sum up the position Although it can hardly be said that craniometric data provide an unequivocal answer to the problem of the Beaker folk the balance of the evidence would at present seem to favour a migration hypothesis 44 Non metrical research concerning the Beaker people in Britain also cautiously pointed in the direction of migration 45 Subsequent studies such as one concerning the Carpathian Basin 46 and a non metrical analysis of skeletons in central southern Germany 47 have also identified marked typological differences with the pre Beaker inhabitants Jocelyne Desideri examined the teeth in skeletons from Bell Beaker sites in Northern Spain Southern France Switzerland the Czech Republic and Hungary Examining dental characteristics that have been independently shown to correlate with genetic relatedness she found that only in Northern Spain and the Czech Republic were there demonstrable links between immediately previous populations and Bell Beaker populations Elsewhere there was a discontinuity 48 Genetics editFurther information Western Steppe Herders See also Unetice culture Genetics Urnfield culture Genetics Hallstatt culture Genetics La Tene culture Genetics Celts Genetics and Italic peoples Genetics nbsp Bell Beaker burial from Shrewton England 2470 2210 BC Lee et al 2012 detected R1b two male skeletons from a German Bell Beaker site dated to 2600 2500 BC at Kromsdorf one of which tested positive for M269 but negative for its U106 subclade note that the P312 subclade was not tested for while for the other skeleton the M269 test was unclear 49 Two studies published in 2015 Haak et al 2015 Mathieson et al 2015 found that Bell Beaker individuals from Germany and the Czech Republic had high proportions of Steppe related ancestry showing that they derived from mixtures of populations from the Steppe such as Corded Ware and Yamnaya and the preceding Neolithic farmers of Europe 50 51 52 The Y chromosome composition of Beaker associated males was dominated by R1b M269 a lineage associated with the arrival of Steppe migrants in central Europe after 3000 BC 53 Bell Beaker individuals from Germany analysed by Haak et al 2015 were found to have less Steppe ancestry than the earlier Corded Ware culture 51 Allentoft et al 2015 found the people of the Bell Beaker culture to be closely genetically related to the Corded Ware culture the Unetice culture and the Nordic Bronze Age 54 A study published in Nature in 2018 confirmed a massive population turnover in western Europe associated with the Bell Beaker culture 55 In Britain the spread of the Bell Beaker culture introduced high levels of Steppe related ancestry and was associated with a replacement of 90 of the gene pool within a few hundred years British Beaker associated individuals showed strong similarities to central European Beaker associated individuals in their genetic profile 56 Both men and women with Steppe ancestry participated in the turnover in Neolithic Britain as evidenced by the rise of the paternal haplogroup R1b and maternal haplogroups I R1a and U4 The paternal haplogroup R1b was completely absent in Neolithic individuals but represented more than 90 of the Y chromosomes during Copper and Bronze Age Britain 57 The study also found that the Bell Beaker arrivals in Neolithic Britain had significantly higher genetic variants associated with light skin and eye pigmentation than the local population but low frequencies of the SNP associated with lactase persistance in modern Europeans 58 nbsp The Amesbury Archer Stonehenge England c 2300 BC The earliest Bell Beaker samples in Iberia lacked Steppe ancestry 55 but between 2500 and 2000 BC there was a replacement of 40 of Iberia s ancestry and nearly 100 of its Y chromosomes by people with Steppe ancestry 59 Y chromosome lineages common in Copper Age Iberia I2 G2 H were nearly completely replaced by one lineage R1b M269 59 The most plausible source population for this genetic influx was found to be Germany Bell Beaker 60 The earliest samples with Steppe ancestry were located in northern Spain and were modelled as deriving 60 2 of their ancestry from Germany Bell Beaker and 39 8 from the Iberian Copper Age whilst Iberian Bronze Age samples from c 2000 BC were modelled as 39 6 Germany Bell Beaker and 60 4 Iberia Copper Age 61 Some Iberian samples had up to 100 Central European Bell Beaker ancestry 62 A higher percentage of the genetic influx was due to men than women 63 Villalba Mouco et al 2021 analysed genome wide data from 136 southern Iberian individuals dating from the Late Neolithic 3300 cal BCE to the Late Bronze Age 1200 1000 cal BCE They found that Bronze Age populations including those from the El Argar culture were shifted toward populations with steppe related ancestry from central Europe compared to preceding Copper Age groups After 2100 cal BCE all individuals from all sites carried steppe related ancestry in line with R1b P312 R1b M269 becoming the predominant Y chromosomal lineage The major additional ancestry source resembled central European Bell Beaker groups which first contributed ancestry to northern Iberia followed by a southward spread According to the authors R1b Z195 the most common Y lineage in BA Iberia ultimately derives from a common ancestor R1b P312 in central Europe The authors propose that the El Argar culture likely formed from a mixture of new groups arriving from north central Iberia which already carried central European steppe related ancestry and the predominant Y chromosome lineage and local southeastern Iberian CA groups that differed from other regions in Iberian in that they carried excess Iran N like ancestry similar to eastern and or central Mediterranean groups 64 Furtwangler et al 2020 analysed 96 ancient genomes from Switzerland Southern Germany and the Alsace region in France covering the Middle Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age They confirmed that R1b arrived in the region during the transitory Bell Beaker period 2800 1800 BC along with Steppe related ancestry The vast majority of Bell Beaker R1b samples belonged to the U152 gt L2 clade 11 out of 14 the other being P312 or L51 65 nbsp Burial mounds barrows Britain Papac et al 2021 found that the earliest Bell Beaker individuals from Bohemia in the Czech Republic had a similar genetic composition to Corded Ware individuals A closer phylogenetic relationship was observed between the Y chromosome lineages found in early Corded Ware and Bell Beaker than in either late Corded Ware or Yamnaya and Bell Beaker R1b L151 was the most common Y lineage among early Corded Ware males in Bohemia and was ancestral to R1b P312 the dominant Y lineage found in Bell Beaker males 66 Allentoft et al 2024 found that individuals from Denmark dating from the Dagger Period c 4300 3700 BCE clustered with central and western European Late Neolithic Bronze Age individuals dominated by males with lineages of R1b M269 L51 matching the appearance of Bell Beaker material culture in Denmark at this time 67 68 Olalde et al 2018 analysed three Bell Beaker associated individuals one male and two females from northern Italy Parma dating from 2200 to 1930 BC Two of the individuals were found to have around 25 Early Bronze Age Steppe related ancestry whilst one had none 69 The male belonged to Y haplogroup R1b1a1a2a1a2 R1b M269 P312 70 A study by Saupe et al 2021 found that Bronze Age populations from Northern and Central Italy were characterised by a mix of earlier Chalcolithic ancestry and Steppe related ancestry The study found an autosomal affinity of North and Central Italian Bronze Age groups to Late Neolithic Germany suggesting that Steppe related ancestry could have arrived through Bell Beaker groups from Central Europe such as Germany Bell Beaker Three out of the four Italian Bronze Age males for which the paternal haplogroup could be determined belonged to haplogroup R1 and two of those were of the R1b L11 lineage which was absent in earlier Chalcolithic samples but is common in modern Western Europe and in ancient male Bell Beaker burials 71 Posth et al 2021 found that Iron Age Etruscans from central Italy could be modelled as deriving 50 of their ancestry from Central European Bell Beakers represented by Germany Bell Beaker with around 25 steppe ancestry Two Etruscan samples were modelled as having 80 Germany Bell Beaker ancestry Overall the Etruscan samples showed 75 frequency of the Y haplogroup R1b mostly represented by R1b P312 and its derived R1b L2 lineage that diffused across Europe alongside steppe related ancestry in association with the Bell Beaker complex According to the authors the Etruscans carried a local genetic profile shared with other neighboring populations such as the Latins from Rome and its environs despite the cultural and linguistic differences between the two neighboring groups 72 Antonio et al 2019 similarly found that 5 out of 7 male Iron Age Roman samples belonged to the R1b M269 Y haplogroup consistent with the arrival of Steppe ancestry via migration of Steppe pastoralists or intermediary populations in the preceding Bronze Age The Iron Age Roman population showed a clear ancestry shift from the earlier Copper Age modelled as an introduction of 30 to 40 steppe ancestry which was indicative of large scale immigration before the Iron Age 73 According to Chintalapatia et al 2022 a majority of Bronze Age samples from Sardinia lacked steppe related ancestry though evidence for steppe related ancestry was found in a few individuals This ancestry is estimated to have arrived in Sardinia 2600 BC 74 In a 2020 review Fregel et al identified European Bronze Age ancestry including Steppe ancestry in the Guanches from the Canary Islands which could be explained by the presence of Bell Beaker pottery in the North African archaeological record and the expansion of European Bronze Age populations in North Africa 75 Serrano et al 2023 analysed genome wide data from 49 Guanche individuals whose ancestry was modelled as comprising 73 3 Morocco Late Neolithic 6 9 Morocco Early Neolithic 13 4 Germany Bell Beaker and 6 4 Mota on average Germany Bell Beaker ancestry reached 16 2 and 17 9 in samples from Gran Canaria and Lanzarote respectively 76 Bell Beaker related haplogroups identified in the Guanches include Y DNA R1b M269 mtDNA U5 and mtDNA H4a1 77 78 79 80 These haplogroups have also been identified in mummies from Ancient Egypt 81 82 83 84 85 Extent and impact edit nbsp Copper dagger gold diadem and wristguard Spain 86 Bell Beaker people took advantage of transport by sea and rivers creating a cultural spread extending from Ireland to the Carpathian Basin and south along the Atlantic coast and along the Rhone valley to Portugal North Africa and Sicily even penetrating northern and central Italy 87 Its remains have been found in what is now Portugal Spain France excluding the central massif Ireland and Great Britain the Low Countries and Germany between the Elbe and Rhine with an extension along the upper Danube into the Vienna Basin Austria Hungary and the Czech Republic with Mediterranean outposts on Sardinia and Sicily there is less certain evidence for direct penetration in the east Beaker type vessels remained in use longest in the British Isles late beakers in other areas are classified as early Bronze Age Barbed Wire Beakers in the Netherlands Giant Beakers Riesenbecher The new international trade routes opened by the Beaker people became firmly established and the culture was succeeded by a number of Bronze Age cultures among them the Unetice culture in Central Europe the Elp culture and Hilversum culture in the Netherlands the Atlantic Bronze Age in the British Isles and the Atlantic coast of Europe and by the Nordic Bronze Age a culture of Scandinavia and northernmost Germany Poland Iberian Peninsula edit Further information Chalcolithic Iberia nbsp Bell Beaker from Ciempozuelos Spain The Bell Beaker phenomenon in the Iberian Peninsula defines the late phase of the local Chalcolithic and even intrudes in the earliest centuries of the Bronze Age 88 A review of radiocarbon dates for Bell Beaker across Europe found that some of the earliest were found in Portugal where the range from Zambujal and Cerro de la Virgen Spain ran c 2900 2500 BC in contrast to the rather later range for Andalusia c 2500 2200 BC 89 nbsp Los Millares Spain At present no internal chronology for the various Bell Beaker related styles has been achieved yet for Iberia 90 Peninsular corded Bell Beakers are usually found in coastal or near coastal regions in three main regions the western Pyrenees the lower Ebro and adjacent east coast and the northwest Galicia and northern Portugal 91 A corded zoned Maritime variety C ZM proposed to be a hybrid between AOC and Maritime Herringbone was mainly found in burial contexts and expanded westward especially along the mountain systems of the Meseta With some notable exceptions most Iberian early Bell Beaker burials are at or near the coastal regions As for the settlements and monuments within the Iberian context Beaker pottery is generally found in association with local Chalcolithic material and appears most of all as an intrusion from the third millennium in burial monuments whose origin may go back to the fourth or fifth millennia BC Very early dates for Bell Beakers were found in Castelo Velho de Freixo de Numao in Guarda central Portugal The site was located on the summit of a spur A short lived first occupation of pre Bell Beaker building phase at c 3000 BC revealed the remains of a tower some pavings and structures for burning After a break of one or two centuries Bell Beaker pottery was introduced in a second building phase that lasted to the Early Bronze Age c 1800 BC A third building phase followed directly and lasted to c 1300 BC after which the site was covered with layers of stone and clay apparently deliberately and abandoned The second building phase was dominated by a highly coherent group of pottery within the regional Chalcolithic styles representing Maritime Bell Beakers of the local northern Portuguese penteada decoration style in various patterns using lines of points incision or impression Three of them were carbon dated to the first half of the third millennium BC The site demonstrates a notable absence of more common Bell Beaker pottery styles such as Maritime Herringbone and Maritime Lined varieties found in nearby sites such as Castanheiro do Vento and Crasto de Palheiros One non local Bell Beaker sherd however belonging to the upper part of a beaker with a curved neck and thin walls was found at the bedrock base of this second phase The technique and patterning are classic forms in the context of pure European and Peninsular corded ware In the Iberian Peninsula this AOC type was traditionally restricted to half a dozen scattered sites in the western Pyrenees the lower Ebro and the Spanish east coast especially a vessel at Filomena at Villarreal Castellon Spain has parallels with the decoration In Porto Torrao at inner Alentejo southern Portugal a similar vessel was found having a date ultimately corrected to c 2823 2658 BC All pottery was locally made The lack or presence of Bell Beaker elements is the basis for the division of Los Millares and Vila Nova cultures into two periods I and II A gold lunula with two gold discs was found in Cabeceiras de Basto Portugal dating from the Bell Beaker period 92 93 In 2016 archaeologists discovered a large circular earthwork enclosure in southern Spain near Carmona Sevilla dating from the Bell Beaker period c 2600 2200 BC The complex of concentric rings known as La Loma del Real Tesoro II may have been used for holding rituals 94 95 Circular earth and timber enclosures are also known from Germany Ireland and the Netherlands in this period as well as Stonehenge in England nbsp Gold discs from western Asturias Spain 96 nbsp Bracelet copper dagger awl and javelin points Spain nbsp Ceramic dish from Ciempozuelos nbsp Gold wristguard from Vila Nova de Cerveira Portugal 17 nbsp Copper javelin points Castro of Vila Nova de Sao Pedro Portugal nbsp Gold pendants Portugal nbsp Barrow with cist made of stone slabs from older statue menhirs Spain 2879 2589 BC nbsp Dolmen de la Pastora Spain 97 Balearic Islands edit nbsp Beaker with Sun cross on the base 98 Radiocarbon dating currently indicates a 1 200 year duration for the use of the Beaker pottery on the Balearic Islands between about 2475 and 1300 BC 99 Some evidence exists of all corded pottery in Mallorca generally considered the most ancient Bell Beaker pottery possibly indicating an even earlier Beaker settlement at c 2700 BC 100 However in several regions this type of pottery persisted long enough to permit other possibilities Suarez Otero 1997 postulated this corded Beakers entered the Mediterranean by routes both through the Atlantic coast and eastern France Bell Beaker pottery has been found in Mallorca and Formentera but has not been observed in Menorca or Ibiza Collective burials in dolmen structures in Ibiza could be contrasted against the individual burials in Mallorca In its latest phase c 1750 1300 cal BC the local Beaker context became associated with the distinctive ornamented Boquique pottery 101 demonstrating clear maritime links with the megalithic coastal regions of Catalonia also assessed to be directly related to the late Cogotas complex In most of the areas of the mainland Boquique pottery falls into the latter stages of the Bell Beaker complex as well Along with other evidence during the earlier Beaker period in the Balearics c 2400 2000 BC as shown by the local presence of elephant ivory objects together with significant Beaker pottery and other finds 102 this maritime interaction can be shown to have a long tradition The abundance of different cultural elements that persisted towards the end of the Bronze Age show a clear continuity of different regional and intrusive traditions The presence of perforated Beaker pottery traditionally considered to be used for making cheese at Son Ferrandell Oleza 103 and at Coval Simo 104 confirms the introduction of production and conservation of dairy Also the presence of spindles at sites like Son Ferrandell Oleza 105 or Es Velar d Aprop 106 point to knowledge of making thread and textiles from wool However more details on the strategies for tending and slaughtering the domestic animals involved are forthcoming Being traditionally associated with the introduction of metallurgy the first traces of copper working in the Balearics were also clearly associated with Bell Beakers Central Europe edit See also Unetice culture nbsp Bell Beaker dress with gold ornaments Czech Republic In their large scale study on radiocarbon dating of the Bell Beakers J Muller and S Willingen established that the Bell Beaker Culture in Central Europe started after 2500 BC 89 Two great coexisting and separate Central European cultures the Corded Ware with its regional groups and the Eastern Group of the Bell Beaker Culture form the background to the Late Copper Age and Early Bronze Age The Mako Kosihy Caka culture indigenous to the Carpathians may be included as a third component 107 Their development diffusion and long range changes are determined by the great river systems nbsp Gold lunula from Lower Saxony Germany 108 109 The Bell Beaker settlements are still little known and have proved remarkably difficult for archaeologists to identify This allows a modern view of them to contradict results of anthropologic research 46 The late 20th century view is that the Bell Beaker people far from being the warlike invaders as once described by Gordon Childe 1940 added rather than replaced local late Neolithic traditions into a cultural package and as such did not always and evenly abandon all local traditions 110 More recent extensive DNA evidence however suggests a significant replacement of earlier populations 111 Bell Beaker domestic ware has no predecessors in Bohemia and Southern Germany shows no genetic relation to the local Late Copper Age Corded Ware nor to other cultures in the area and is considered something completely new The Bell Beaker domestic ware of Southern Germany is not as closely related to the Corded Ware as would be indicated by their burial rites Settlements link the Southern German Bell Beaker culture to the seven regional provinces of the Eastern Group represented by many settlement traces especially from Moravia and the Hungarian Bell Beaker Csepel group being the most important In 2002 one of the largest Bell Beaker cemeteries in Central Europe was discovered at Hostice za Hanou Moravia Czech Republic 112 The relationship to the western Bell Beakers groups and the contemporary cultures of the Carpathian basin to the south east is much less 113 Research in northern Poland shifted the north eastern frontier of this complex to the western parts of the Baltic with the adjacent Northern European plain Typical Bell Beaker fragments from the site of Ostrikovac Djura at the Serbian river Morava were presented at the Riva del Garda conference in 1998 some 100 km south east of the Csepel Beaker sub group modern Hungary Bell Beaker related material has now been uncovered in a line from the Baltic Sea down to the Adriatic and the Ionian Sea including the modern states comprising Belarus Poland Romania Serbia Montenegro Croatia Albania North Macedonia and parts of Greece 114 nbsp Stone stele Switzerland The Bell Beaker culture settlements in southern Germany and in the East Group show evidence of mixed farming and animal husbandry and indicators such as millstones and spindle whorls prove the sedentary character of the Bell Beaker people and the durability of their settlements 113 Some especially well equipped child burials seem to indicate sense of predestined social position indicating a socially complex society However analysis of grave furnishing position within the cemetery and size and deepness of grave pits did not lead to any strong conclusions on the social divisions nbsp Bell Beaker Germany The Late Copper Age is regarded as a continuous culture system connecting the Upper Rhine valley to the western edge of the Carpathian Basin Late Copper Age 1 was defined in southern Germany by the connection of the late Cham Culture Globular Amphora culture and the older Corded Ware Culture of beaker group 1 that is also referred to as Horizon A or Step A Early Bell Beaker Culture intruded 30 into the region at the end of the Late Copper Age 1 around 2600 2550 BC Middle Bell Beaker corresponds to Late Copper Age 2 and here an east west Bell Beaker cultural gradient became visible through the difference in the distribution of the groups of beakers with and without handles cups and bowls in the three regions Austria Western Hungary the Danube catchment area of Southern Germany and the Upper Rhine lake Constance Eastern Switzerland area for all subsequent Bell Beaker periods 115 This middle Bell Beaker Culture is the main period when almost all the cemeteries in Southern Germany begin Younger Bell Beaker Culture of Early Bronze Age shows analogies to the Proto Unetice Culture in Moravia and the Early Nagyrev Culture of the Carpathian Basin During the Bell Beaker period a border ran through southern Germany which culturally divided a northern from a southern area The northern area was oriented around the Rhine and the Bell Beaker West Group while the southern area occupied much of the Danube river system and was mainly settled by the homogeneous Bell Beaker East Group This latter group overlapped with the Corded Ware Culture and other groups of the Late Neolithic and early Bronze Age Nevertheless southern Germany shows some independent developments of itself 30 nbsp Pommelte circular enclosure Germany c 2300 BC 116 117 118 119 Although a broadly parallel evolution with early middle and younger Bell Beaker Culture was detected the Southern Germany middle Bell Beaker development of metope decorations and stamp and furrow engraving techniques do not appear on beakers in Austria Western Hungary and handled beakers are completely absent It is contemporary to Corded Ware in the vicinity that has been attested by associated finds of middle Corded Ware chronologically referred to as beaker group 2 or Step B and younger Geiselgasteig Corded Ware beakers beaker group 3 or Step C Bell Beaker Culture in Bavaria used a specific type of copper which is characterised by combinations of trace elements This same type of copper was spread over the area of the Bell Beaker East Group Previously some archaeologists considered the Bell beaker people to have lived only within a limited territory of the Carpathian Basin and for a short time without mixing with the local population Although there are very few evaluable anthropological finds the appearance of the characteristic planoccipital flattened back Taurid type in the populations of some later cultures e g Kisapostag and Gata Wieselburg cultures suggested a mixture with the local population contradicting such archaeological theories According to archaeology the populational groups of the Bell beakers also took part in the formation of the Gata Wieselburg culture on the western fringes of the Carpathian Basin which could be confirmed with the anthropological Bell Beaker series in Moravia and Germany 46 In accordance with anthropological evidence it has been concluded the Bell Beakers intruded in an already established form the southern part of Germany as much as the East Group area 30 Around 2300 BC large circular enclosures were built at Pommelte and nearby Schonebeck in central Germany These were important ritual sites which remained in use until c 1900 BC 120 121 The main entrances of the Pommelte enclosure were oriented towards sunrise and sunset midway between the solstices and equinoxes indicating that Pommelte served as a monument for ceremonies linked to calendrical rites and seasonal feasting 122 The Pommelte and Schonebeck enclosures formed parts of a sacral landscape with origins in an early 3rd millennium BC sanctuary and elite burial of the Corded Ware culture 123 The Pommelte enclosure also has an almost identical diameter and a similar ground plan to Stonehenge in England 124 According to excavators the two monuments were built by the same culture with the same view of the world 118 nbsp Bell Beaker from the Czech Republic nbsp Copper dagger from Brandenburg Germany 125 nbsp Gold discs from Eythra Germany nbsp Gold diadem and jewellery Germany nbsp Stone wrist guards from Central Europe nbsp House reconstruction Csepel group Hungary 126 nbsp Outline of an Early Bronze Age longhouse Germany 127 128 nbsp Pottery and implements Germany Ireland edit Further information Prehistoric Ireland Copper and Bronze Ages 2500 500 BC nbsp Gold lunula from Blessington c 2400 BC Beakers arrived in Ireland c 2500 BC and fell out of use c 1700 BC 129 The beaker pottery of Ireland was rarely used as a grave good but is often found in domestic assemblages from the period This stands in contrast to the rest of Europe where it is frequently found in both roles The inhabitants of Ireland used food vessels as a grave good instead The large communal passage tombs of the Irish Neolithic were no longer being constructed during the Early Bronze Age although some such as Newgrange were re used 130 The preferred method of burial seems to have been single graves and cists in the east or in small wedge tombs in the west Cremation was also common The advent of the Bronze Age Beaker culture in Ireland is accompanied by the destruction of smaller satellite tombs at Knowth 131 and collapses of the great cairn at Newgrange 132 marking an end to the Neolithic culture of megalithic passage tombs Beakers are found in large numbers in Ireland and the technical innovation of ring built pottery indicates that the makers were also present 133 Classification of pottery in Ireland and Britain has distinguished a total of seven intrusive 134 beaker groups originating from the continent and three groups of purely insular character having evolved from them Five out of seven of the intrusive Beaker groups also appear in Ireland the European bell group the All over cord beakers the Scottish North Rhine beakers the Northern British Middle Rhine beakers and the Wessex Middle Rhine beakers However many of the features or innovations of Beaker society in Britain never reached Ireland 135 Instead quite different customs predominated in the Irish record that were apparently influenced by the traditions of the earlier inhabitants 136 Some features that are found elsewhere in association to later types 137 of Earlier Bronze Age Beaker pottery indeed spread to Ireland however without being incorporated into the same close and specific association of Irish Beaker context 138 The Wessex Middle Rhine gold discs bearing wheel and cross motifs that were probably sewn to garments presumably to indicate status and reminiscent of racquet headed pins found in Eastern Europe 139 enjoy a general distribution throughout the country however never in direct association with beakers In 1984 a Beaker period copper dagger blade was recovered from the Sillees River near Ross Lough County Fermanagh Northern Ireland 140 The flat triangular shaped copper blade was 171 mm 6 73 in long with bevelled edges and a pointed tip and featured an integral tang that accepted a riveted handle 140 Flint arrow heads and copper blade daggers with handle tangs found in association with Beaker pottery in many other parts of Europe have a date later than the initial phase of Beaker People activity in Ireland 141 Also the typical Beaker wristguards seem to have entered Ireland by cultural diffusion only after the first intrusions and unlike English and Continental Beaker burials never made it to the graves The same lack of typical Beaker association applies to the about thirty found stone battle axes A gold ornament found in County Down that closely resembles a pair of ear rings from Ermegeira Portugal has a composition that suggests it was imported 141 Incidental finds suggest links to non British Beaker territories like a fragment of a bronze blade in County Londonderry that has been likened to the palmella points of Iberia 134 even though the relative scarcity of beakers and Beaker compatible material of any kind in the south west are regarded as an obstacle to any colonisation directly from Iberia or even from France 134 Their greater concentration in the northern part of the country 133 which traditionally is regarded as the part of Ireland least blessed with sources of copper citation needed has led many authorities to question the role of Beaker People in the introduction of metallurgy to Ireland However indications of their use of stream sediment copper low in traces of lead and arsenic and Beaker finds connected to mining and metalworking at Ross Island County Kerry provide an escape to such doubts 142 nbsp Gold lunula and discs from Coggalbeg Ireland c 2300 BC 143 The featured food vessels and cinerary urns encrusted collared and cordoned of the Irish Earlier Bronze Age have strong roots in the western European Beaker tradition Recently the concept of these food vessels was discarded and replaced by a concept of two different traditions that rely on typology the bowl tradition and the vase tradition the bowl tradition being the oldest 144 as it has been found inserted in existing Neolithic pre beaker tombs both court tombs and passage tombs The bowl tradition occurs over the whole country except the south west and feature a majority of pit graves both in flat cemeteries and mounds and a high incidence of uncremated skeletons often in crouched position 145 The vase tradition has a general distribution and feature almost exclusively cremation The flexed skeleton of a man 1 88 meters tall in a cist in a slightly oval round cairn with food vessel at Cornaclery County Londonderry was described in the 1942 excavation report as typifying the race of Beaker Folk 146 although the differences between Irish finds and e g the British combination of round barrows with crouched unburnt burials make it difficult to establishes the exact nature of the Beaker People s colonization of Ireland 135 nbsp Timber circle at Newgrange Ireland c 2000 BC In general the early Irish Beaker intrusions do not attest 147 the overall Beaker package of innovations that once fully developed swept Europe elsewhere leaving Ireland behind 148 The Irish Beaker period is characterised by the earliness 141 of Beaker intrusions by isolation 141 and by influences and surviving traditions of autochthons 149 Beaker culture introduces the practice of burial in single graves suggesting an Earlier Bronze Age social organisation of family groups 150 Towards the Later Bronze Age the sites move to potentially fortifiable hilltops suggesting a more clan type structure 151 Although the typical Bell Beaker practice of crouched burial has been observed 152 cremation was readily adopted 153 in accordance with the previous tradition of the autochthons 131 In a tumulus the find of the extended skeleton of a woman accompanied by the remains of a red deer and a small seven year old stallion is noteworthy including the hint to a Diana like religion 154 A few burials seem to indicate social status though in other contexts an emphasis to special skills is more likely 155 One of the most important sites in Ireland during the Beaker period is Ross Island A series of copper mines from here are the earliest known in Ireland starting from c 2500 BC O Brien 2004 A comparison of chemical traces and lead isotope analysis from these mines with copper artefacts strongly suggests that Ross Island was the sole source of copper in Ireland between the dates 2500 2200 BC In addition two thirds of copper artefacts from Britain also display the same chemical and isotopic signature strongly suggesting that Irish copper was a major export to Britain 156 Traces of Ross Island copper can be found even further afield in the Netherlands it makes up 12 of analysed copper artefacts and Brittany 6 of analysed copper artefacts 157 After 2200 BC there is greater chemical variation in British and Irish copper artefacts which tallies well with the appearance of other mines in southern Ireland and north Wales After 2000 BC other copper sources supersede Ross Island The latest workings from the Ross Island mines is dated to around 1700 BC nbsp Reconstruction of a halberd from Carn 158 As well as exporting raw copper bronze there were some technical and cultural developments in Ireland that had an important impact on other areas of Europe Irish food vessels were adopted in northern Britain in c 2200 BC and this roughly coincides with a decline in the use of beakers in Britain 129 The bronze halberd not to be confused with the medieval halberd was a weapon in use in Ireland from c 2400 2000 BC 129 They are essentially broad blades that were mounted horizontally on a meter long handle giving greater reach and impact than any known contemporary weapon 159 They were subsequently widely adopted in other parts of Europe 160 possibly showing a change in the technology of warfare 161 Solar symbolism edit Ireland has the greatest concentration of gold lunulae and stone wrist guards in Europe However neither of these items were deposited in graves and they tend to be found isolated and at random In some cases gold lunulae have been found with pairs of gold discs e g at Coggalbeg in Ireland and Cabeceiras de Basto in Portugal 162 163 Both lunulae and discs have been linked to sun worship 164 Cahill 2015 connects them to a great solar cult stretching across western and central Europe to Scandinavia 165 Cahill suggests that the central part of the lunulae which is left undecorated represents a solar boat which she compares to the gold boat depicted on the Nebra sky disc and to depictions of solar boats from the Nordic Bronze Age as well as to depictions on pottery from Los Millares in Spain According to Cahill pairs of gold discs found with lunulae may therefore represent the day and night sun symbolising the movement of the sun from day to night and from east to west 165 The double sun motif has also been linked to the mythological Divine Twins 166 167 as have ritual depositions of twinned objects including two swords buried with the Nebra sky disc 168 Scientific analyses have shown that gold used to make both the Irish lunulae and the Nebra sky disc originated from Cornwall providing a further link between these artefacts 164 169 Cornwall was also the likely source of gold used to make artefacts from the Bush Barrow at Stonehenge 170 Gold used to make discs from western Asturias northern Spain dating from the Bell Beaker period was similarly found to be of non local origin and possibly from southern Britain 171 nbsp Gold lunula c 2000 BC nbsp Bronze dagger c 1900 BC nbsp Gold discs from Tedavnet c 2200 BC 172 nbsp Bell Beaker ceramic c 2200 BC nbsp Gold ornaments c 2200 BC nbsp Stone wristguards nbsp Gold lunula c 2000 BC nbsp Copper axe c 2300 2000 BC Britain edit Further information Bronze Age Britain nbsp Silbury Hill England c 2400 BC nbsp Stonehenge England c 2500 BC Beakers arrived in Britain in c 2500 BC with migrations of Yamnaya or Corded Ware related people eventually resulting in a near total turnover of the British population 173 The Beaker culture declined in use c 2200 2100 BC with the emergence of food vessels and cinerary urns and finally fell out of use around 1700 BC 129 The earliest British beakers were similar to those from the Rhine 174 but later styles are most similar to those from Ireland 175 In Britain domestic assemblages from this period are very rare making it hard to draw conclusions about many aspects of society Most British beakers come from funerary contexts Britain s only unique export in this period is thought to be tin It was probably gathered in streams in Cornwall and Devon as cassiterite pebbles and traded in this raw unrefined state 176 It was used to turn copper into bronze from c 2200 BC and widely traded throughout Britain and into Ireland Other possible European sources of tin are located in Brittany and Iberia but it is not thought they were exploited so early as these areas did not have bronze until after it was well established in Britain and Ireland 177 The most famous site in Britain from this period is Stonehenge which had its Neolithic form elaborated extensively Many barrows surround it and an unusual number of rich burials can be found nearby such as the Amesbury Archer and the later Bush Barrow Close similarities have been noted between Stonehenge and Pommelte circular enclosure in central Germany which was built by Bell Beaker people c 2300 BC 124 118 Silbury Hill was also built in the early Bell Beaker period 178 It may have originally been a burial mound though this has never been proven 179 180 According to Bayliss 2007 the aggrandisement of both Stonehenge and Silbury Hill occurred in close relation to the appearance of novel material culture and practices introduced by Beaker people 181 According to Mike Parker Pearson a significantly higher level of labour mobilisation was achieved following the arrival of Beaker people in Britain 182 The amount of effort that went into building Silbury Hill was massively more than Stonehenge and its dates coincide exactly with the appearance of Beaker burials 183 Beaker people also introduced mummification 184 185 burial in log coffins 186 187 and cranial deformation to Britain 188 Timothy Darvill has proposed that Stonehenge represented a solar calendar its construction marking spread of solar cosmologies across Northern Europe in the third millennium BC 189 190 Darvill has suggested that the Stonehenge trilithons may have also represented twin gods or an early form of the Divine Twins 191 Another site of particular interest in this period is Ferriby on the Humber Estuary where Europe s oldest sewn plank boats were recovered dating from as early as 2030 BC 192 These are the oldest known sewn plank boats in the world outside of Egypt 193 194 A later example is the Dover Boat from southern England dating from 1550 BC 195 nbsp Beaker wrist guard with gold studs copper dagger and toggle 196 nbsp Gold lunula from Cornwall c 2400 BC 197 198 nbsp Copper daggers nbsp Gold lunula Wales 2400 2000 BC 199 nbsp Ferriby boat c 2000 BC model and replica tools nbsp Gold discs and ornaments 200 nbsp Log coffin burial reconstruction 201 202 nbsp Beaker Italian Peninsula edit See also Copper Age Italy nbsp Bell Beaker sites in Italy The Italian Peninsula s most affected areas are the Po Valley in particular the area of Lake Garda and Tuscany The bell shaped vases appear in these areas of central and northern Italy as foreign elements integrated in the pre existing Remedello and Rinaldone cultures 203 Graves with Beaker artefacts have been discovered in the Brescia area like that of Ca di Marco Fiesse while in central Italy bell shaped glasses were found in the tomb of Fosso Conicchio Viterbo 204 The Bell Beaker culture was followed by the Polada culture and Proto Apennine culture Sardinia edit See also Beaker culture in Sardinia Sardinia has been in contact with extra insular communities in Corsica Tuscany Liguria and Provence since the Stone Age From the late third millennium BC on comb impressed Beaker ware as well as other Beaker material in Monte Claro contexts has been found mostly in burials such as Domus de Janas demonstrating continuing relationships with the western Mediterranean Elsewhere Beaker material has been found stratigraphically above Monte Claro and at the end of the Chalcolithic period in association with the related Bronze Age Bonnanaro culture 1800 1600 BC for which C 14 dates calibrate to c 2250 BC There is virtually no evidence in Sardinia of external contacts in the early second millennia apart from late Beakers and close parallels between Bonnannaro pottery and that of the North Italian Polada culture Like elsewhere in Europe and in the Mediterranean area the Bell Beaker culture in Sardinia 2100 1800 BC is characterised by the typical ceramics decorated with overlaid horizontal bands and associated finds brassards V pierced buttons etc for the first time gold items appeared on the island torc of the tomb of Bingia e Monti Gonnostramatza 205 The different styles and decorations of the ceramics which succeed through the time allow to split the Beaker culture in Sardinia into three chronological phases A1 2100 2000 BC A2 2000 1900 BC B 1900 1800 BC 206 In these various phases is observable the succession of two components of different geographical origin the first Franco Iberian and the second Central European 207 It appears likely that Sardinia was the intermediary that brought Beaker culture to Sicily 208 nbsp Domus de Janas tomb Sardinia nbsp Beaker necropolis of Anghelu Ruju Sardinia nbsp Animal tooth necklace from the necropolis of Is Loccis Santus Sardinia nbsp Pottery wristguards and daggers nbsp Tripod bowl necropolis of Santu Pedru Sardinia nbsp Bell Beaker bowl from Monte d Accoddi 209 nbsp Anthropomorphic stele Saint Martin de Corleans Italy nbsp Anthropomorphic stele Saint Martin de Corleans Sicily edit The Beaker was introduced in Sicily from Sardinia and spread mainly in the north west and south west of the island In the northwest and in the Palermo kept almost intact its cultural and social characteristics while in the south west there was a strong integration with local cultures 210 The only known single bell shaped glass in eastern Sicily was found in Syracuse 210 Greece edit Bell Beaker artefacts appear in mainland Greece and the Aegean from c 2200 2000 BC According to Heyd 2013 and Maran 1998 this is explained by the movement of people from the Adriatic Cetina culture into Greece at the transition from Early Helladic II to III The Cetina culture was a syncretistic Bell Beaker culture splitting off from the Adriatic variant of the Vucedol culture and at the same time incorporating Bell Beaker elements related to those in northern Italy 211 212 Kristiansen and Larsson 2005 suggest that migrants from both the Adriatic Cetina culture and the Danube area reached Greece in this period the latter indicated by close similarities in pottery forms to the Mokrin and Nagyrev cultures 213 New and more intensive exchange of goods subsequently developed after 1900 BC between Greece and Bell Beaker derived cultures such as the Unetice culture in central Europe and the Wessex culture in Britain 213 According to Galaty et al 2015 a warrior culture including ideas related to warrior aristocracy spread from Europe to Greece through contact with the Cetina culture along with the tradition of tumulus burial 214 Scandinavia edit See also Nordic Bronze Age and Nordic Stone Age nbsp Gold lunula from Grevinge Denmark c 2350 1950 BC 215 nbsp Late Neolithic Early Bronze Age house Denmark c 1900 BC 216 217 nbsp Late Neolithic Early Bronze Age house remains Denmark c 1900 BC 216 In Denmark large areas of forested land were cleared to be used for pasture and the growing of cereals during the Single Grave culture and in the Late Neolithic Period Faint traces of Bell Beaker influence can be recognised already in the pottery of the Upper Grave phase of the Single Grave period and even of the late Ground Grave phase such as occasional use of AOO like or zoned decoration and other typical ornamentation while Bell Beaker associated objects such as wristguards and small copper trinkets also found their way into this northern territories of the Corded Ware Culture Domestic sites with Beakers only appear 200 300 years after the first appearance of Bell Beakers in Europe at the early part of the Danish Late Neolithic Period LN I starting at 2350 BC These sites are concentrated in northern Jutland around the Limfjord and on the Djursland peninsula largely contemporary to the local Upper Grave Period In east central Sweden and western Sweden barbed wire decoration characterised the period 2460 1990 BC linked to another Beaker derivation of northwestern Europe Stone and copper arms trade edit nbsp Reconstruction of a building at Ostbirk Denmark c 1800 BC Northern Jutland has abundant sources of high quality flint which had previously attracted industrious mining large scale production and the comprehensive exchange of flint objects notably axes and chisels The Danish Beaker period however was characterised by the manufacture of lanceolate flint daggers described as a completely new material form without local antecedents in flint and clearly related to the style of daggers circulating elsewhere in Beaker dominated Europe Presumably Beaker culture spread from here to the remainder of Denmark and to other regions in Scandinavia and northern Germany as well Central and eastern Denmark adopted this dagger fashion and to a limited degree also archer s equipment characteristic to Beaker culture although here Beaker pottery remained less common This period in Scandinavian prehistory from 2400 1800 BC is also known as the Dagger Period 218 The spread of metallurgy in Denmark is also intimately related to the Beaker representation in northern Jutland The LN I metalwork is distributed throughout most of Denmark but a concentration of early copper and gold coincides with this core region hence suggesting a connection between Beakers and the introduction of metallurgy Most LN I metal objects are distinctly influenced by the western European Beaker metal industry gold sheet ornaments and copper flat axes being the predominant metal objects The LN I copper flat axes divide into As Sb Ni copper recalling so called Dutch Bell Beaker copper and the As Ni copper found occasionally in British and Irish Beaker contexts the mining region of Dutch Bell Beaker copper being perhaps Brittany and the Early Bronze Age Singen As Sb Ag Ni and Osenring As Sb Ag coppers having a central European probably Alpine origin Connections with other parts of Beaker culture edit See also Prehistory of the Netherlands nbsp Bell Beaker Netherlands The Beaker group in northern Jutland forms an integrated part of the western European Beaker Culture while western Jutland provided a link between the Lower Rhine area and northern Jutland The local fine ware pottery of Beaker derivation reveal links with other Beaker regions in western Europe most specifically the Veluwe group at the Lower Rhine Netherlands Concurrent introduction of metallurgy shows that some people must have crossed cultural boundaries Danish Beakers are contemporary with the earliest Early Bronze Age EBA of the East Group of Bell Beakers in central Europe and with the floruit of Beaker cultures of the West Group in western Europe The latter comprise Veluwe and Epi Maritime in Continental northwestern Europe and the Middle Style Beakers Style 2 in insular western Europe nbsp Bronze Age house reconstruction Netherlands The interaction between the Beaker groups on the Veluwe Plain and in Jutland must at least initially have been quite intensive All over ornamented AOO and All over corded AOC and particularly Maritime style beakers are featured although from a fairly late context and possibly rather of Epi maritime style equivalent to the situation in the north of the Netherlands where Maritime ornamentation continued after it ceased in the central region of Veluwe and were succeeded c 2300 BC by beakers of the Veluwe and Epi Maritime style 24 Clusters of Late Neolithic Beaker presence similar to northern Jutland appear as pockets or islands of Beaker Culture in northern Europe such as Mecklenburg Schleswig Holstein and southern Norway 219 220 221 222 223 In northern central Poland Beaker like representations even occur in a contemporary EBA setting The frequent occurrence of Beaker pottery in settlements points at a large scaled form of social identity or cultural identity or perhaps an ethnic identity In 2023 a large circular enclosure dating from c 2000 BC was discovered near the town of Tiel in the province of Gelderland Described as the Stonehenge of the Netherlands the enclosure consisted of earth banks and ditches with entrances aligned to the solstices and equinoxes At the centre of the enclosure there was a burial mound containing numerous burials According to the excavators the enclosure functioned as a solar calendar used to determine important moments including festival and harvest days Wooden longhouses and other burial mounds were found in the immediate vicinity of the site A glass bead from Mesopotamia dating from c 2000 BC was also found in the enclosure indicating that long distance contacts already existed at this time 224 Three gold lunulae have been found in Denmark dating from the Bell Beaker period 225 226 and one in the Netherlands 227 nbsp Bell Beaker artefacts Netherlands nbsp Amber Denmark nbsp Hindsgavl flint dagger Denmark c 1900 BC nbsp Bow shaped pendant Germany 228 nbsp Bell Beaker ceramic Netherlands nbsp Beaker dagger wristguard and arrowheads nbsp Copper axe Netherlands Burial practices edit In eastern Denmark and Scania one person graves occur primarily in flat grave cemeteries This is a continuation of the burial custom characterising the Scanian Battle axe Culture often to continue into the early Late Neolithic Also in northern Jutland the body of the deceased was normally arranged lying on its back in an extended position but a typical Bell Beaker contracted position occurs occasionally Typical to northern Jutland however cremations have been reported also outside the Beaker core area once within the context of an almost full Bell Beaker equipment Social transition edit The introductory phase of the manufacture and use of flint daggers c 2350 BC must all in all be characterised as a period of social change Apel argued that an institutionalised apprenticeship system must have existed 229 Craftsmanship was transmitted by inheritance in certain families living in the vicinity of abundant resources of high quality flint Debbie Olausson s 1997 examinations indicate that flint knapping activities particularly the manufacture of daggers reflect a relatively low degree of craft specialisation probably in the form of a division of labour between households Noteworthy was the adoption of European style woven wool clothes kept together by pins and buttons in contrast to the earlier usage of clothing made of leather and plant fibres 230 231 Two aisled timber houses in Late Neolithic Denmark correspond to similar houses in southern Scandinavia and at least parts of central Scandinavia and lowland northern Germany In Denmark this mode of building houses is clearly rooted in a Middle Neolithic tradition In general Late Neolithic house building styles were shared over large areas of northern and central Europe 232 Towards the transition to LN II some farm houses became extraordinarily large End of a distinct Beaker culture edit The cultural concepts originally adopted from Beaker groups at the lower Rhine blended or integrated with local Late Neolithic Culture For a while the region was set apart from central and eastern Denmark that evidently related more closely to the early Unetice culture across the Baltic Sea Before the turn of the millennium the typical Beaker features had gone their total duration being 200 300 years at the most A similar picture of cultural integration is featured among Bell Beakers in central Europe thus challenging previous theories of Bell Beakers as an elitist or purely super structural phenomenon 233 234 235 236 237 The connection with the East Group Beakers of Unetice had intensified considerably in LN II thus triggering a new social transformation and innovations in metallurgy that would announce the actual beginning of the Northern Bronze Age 238 See also editBeaker disambiguation Amesbury Archer Prehistoric Britain Prehistoric Iberia Bronze Age Britain Cornish Bronze AgeNotes edit Marija Gimbutas characterized the Bell Beaker culture complex as an amalgam of the Vucedol and Yamna culture formed after the incursion of the Yamna people into the Vucedol milieu and the interaction of these peoples for three or four centuries from circa 3000 BC 18 See Anthrogenica Eurogenes Blog Hungarian Yamnaya gt Bell Beakers for a number of maps References edit Armit Ian and David Reich 2022 What do we know about the Beaker Folk in Antiquity Journal Youtube min 1 11 So the Beaker Complex in terms of the British Isles is from around 2450 BC when we see in Britain the appearance of single inhumation graves Bradley 2007 p 144 a b c d e f g h Cunliffe 2010 Olalde Inigo Brace Selina Allentoft Morten E Armit Ian Kristiansen Kristian Booth Thomas Rohland Nadin Mallick Swapan Szecsenyi Nagy Anna Mittnik Alissa Altena Eveline March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology page needed need quotation to verify Papac Luka et al 2021 Dynamic changes in genomic and social structures in third millennium BCE central Europe Science Advances 7 35 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 6941P doi 10 1126 sciadv abi6941 PMC 8386934 PMID 34433570 Fokkens amp Nicolis 2012 p 82 Doce Elisa von Lettow Vorbeck Corina eds September 2014 Analysis of the Economic Foundations Supporting the Social Supremacy of the Beaker Groups Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress 1 7 September Burgos Spain Archaeopress ISBN 9781784913076 Lemercier Olivier December 2018 Think and Act Local Data and Global Perspectives in Bell Beaker Archaeology Journal of Neolithic Archaeology 20 Special Issue 4 77 96 doi 10 12766 jna 2018S 5 Case 2007 Harrison amp Heyd 2007 Fitzpatrick 2013 p 44 a b Fokkens amp Nicolis 2012 p 201 Fokkens amp Nicolis 2012 p 200 Vander Linden Marc 2006 Le phenomene campaniforme dans l Europe du 3eme millenaire avant notre ere Synthese et nouvelles perspectives British Archaeological Reports international series 1470 in French Oxford Archaeopress p 33 ISBN 9781841719061 Muller Hinz amp Ulrich 2015 a b Garrido Pena Rafael January 2014 Bell Beakers in Iberia In Almagro M ed Iberia Protohistory of the far west of Europe from Neolithic to Roman conquest Universidad de Burgos Fundacion Atapuerca pp 113 124 ISBN 978 84 92681 91 4 Gimbutas The Civilization of the Goddess the world of Old Europe 1991 372ff Joseph Maran 2007 Seaborne Contacts between the Aegean the Balkans and the Central Mediterranean in the 3rd Millennium BC The Unfolding of the Mediterranean World In Between the Aegean and Baltic Seas Prehistory across Borders Proceedings of the International Conference Bronze and Early Iron Age Interconnections and Contemporary Developments between the Aegean and the Regions of the Balkan Peninsula Central and Northern Europe University of Zagreb 11 14 April 2005 eds I Galanaki H Tomas Y Galanakis and R Laffineur Aegaeum 27 2007 3 21 note 55 Piguet M Besse M 2009 Chronology and Bell Beaker common ware Radiocarbon 51 2 817 830 Bibcode 2009Radcb 51 817P doi 10 1017 S0033822200056125 Janusz Czebreszuk Bell Beakers From West to East in Ancient Europe 8000 B C to A D 1000 Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World Jeunesse C 2014 Pratiques funeraires campaniformes en Europe Faut il remettre en cause la dichotomie Nord Sud La question de la reutilisation des sepultures monumentales dans l Europe du 3e millenaire in Donnees recentes sur les pratiques funeraires neolithiques de la Plaine du Rhin superieur P Lefranc A Denaire and C Jeunesse eds BAR International Series 2633 211 Oxford Archaeopress Salinova Laure 2000 La question du campaniforme en France et dans les Iles Anglo Normandes Bulletin de la Societe Prehistorique Francaise in French 94 2 259 264 doi 10 3406 bspf 1997 10872 a b Lanting J N van der Waals J D 1976 Beaker culture relations in the Lower Rhine Basin Glockenbechersimposion Oberried 1974 Bussum Haarlem Fibula Van Dishoeck pp 1 80 ISBN 9789022836194 Needham S 2009 Encompassing the Sea Maritories and Bronze Age Maritime Interactions In Clark Peter ed Bronze Age Connections Cultural Contact in Prehistoric Europe Oxford Oxbow pp 12 37 ISBN 9781842173480 O Brien William 2004 Ross Island Mining Metal and Society in Early Ireland Galway Department of Archaeology National University of Ireland ISBN 9780953562039 Ambert P 2001 La place de la metallurgie campaniforme dans la premiere metallurgie francaise In Nicolis Franco ed Bell Beakers Today pottery people culture symbols in prehistoric Europe proceedings of the International Colloquium Riva del Garda Trento Italy 11 16 May 1998 in French Trento Italy Provincia Autonoma di Trento pp 577 588 ISBN 9788886602433 Lemercier Olivier 2012 The Mediterranean France beakers transition In Fokkens Harry Nicolis Franco eds Background To Beakers inquiries in regional cultural backgrounds of the Bell Beaker complex Leiden Sidestone pp 117 156 ISBN 9789088900846 Christian Strahm ed Das Glockenbecher Phanomen ein Seminar Freiburger Arch Studien 2 Freiburg 1995 4 14 pp 386 396 a b c d Heyd Volker 1998 Die Glockenbecherkultur in Suddeutschland Zum Stand der Forschung einer Regionalprovinzentlang der Donau Bell Beaker Culture in Southern Germany State of research for a regional province along the Danube In Benz M van Willigen S eds Some New Approaches to the Bell Beaker Phenomenon Lost Paradise British Archaeological Report S690 in German Oxford Hadrian pp 87 106 ISBN 9780860549284 Burgess C Shennan S 1976 The Beaker Phenomenon some suggestions In Burgess C Miket R eds Settlement and economy in the third and second millennia BC Papers delivered at a conference organised by the Department of Adult Education University of Newcastle upon Tyne Vol 33 Oxford British Archaeological Reports pp 309 331 ISBN 9780904531527 Fokkens amp Nicolis 2012 p 172 Librado Pablo 2021 The origins and spread of domestic horses from the Western Eurasian steppes Nature 598 7882 634 640 Bibcode 2021Natur 598 634L doi 10 1038 s41586 021 04018 9 PMC 8550961 PMID 34671162 Wentink Karsten 2020 Stereotype The role of grave sets in Corded Ware and Bell Beaker funerary practices Sidestone Press doi 10 59641 ba84e5a2 hdl 1887 123270 ISBN 9789088909382 Lemercier Olivier 2004 Historical model of settling and spread of Bell Beakers Culture in the mediterranean France In Czebreszuk J ed Similar but Different Bell Beakers in Europe Poznan Symposium Poland 26 29 May 2002 Poznan Poland Adam Mickiewicz University pp 193 203 ISBN 9788385215257 Available from the author s web site a b Price T Douglas Grupe Gisela Schroter Peter 1998 Migration in the Bell Beaker period of central Europe Antiquity 72 276 405 411 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00086683 S2CID 161292616 Olalde I et al 2017 The Beaker Phenomenon And The Genomic Transformation Of Northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 Garcia Xavier C 2001 Bell Breaker In Ember Melvin Peregrine Peter Neal eds Encyclopedia of Prehistory Vol 4 Europe Springer p 24 ISBN 9780306462559 Sherratt A G 1987 Cups that cheered The introduction of alcohol to prehistoric Europe In Waldren W Kennard R C eds Bell Beakers of the Western Mediterranean Definition interpretation theory and new site data The Oxford International Conference 1986 Oxford British Archaeology Reports pp 81 114 ISBN 9780860544265 Doce Elisa Guerra 2006 Sobre la funcion y el significado de la ceramica campaniforme a la luz de los analisis de contenidos trabajos de prehistoria Function and significance of bell beaker pottery according to data from residue analyses Trabajos de Prehistoria in Spanish 63 1 69 84 doi 10 3989 tp 2006 v63 i1 5 ISSN 0082 5638 Ryan Jessica December 2018 Bell Beaker Archers Warriors or an Ideology Journal of Neolithic Archaeology 20 Special Issue 4 97 122 doi 10 12766 jna 2018S 6 J P Mallory The Indo Europeanization of Atlantic Europe in Celtic From the West 2 Rethinking the Bronze Age and the Arrival of Indo European in Atlantic Europe eds J T Koch and B Cunliffe Oxford 2013 pp 17 40 Almagro Gorbea La lengua de los Celtas y otros pueblos indoeuropeos de la peninsula iberica 2001 p 95 In Almagro Gorbea M Marine M and Alvarez Sanchis J R eds Celtas y Vettones pp 115 121 Avila Diputacion Provincial de Avila Cox Margaret Mays Simon 2000 Human Osteology in Archaeology and Forensic Science London Greenwich Medical Media pp 281 283 ISBN 9781841100463 A Test of Non metrical Analysis as Applied to the Beaker Problem Natasha Grace Bartels University of Albeda Department of Anthropology 1998 1 a b c Zoffmann Zsuzsanna K 2000 Anthropological sketch of the prehistoric population of the Carpathian Basin PDF Acta Biologica Szegediensis 44 1 4 75 79 Archived from the original PDF on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 16 September 2007 Gallagher A Gunther M M Bruchhaus H 2009 Population continuity demic diffusion and Neolithic origins in central southern Germany The evidence from body proportions Homo 60 2 95 126 doi 10 1016 j jchb 2008 05 006 PMID 19264304 Jocelyne Desideri Europe during the Third Millennium BC and Bell Beaker Culture Phenomenon peopling history through dental non metric traits study 2008 Archived 26 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lee E et al 2012 Emerging genetic patterns of the European neolithic Perspectives from a late neolithic bell beaker burial site in Germany American Journal of Physical Anthropology 148 4 571 579 doi 10 1002 ajpa 22074 PMID 22552938 Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 Genome wide data have revealed high proportions of Steppe related ancestry in Beaker Complex associated individuals from Germany and the Czech Republic showing that they derived from mixtures of populations from the Steppe and the preceding Neolithic farmers of Europe a b Haak Wolfgang 2 March 2015 Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo European languages in Europe Nature 522 7555 207 211 arXiv 1502 02783 Bibcode 2015Natur 522 207H doi 10 1038 nature14317 PMC 5048219 PMID 25731166 Mathieson Iain 24 December 2015 Genome wide patterns of selection in 230 ancient Eurasians Nature 528 7583 499 503 Bibcode 2015Natur 528 499M doi 10 1038 nature16152 PMC 4918750 PMID 26595274 Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 The Y chromosome composition of Beaker associated males was dominated by R1b M269 Supplementary Table 4 a lineage associated with the arrival of Steppe migrants in central Europe after 3000 BCE Allentoft ME 11 June 2015 Population genomics of Bronze Age Eurasia Nature 522 7555 167 172 Bibcode 2015Natur 522 167A doi 10 1038 nature14507 PMID 26062507 S2CID 4399103 European Late Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures such as Corded Ware Bell Beakers Unetice and the Scandinavian cultures are genetically very similar to each other The close affinity we observe between peoples of Corded Ware and Sintashta cultures suggests similar genetic sources of the two Among Bronze Age Europeans the highest tolerance frequency was found in Corded Ware and the closely related Scandinavian Bronze Age cultures The Andronovo culture which arose in Central Asia during the later Bronze Age is genetically closely related to the Sintashta peoples and clearly distinct from both Yamnaya and Afanasievo Therefore Andronovo represents a temporal and geographical extension of the Sintashta gene pool There are many similarities between Sintasthta Androvono rituals and those described in the Rig Veda and such similarities even extend as far as to the Nordic Bronze Age a b Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 migration played a key role in the further dissemination of the Beaker Complex a phenomenon we document most clearly in Britain where the spread of the Beaker Complex introduced high levels of Steppe related ancestry and was associated with a replacement of 90 of Britain s gene pool within a few hundred years continuing the east to west expansion that had brought Steppe related ancestry into central and northern Europe 400 years earlier British Beaker Complex associated individuals show strong similarities to central European Beaker Complex associated individuals in their genetic profile Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 While Y chromosome haplogroup R1b was completely absent in Neolithic individuals n 33 it represents more than 90 of the Y chromosomes during Copper and Bronze Age Britain n 52 Fig 3 The introduction of new mtDNA haplogroups such as I R1a and U4 which were present in Beaker associated populations from continental Europe but not in Neolithic Britain Supplementary Table 3 suggests that both men and women were involved Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 Our genetic time transect in Britain also allowed us to track the frequencies of alleles with known phenotypic effects Derived alleles at rs16891982 SLC45A2 and rs12913832 HERC2 OCA2 which contribute to reduced skin and eye pigmentation in Europeans dramatically increased in frequency between the Neolithic period and the Beaker and Bronze Age periods Extended Data Fig 7 Thus the arrival of migrants associated with the Beaker Complex significantly altered the pigmentation phenotypes of British populations a b Olalde Inigo et al 2019 The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years Science 363 6432 1230 1234 Bibcode 2019Sci 363 1230O doi 10 1126 science aav4040 PMC 6436108 PMID 30872528 We assembled genome wide data from 271 ancient Iberians of whom 176 are from the largely unsampled period after 2000 BCE thereby providing a high resolution time transect of the Peninsula We document high genetic substructure between northwestern and southeastern hunter gatherers prior to the spread of farming We reveal sporadic contacts between Iberia and North Africa by 2500 BCE and by 2000 BCE the replacement of 40 of Iberia s ancestry and nearly 100 of its Y chromosomes by people with Steppe ancestry the lineages common in Copper Age Iberia I2 G2 H were nearly completely replaced by one lineage R1b M269 Olalde Inigo et al 2019 The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years Supplementary Materials Science 363 6432 64 65 Bibcode 2019Sci 363 1230O doi 10 1126 science aav4040 PMC 6436108 PMID 30872528 We started by modeling the earliest individuals with steppe ancestry in Iberia Iberia CA Stp dated to 2500 2000 BCE Only one 2 way model fits the ancestry in Iberia Copper Age Stp Germany Beaker Germany Bell Beaker Iberia CA Iberia Copper Age Finding a Bell Beaker related group as a plausible source for the introduction of steppe ancestry into Iberia is consistent with the fact that some of the individuals in the Iberia CA Stp group were excavated in Bell Beaker associated contexts For Iberia BA Iberia Bronze Age we added Iberia CA Stp to the outgroup set as a possible source The same Germany Beaker Iberia CA model shows a good fit but with less ancestry attributed to Germany Beaker Another working model is Iberia CA Iberia CA Stp suggesting that Iberia Bronze Age is a mixture between the local Iberia CA population and the earliest individuals with steppe ancestry in Iberia Olalde Inigo et al 2019 The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years Supplementary Materials Science 363 6432 1230 1234 Bibcode 2019Sci 363 1230O doi 10 1126 science aav4040 PMC 6436108 PMID 30872528 Olalde Inigo et al 2019 The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years Science 363 6432 1230 1234 Bibcode 2019Sci 363 1230O doi 10 1126 science aav4040 PMC 6436108 PMID 30872528 Olalde Inigo et al 2019 The genomic history of the Iberian Peninsula over the past 8000 years Science 363 6432 1230 1234 Bibcode 2019Sci 363 1230O doi 10 1126 science aav4040 PMC 6436108 PMID 30872528 These patterns point to a higher contribution of incoming males than females also supported by a lower proportion of non local ancestry on the X chromosome a paradigm that can be exemplified by a Bronze Age tomb from Castillejo del Bonete containing a male with Steppe ancestry and a female with ancestry similar to Copper Age Iberians Villalba Mouco Vanessa et al 2021 Genomic transformation and social organization during the Copper Age Bronze Age transition in southern Iberia Science Advances 7 47 eabi7038 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 7038V doi 10 1126 sciadv abi7038 PMC 8597998 PMID 34788096 Furtwangler Anja Rohrlach A B Lamnidis Thiseas C Papac Luka Neumann Gunnar U Siebke Inga Reiter Ella Steuri Noah Hald Jurgen Denaire Anthony Schnitzler Bernadette Wahl Joachim Ramstein Marianne Schuenemann Verena J Stockhammer Philipp W 20 April 2020 Ancient genomes reveal social and genetic structure of Late Neolithic Switzerland Nature Communications 11 1 1915 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 1915F doi 10 1038 s41467 020 15560 x ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 7171184 PMID 32313080 Papac Luka et al 2021 Dynamic changes in genomic and social structures in third millennium BCE central Europe Science Advances 7 35 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 6941P doi 10 1126 sciadv abi6941 PMC 8386934 PMID 34433570 The earliest Bell Beaker individuals occupy a similar position in PCA as Corded Ware individuals suggesting a degree of genetic continuity We observe a closer phylogenetic relationship between the Y chromosome lineages found in early Corded Ware and Bell Beaker than in either late Corded Ware or Yamnaya and Bell Beaker R1b L151 is the most common Y lineage among early Corded Ware males 6 of 11 55 and one branch ancestral to R1b P312 the dominant Y lineage in Bell Beaker Allentoft M E et al 2024 100 ancient genomes show repeated population turnovers in Neolithic Denmark Nature 625 7994 329 337 Bibcode 2024Natur 625 329A doi 10 1038 s41586 023 06862 3 PMC 10781617 PMID 38200294 Kristiansen Kristian 2009 Proto Indo European Languages and Institutions An Archaeological Approach In van der Linden M Jones Bley C eds Journal of Indo European Studies Monograph Series No 56 Departure from the Homeland pp 111 140 Archived from the original on 29 September 2022 Retrieved 2 May 2023 Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 190 196 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 Olalde Inigo et al March 2018 The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe Nature 555 7695 Supplementary Table 4 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 190O doi 10 1038 nature25738 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 5973796 PMID 29466337 Saupe Tina et al 2021 Ancient genomes reveal structural shifts after the arrival of Steppe related ancestry in the Italian Peninsula Current Biology 31 12 2576 2591 E12 Bibcode 2021CBio 31E2576S doi 10 1016 j cub 2021 04 022 hdl 11585 827581 PMID 33974848 S2CID 234471370 all the Bronze Age groups from North and Central Italy presented here support a scenario in which Chalcolithic like individuals received a contribution of Steppe related ancestry possibly through Late Neolithic Chalcolithic groups from the north such as Germany Bell Beaker Consistent with the previously reported co spread of Steppe related ancestry and Y chromosome haplogroup R1 we observed that three out of the four Italian Bronze Age males for which a Ychr haplogroup could be determined belong to haplogroup R1 and two of those were of the R1b lineage This haplogroup does not appear in the Chalcolithic samples The two Italian R1b lineages belong to the L11 subset of R1b which is common in modern Western Europe and in ancient male Bell Beaker burials Our qpAdm results suggest that the Steppe related ancestry component could have arrived through Late Neolithic Bell Beaker groups from Central Europe Together with the autosomal affinity of North and Central Italian Bronze Age groups with Late Neolithic Germany the Ychr data point to a possibly Northern trans alpine and potentially Bell Beaker associated source of the Italian Steppe related ancestry Posth Cosimo et al 2021 The origin and legacy of the Etruscans through a 2000 year archeogenomic time transect Science Advances 7 39 eabi7673 Bibcode 2021SciA 7 7673P doi 10 1126 sciadv abi7673 PMC 8462907 PMID 34559560 Antonio Margaret et al 2019 Ancient Rome A genetic crossroads of Europe and the Mediterranean Science 366 6466 708 714 Bibcode 2019Sci 366 708A doi 10 1126 science aay6826 hdl 2318 1715466 PMC 7093155 PMID 31699931 Chintalapatia Manjusha et al 2022 The spatiotemporal patterns of major human admixture events during the European Holocene eLife 11 e77625 doi 10 7554 eLife 77625 PMC 9293011 PMID 35635751 Fregel Rosa et al 2020 The demography of the Canary Islands from a genetic perspective Human Molecular Genetics 30 R1 R64 R71 doi 10 1093 hmg ddaa262 PMID 33295602 Serrano J G et al 2023 The genomic history of the indigenous people of the Canary Islands Nature Communications 14 4641 4641 Bibcode 2023NatCo 14 4641S doi 10 1038 s41467 023 40198 w hdl 10553 124288 PMC 10427657 PMID 37582830 Serrano J G et al 2023 The genomic history of the indigenous people of the Canary Islands Nature Communications 14 4641 Supplementary Information p 13 Bibcode 2023NatCo 14 4641S doi 10 1038 s41467 023 40198 w hdl 10553 124288 PMC 10427657 PMID 37582830 Two indigenous individuals belong to the R M269 haplogroup one from Punta Azul El Hierro and one from Guayadeque Gran Canaria R M269 is the most common haplogroup in Western Europe although it is also found in North Africa in lower frequencies When ancient individuals were further classified within R M269 both showed derived SNPs on the branch clustering R L11 individuals Although the R L11 lineage is commonly restricted to Western Europe it was common in Early Bronze Age populations from Europe and could have reached North Africa with Bronze Age migrations from this region as implied by the presence of Bell Beaker pottery Fregel Rosa et al 2020 The demography of the Canary Islands from a genetic perspective Human Molecular Genetics 30 R1 R64 R71 doi 10 1093 hmg ddaa262 PMID 33295602 Fregel Rosa et al 20 March 2019 Mitogenomes illuminate the origin and migration patterns of the indigenous people of the Canary Islands PLOS One 14 3 PLOS e0209125 Bibcode 2019PLoSO 1409125F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0209125 PMC 6426200 PMID 30893316 Ordonez Alejandra C et al February 2017 Genetic studies on the prehispanic population buried in Punta Azul cave El Hierro Canary Islands Journal of Archaeological Science 78 Elsevier 20 28 Bibcode 2017JArSc 78 20O doi 10 1016 j jas 2016 11 004 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Drosou Konstantina 2020 The first reported case of the rare mitochondrial haplotype H4a1 in ancient Egypt Scientific Reports 10 1 17037 Bibcode 2020NatSR 1017037D doi 10 1038 s41598 020 74114 9 PMC 7550590 PMID 33046824 Takabuti belonged to mitochondrial haplogroup H4a1 in the archaeological record H4a1 has been reported in sixth fourteenth century CE remains sourced from the Canary Islands and three additional ancient DNA samples two from Bell Beaker and Unetice contexts 2500 1575 BCE at Quedlinburg and Eulau both in Saxony Anhalt Germany and one individual from early Bronze Age Bulgaria Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of our findings which is of great archaeological interest and importance is the observation of a predominantly European haplogroup in an Egyptian individual located in Southern Egypt Loreille O et al 2018 Biological Sexing of a 4000 Year Old Egyptian Mummy Head to Assess the Potential of Nuclear DNA Recovery from the Most Damaged and Limited Forensic Specimens Genes 9 3 135 doi 10 3390 genes9030135 PMC 5867856 PMID 29494531 Gad Yehia 2020 Maternal and paternal lineages in King Tutankhamun s family Guardian of Ancient Egypt Essays in Honor of Zahi Hawass Czech Institute of Egyptology pp 497 518 ISBN 978 80 7308 979 5 The haplogroup for three of the investigated mummies namely Tutankhamun KV55 Akhenaten and Amenhotep III was R1b The Tutankhamun DNA Project iGenea Tutankhamun belongs to the haplogroup R M269 which more than 50 of all men in Western Europe belong to Yatsishina E B et al 2020 Paleogenetic Study of Ancient Mummies at the Kurchatov Institute Nanotechnologies in Russia 15 9 10 524 531 doi 10 1134 S1995078020050183 S2CID 232315321 Haplogroup R1b1a1b R1b M269 isolated in the studied samples is also uncharacteristic of the modern Egyptian population its frequency in the population is less than 1 while it is found in approximately half of the male population of Western Europe Gold artefacts of the Bell Beaker culture Iberia 22 November 2019 The Oxford Illustrated Prehistory of Europe Barry Cunliffe Oxford University Press 1994 pp 250 254 F Jorda Cerda et al Historia de Espana 1 Prehistoria 1986 ISBN 842491015X a b Muller Johannes van Willigen Samuel 2001 New radiocarbon evidence for European Bell Beakers and the consequences for the diffusion of the Bell Beaker Phenomenon In Nicolis Franco ed Bell Beakers today Pottery people culture symbols in prehistoric Europe Proceedings of the international colloquium Riva del Garda Trento Italy 11 16 May 1998 Volume 1 Trento Provincia Autonoma di Trento pp 59 80 ISBN 9788886602433 Jorge Susana Oliveira 2002 An all over corded Bell Beaker in northern Portugal Castelo Velho de Freixo de Numao Vila Nova de Foz Coa some remarks PDF Journal of Iberian Archaeology 4 107 123 Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2005 Prieto Martinez M P 2013 Unity and Circulation what underlies the homogeneity of Galician bell beaker ceramic style In Prieto Martinez M Pilar Salanova Laure eds Current researches on bell beakers proceedings of 15th International Bell Beaker From Atlantic to Ural 5th 9th May 2011 Poio Pontevedra Galicia Spain Santiago de Compostela Copynino ISBN 9788494153709 Retrieved 4 October 2015 Cahill Mary Spring 2015 Here comes the sun solar symbolism in Early Bronze Age Ireland Archaeology Ireland 29 1 26 33 Doce Elisa von Lettow Vorbeck Corina eds September 2014 Analysis of the Economic Foundations Supporting the Social Supremacy of the Beaker Groups Proceedings of the XVII UISPP World Congress 1 7 September Burgos Spain Archaeopress p 48 ISBN 9781784913076 The Cabeceiras de Basto discs were found with a lunula whose similarities to the Irish series were noted by Cardoso in the first publication of the find Cardoso 1930 6 16 fig 2 Even if the Cabeceiras de Basto lunula is a very peripheral cousin of the British lunula Taylor 1980 24 pl 23 b it is still related The association of lunula and discs both types of object that are well known in Ireland Case 1977 Cahill 2015 is unlikely to be coincidental It has been demonstrated recently in relation to the Coggalbeg Co Roscommon find that lunulae and sun discs were sometimes associated in Ireland Kelly amp Cahill 2010 The pair of gold discs from Oviedo is less well known than the Cabeceiras de Basto finds and although their decoration differs from the Irish discs in detail they are similar in their shape and size in having a central cross and central holes and in having been made as a pair Macwhite 1951 50 lam viii These finds seem likely to be broadly contemporary with the Tablada del Rudron ornaments First Bell Beaker earthwork enclosure found in Spain University of Tubingen 2016 Sanjuan Leonardo Garcia Bartelheim Martin 2017 Chalcolithic enclosures in the lower Guadalquivir Basin La Loma del Real Tesoro Bartelheim M Bueno Ramirez P And Kunst M Eds Key Resources and Socio Cultural Developments in the Iberian Chalcolithic 257 272 Tubingen University of Tubingen Armbruster Barbara 2015 Early gold technology as an indicator of circulation processes in Atlantic Europe The Bell Beaker transition in Europe Mobility and local evolution during the 3rd millenium BC Oxbow Books pp 140 149 Garcia Sanjuan Leonardo 2018 Assembling the Dead Gathering the Living Radiocarbon Dating and Bayesian Modelling for Copper Age Valencina de la Concepcion Seville Spain Journal of World Prehistory 31 2 179 313 doi 10 1007 s10963 018 9114 2 PMC 5984651 PMID 29962659 Valera Antonio Carlos 2015 Ciempozuelos beaker geometric patterns a glimpse into their meaning Waldren and Van Strydonck 1996 Trias Manuel Calvo Ayuso Victor M Guerrero Simonet Bartomeu Salva 2002 Los origenes del poblamiento balear una discusion no acabada Complutum in Spanish 13 159 191 ISSN 1131 6993 Waldren William H 2003 Evidence of Iberian Bronze Age Boquique Pottery in the Balearic Islands Trade Marriage or Culture Oxford Journal of Archaeology 22 4 357 374 doi 10 1046 j 1468 0092 2003 00193 x Available from the author s web site Archived 6 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine Waldren 1979 and Waldren 1998 Waldren 1998 95 Coll 2000 Waldren 1998 94 Carreras y Covas 1984 Bertemes Francois Heyd Volker 2002 Der Ubergang Kupferzeit Fruhbronzezeit am Nordwestrand des Karpatenbeckens Kulturgeschichtliche und palaometallurgische Betrachtungen The transition from the Copper Age to the Early Bronze Age at the north western edge of the Carpathian basin culture historical and palaeometallurgical considerations In Bartelheim Martin Pernicka Ernst Krause Rudiger eds Die Anfange der Metallurgie in der alten Welt The beginnings of metallurgy in the old world in German Rahden Verlag Marie Leidorf pp 185 228 ISBN 9783896468710 O Connor Brendan 2010 From Dorchester to Dieskau some aspects of relations between Britain and Central Europe during the Early Bronze Age In Meller Harald Bertemes Francoise eds Der Griff nach den Sternen Wie Europas Eliten zu Macht und Reichtum kamen 591 602 Halle Tagungen des Landesmuseums fur Vorgeschichte Halle Gold lunula from Schulenburg this crescent shaped golden necklace from the beginning of the third millennium BC is extremely rare evidence of contact between early Bronze Age elites in Central Europe and the British Isles as it is possible that the find was imported from Ireland at the time To date 69 golden lunulae Latin lunula small moon as the necklace is also called because of its shape have been found in Ireland alone The Schulenburg gold jewelry consists of almost pure gold which was probably driven into a thin sheet by hammering a gold rod then ground and finally polished The striking similarity to the crescent moon indicates a corresponding symbolic meaning of this gold jewelry Darvill T 2002 Beaker culture Oxford Concise Dictionary of Archaeology Oxford University Press p 42 ISBN 9780192116499 Brotherton Paul et al 2013 Neolithic mitochondrial haplogroup H genomes and the genetic origins of Europeans Nature Communications 4 1764 Bibcode 2013NatCo 4 1764 doi 10 1038 ncomms2656 PMC 3978205 PMID 23612305 Anthropology of skeletal remains of Bell Beaker people from Moravia Czech Republic a b Heyd V Husty L Kreiner L 2004 Siedlungen der Glockenbecherkultur in Suddeutschland und Mitteleuropa Bell Beaker settlements in South Germany and Central Europe in German Buchenbach Faustus ISBN 9783933474278 The Eastern Border of the Bell Beaker Phenomenon Volker Heyd 2004 Heyd Volker 2000 Die Spatkupferzeit in Suddeutschland The Late Copper age in Southern Germany in German Bonn Habelt ISBN 9783774930483 Aerial view of the Pommelte enclosure dw com 2020 Spatzier Andre Bertemes Francois June 2018 The ring sanctuary of Pommelte Germany a monumental multi layered metaphor of the late third millennium BC Antiquity 92 363 655 673 doi 10 15184 aqy 2018 92 S2CID 165852387 a b c Stonehenge s Continental Cousin Archaeology January 2021 The World of the Nebra Sky Disc Halle State Museum of Prehistory Spatzier Andre 2019 The enclosure complex Pommelte Schonebeck The dialectic of two circular monuments of the late 3rd to early 2nd millennium BC in Central Germany In Bertemes F Meller H eds Der Aufbruch zu neuen Horizonten NeueSichtweisen zur europaischen Fruhbronzezeit Landesmuseums fur Vorgeschichte Halle pp 421 443 ISBN 9783948618032 Meller Harald 2019 Princes Armies Sanctuaries The emergence of complex authority in the Central German Unetice culture Acta Archaeologica 90 1 39 79 Spatzier Andre Bertemes Francois June 2018 The ring sanctuary of Pommelte Germany a monumental multi layered metaphor of the late third millennium BC Antiquity 92 363 655 673 doi 10 15184 aqy 2018 92 S2CID 165852387 Spatzier Andre 2019 The enclosure complex Pommelte Schonebeck The dialectic of two circular monuments of the late 3rd to early 2nd millennium BC in Central Germany In Bertemes F Meller H eds Der Aufbruch zu neuen Horizonten NeueSichtweisen zur europaischen Fruhbronzezeit Landesmuseums fur Vorgeschichte Halle pp 421 443 ISBN 9783948618032 the Pommelte Schonebeck complex can be best understood as a sacral landscape in which the two enclosures were focal points standing in dialectic relation to each other This sacral landscape began to be established in the early 3rd millennium BC with a small sanctuary and a burial of a warrior leader of the Corded Ware Culture a b Concepts of cosmos in the world of Stonehenge British Museum 2022 Clement Nicolas 27 January 2020 Bell Beaker copper alloy daggers from central Europe Prehistoires Mediterraneennes 8 doi 10 4000 pm 2167 S2CID 248017237 Pasztor Emilia Barna Judit 2015 Neolithic Longhouses and Bronze Age Houses in Central Europe In Ruggles CLN ed Handbook of Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy pp 1307 1315 Bibcode 2015hae book R What was life like in the Early Bronze Age Digital reconstruction of a Unetice culture longhouse c 2200 BC Terra X Benzingerode longhouse reconstruction p 192 Tagungen des Landesmuseums fur Vorgeschichte Halle 2019 a b c d Needham S 1996 Chronology and periodisation in the British Bronze Age Acta Archaeologica 67 121 140 O Kelly M J 1982 Newgrange Archaeology Art and Legend London Thames amp Hudson a b Flanagan 1998 p 71 Flanagan 1998 p 99 a b Flanagan 1998 p 78 a b c Flanagan 1998 p 82 a b Flanagan 1998 p 81 Flanagan 1998 pp 94 95 Flanagan 1998 p 84 Flanagan 1998 p 85 Flanagan 1998 pp 86 88 a b Sheridan Alison Northover Peter 1993 A Beaker Period copper dagger blade from the Sillees River near Ross Lough Co Fermanagh Ulster Journal of Archaeology 3rd series 56 61 69 JSTOR 20568187 a b c d Flanagan 1998 p 88 Flanagan 1998 p 89 Coggalbeg Gold Hoard A History of Ireland in 100 Objects Retrieved 17 March 2021 Flanagan 1998 p 104 Flanagan 1998 pp 104 105 111 114 Male sizes range between 157 and 191 cm 62 and 75 in to average 174 cm 69 in comparable to the current male population Flanagan 1998 p 116 Flanagan 1998 pp 84 85 116 Flanagan 1998 p 133 Flanagan 1998 p 91 Flanagan 1998 p 150 Flanagan 1998 p 158 Flanagan 1998 pp 96 151 Flanagan 1998 pp 105 106 Flanagan 1998 p 156 Flanagan 1998 p 155 Northover J P N O Brien W Stos S 2001 Lead isotopes and metal circulation in Beaker Early Bronze Age Ireland Journal of Irish Archaeology 10 25 47 Northover J P 1999 Hauptmann A Pernicka E Rehren T Yalcin U eds The earliest metalworking in South Britain The Beginnings of Metallurgy Bochum Dt Bergbau Museum 211 225 Garrido Pena Rafael 2022 Atlantic halberds as Bell Beaker weapons in Iberia Oxford Journal of Archaeology 41 3 252 277 doi 10 1111 ojoa 12250 hdl 10486 703276 S2CID 249560008 Atlantic halberds are characteristic weapons of the beginning of the Early Bronze Age in western Europe Some scholars support an origin in Ireland O Flaherty R 2007 A weapon of choice experiments with a replica Irish early Bronze Age halberd Antiquity 81 312 425 434 doi 10 1017 s0003598x00095284 S2CID 160489266 Schuhmacher T X 2002 Some remarks on the origin and chronology of halberds in Europe Oxford Journal of Archaeology 21 3 263 288 doi 10 1111 1468 0092 00162 James Simon 1993 Exploring the World of the Celts London Thames amp Hudson p 21 ISBN 9780500279984 Under the Protection of Lunules D amp M Magazine Europe 2019 p 19 Gold lunula and discs from Cabeceiras de Basto Portugal a b Urbanus Jason 2015 Bronze Age Ireland s Taste in Gold Archaeology Retrieved 26 April 2022 a b Cahill Mary Spring 2015 Here comes the sun solar symbolism in Early Bronze Age Ireland Archaeology Ireland 29 1 26 33 Kristiansen Kristian 2012 Rock Art and Religion The sun journey in Indo European mythology and Bronze Age rock art PDF Adoranten 2012 69 86 Lahelma Antti 2017 The Circumpolar Context of the Sun Ship Motif in South Scandinavian Rock Art In Skoglund Peter Ling Johan Bertilsson Ulf eds North Meets South Theoretical Aspects on the Northern and Southern Rock Art Traditions in Scandinavia Oxbow Books pp 144 171 Kristiansen Kristian 2011 Bridging India and Scandinavia Institutional Transmission and Elite Conquest during the Bronze Age In Wilkinson Toby C Sherratt Susan Bennet John eds Interweaving Worlds Systemic Interactions in Eurasia 7th to 1st Millennia BC Oxbow Books pp 243 265 Ehser Gregor Borg Pernicka Ernst August 2011 Provenance of the gold of the Early Bronze Age Nebra Sky Disk central Germany geochemical characterization of natural gold from Cornwall European Journal of Mineralogy 23 6 895 910 Bibcode 2011EJMin 23 895E doi 10 1127 0935 1221 2011 0023 2140 Where did the gold from the time of Stonehenge come from Analysing the Bush Barrow dagger Wiltshire Museum 2019 Retrieved 26 April 2022 Fernandez Moreno Jose Javier 2018 The gold discs of the Archaeological Museum of Asturias some observations on prehistoric goldsmithing Zephyrus 82 65 65 92 doi 10 14201 zephyrus2018826592 hdl 10651 50763 S2CID 239596297 Pair of Gold discs A History of Ireland in 100 Objects 5 October 2016 Koljing Cecilia 21 February 2018 Ancient DNA reveals impact of the Beaker Phenomenon on prehistoric Europeans University of Gothenburg Archived from the original on 23 May 2019 Needham S 2005 Transforming Beaker Culture in North West Europe processes of fusion and fission Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 71 171 217 doi 10 1017 s0079497x00001006 S2CID 193226917 Case H 1993 Beakers Deconstruction and After Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 59 241 268 doi 10 1017 s0079497x00003807 Charles J A 1975 Where is the Tin Antiquity 49 193 19 24 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00063201 S2CID 162722576 Bradley 2007 p 146 Armit Ian Reich David 2021 The return of the Beaker folk Rethinking migration and population change in British prehistory Antiquity 95 384 1464 1477 doi 10 15184 aqy 2021 129 S2CID 239626106 Harding Anthony 2012 The Tumulus in European Prehistory Covering the Body Housing the Soul In Borgna Elizabetta Muller Celka Sylvie eds Ancestral Landscapes Burial mounds in the Copper and Bronze Ages Proceedings of the International Conference held in Udine May 15th 18th 2008 Maison de l Orient p 23 ISBN 978 2 35668 022 8 There are cases where the practice of building a barrow could be carried to extreme lengths The pyramids of the Old Kingdom of Egypt are essentially barrows of a special sort maybe Silbury Hill near Marlborough in southern England was a burial mound though this has never been proven Turek Jan June 2016 The Beaker World and Otherness of the Early Civilizations Musaica Archaeologica 1 1 155 162 on the British Isles the Bell Beaker communities have created monuments such as the late phase of construction of Stonehenge shrine or a giant burial mound of Silbury Hill which are comparable with Egyptian temples and pyramids Bayliss Alex McAvoy Fachtna Whittle Alisdair 2007 The world recreated redating Silbury Hill in its monumental landscape Antiquity 81 311 26 53 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00094825 S2CID 161443252 Mike Parker Pearson The New Archaeology of Stonehenge 2021 Mike Parker Pearson The New Archaeology of Stonehenge 2021 Booth Thomas J 2015 Mummification in Bronze Age Britain Antiquity 89 347 1155 1173 doi 10 15184 aqy 2015 111 S2CID 161304254 Smith Allen 2016 Holding on to the past Southern British evidence for mummification and retention of the dead in the Chalcolithic and Bronze Age Journal of Archaeological Science Reports 10 744 756 Bibcode 2016JArSR 10 744S doi 10 1016 j jasrep 2016 05 034 Melton Nigel 2015 Gristhorpe Man an Early Bronze Age log coffin burial scientifically defined Antiquity 84 325 796 815 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00100237 hdl 10036 4426 S2CID 53412188 Jones A 2023 The Early Bronze Age Log Coffin Burials of Britain The Origins and Development of a Burial Rite s Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 89 51 81 doi 10 1017 ppr 2023 5 Mike Parker Pearson The New Archaeology of Stonehenge 2021 Darvill Timothy 2022 Keeping time at Stonehenge Antiquity 96 386 319 335 doi 10 15184 aqy 2022 5 S2CID 247336130 Darvill Timothy 2023 Keeping Time at Stonehenge A Megalithic Calendar Revealed Darvill Timothy 2016 Houses of the Holy Architecture and Meaning in the Structure of Stonehenge Wiltshire UK Time and Mind 9 2 89 121 doi 10 1080 1751696X 2016 1171496 S2CID 164201703 each of the trilithons could be considered conjoined deities pairs of gods or an early form of the Divine Twins born at the same time from a single union Darvill 2006 144 145 The Great Trilithon to the southwest is the largest and most prominent It is set astride the principal axis and might cautiously be identified with a pair of deities representing day and night the sun and moon summer and winter life and death perhaps even the prehistoric equivalents of the twins Apollo and Artemis as they are known in later pantheons across the Old World Bronze Age boat oldest in Europe BBC News Retrieved 18 March 2015 Chapman Henry P 2021 Seascapes and Landscapes the Siting of the Ferriby Boat Finds in the Context of Prehistoric Pilotage International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 34 1 43 50 doi 10 1111 j 1095 9270 2005 00042 x S2CID 162318244 Wright E V Churchill D M 1965 The Boats from North Ferriby Yorkshire England with a review of the origins of the sewn boats of the Bronze Age Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 31 1 24 doi 10 1017 S0079497X00014687 S2CID 130511731 Clark Peter 2004 The Dover Bronze Age Boat in Context Society and Water Transport in Prehistoric Europe Oxbow Books ISBN 9781842171394 Archived from the original on 27 April 2023 Retrieved 27 April 2023 wrist guard British Museum Lunula British Museum Gold lunula National Museums Scotland Gold lunula British Museum online ornament British Museum Gristhorpe Man log coffin The Gristhorpe log coffin burial is one of 75 recorded in Britain that range in date from the twenty third to seventeenth centuries BC They are found throughout Britain from Scotland to the south coast and from East Anglia to Wales the coffin was roughly square cut at the foot end but the base and lid had been rounded off at the head end In 1834 the excavators identified a rude figure of a human face carved into the lid This carving now much degraded is surrounded by a cut which flares possibly to indicate shoulders Melton 2015 Melton Nigel 2015 Gristhorpe Man an Early Bronze Age log coffin burial scientifically defined Antiquity 84 325 796 815 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00100237 S2CID 53412188 Le grandi avventure dell archeologia Vol 5 Europa e Italia protostorica Curcio editore pp 1585 1586 Il complesso culturale di Fosso Conicchio Viterbo Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Bingia e Monti Gonnostramatza Un sito archeologico tra l eta del Rame e l eta del Bronzo in Italian retrieved 7 February 2024 Giovanni Ugas L alba dei Nuraghi 2005 p 12 Ceramiche Storia linguaggio e prospettive in Sardegna Maria Rosaria Manunza p 26 Piccolo S 2013 Ancient Stones The Prehistoric Dolmens of Sicily Abingdon Brazen Head Publishing p 32 ISBN 9780956510624 Melis Maria Grazia Monte d Accoddi and the end of the Neolithic in Sardinia Italy Documenta Praehistorica 38 207 a b Tusa Sebastiano 1999 La Sicilia nella Preistoria Palermo Sellerio Editore ISBN 8838914400 pp 310 311 Heyd Volker 2013 Chapter 3 Europe 2500 to 2200 BC Between expiring ideologies and emerging complexity The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age Oxford University Press pp 47 67 ISBN 9780199572861 Heyd Volker 2008 When the West Meets the East The Eastern Periphery of the Bell Beaker Phenomenon and Its Relation with the Aegean Early Bronze Age Aegean and Balkan Prehistory a b Kristiansen Kristian Larsson Thomas B 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press p 120 ISBN 9780521843638 Galaty Michael Tomas Helen Parkinson William 2015 9 Bronze Age European Elites From the Aegean to the Adriatic and Back Again The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean Cambridge University Press pp 157 177 doi 10 1017 CHO9781139028387 013 ISBN 9781139028387 Vandkilde Helle 2007 A Review of the Early Late Neolithic Period in Denmark Offa The form and decoration of the Danish lunulae are dependent on Anglo Irish lunulae which can be attributed to the Beaker Culture of western Europe a b Johannsen Jens 2017 Mansion on the Hill A Monumental Late Neolithic House at Vinge Zealand Denmark Journal of Neolithic Archaeology 19 the Vinge house was approximately 45 5 metres long by 7 2 metres wide covering an area of approximately 320 m2 the monumental size of the Vinge house compared to common Late Neolithic houses and its position on the elevated plateau with a wide view in all directions and high visibility show that the inhabitants were of special importance This was likely the residence of a magnate his family his farmhands and his livestock all included in one enormous building In addition to its practical functions the house was thus an imposing monument displaying the inhabitant s wealth and power Kristiansen Kristian 2009 Proto Indo European Languages and Institutions An Archaeological Approach In van der Linden M Jones Bley C eds Journal of Indo European Studies Monograph Series No 56 Departure from the Homeland pp 111 140 From ca 2300 to 1700 BC a new historical period of cultural integration prevailed in south Scandinavia It was initiated by the migration of Bell Beaker groups into Jutland who brought with them new skills in mining and sailing and who started to mine flint in northern Jutland for mass production of flint daggers that were soon distributed to most of Scandinavia It was later followed by a similar production in southeast Denmark This period marks the first introduction of metal into Scandinavia and the dagger production represented an imitation of copper and bronze prototypes It also represents the introduction of a new more ranked social organization Large chiefly houses similar to those found in the Unetice Culture appear in south Scandinavia and speak of a radical reorganization of economy and social organization The Hindsgavl Dagger National Museum of Denmark Struve 1955 pl 22 full citation needed Kuhn 1979 pl 11 18 full citation needed Myhre 1978 1979 full citation needed Jacobs 1991 full citation needed Prescott amp Walderhaug 1995 full citation needed Dutch unveil 4 000 year old Stonehenge like discovery phys org 21 June 2023 Vandkilde Helle 2007 A Review of the Early Late Neolithic Period in Denmark Offa The form and decoration of the Danish lunulae are dependent on Anglo Irish lunulae which can be attributed to the Beaker Culture of western Europe Gold lunula Denmark National Museum Denmark Fokkens Harry 2013 The Bronze Age in the Low Countries Oxford Handbooks Online Ruzickova Pavla 2009 Bow shaped pendants of the Bell Beaker culture Acta Archaeologica Carpathica 44 37 72 Apel 2001 42 p 323 ff Bender Jorgensen 1992 p 114 Ebbesen 1995 2004 Nielsen 2000 pp 161 ff cf Shennan 1976 1977 Harrison R J 1980 The Beaker Folk Thames and Hudson Thorpe amp Richards 1984 Lohof 1994 Strahm 1998 Vandkilde Helle 2005 A Review of the Early Late Neolithic Period in Denmark Practice Identity and Connectivity PDF www jungstein SITE de Retrieved 12 August 2014 Sources editBradley Richard 2007 The prehistory of Britain and Ireland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521848114 cite, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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