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Nordic Bronze Age

The Nordic Bronze Age (also Northern Bronze Age, or Scandinavian Bronze Age) is a period of Scandinavian prehistory from c. 2000/1750–500 BC.

Nordic Bronze Age
Geographical rangeSouthern Scandinavia, northern Germany
PeriodBronze Age
Datescirca 2000–1750 BCE – circa 500 BCE
Preceded byBattle Axe culture, Bell Beaker culture, Pitted Ware culture
Followed byJastorf culture, Pre-Roman Iron Age

The Nordic Bronze Age culture emerged about 1750 BC as a continuation of the Battle Axe culture (the Scandinavian Corded Ware variant) as well as from influence that came from Central Europe.[1] This influence most likely came from people similar to those of the Unetice culture, since they brought customs that were derived from Unetice or from local interpretations of the Unetice culture located in North Western Germany. The metallurgical influences from Central Europe are especially noticeable.[2][3] The Bronze Age in Scandinavia can be said to begin shortly after 2000 BC with the introduction and use of bronze tools, followed by a more systematic adoption of bronze metalworking technology from 1750 BC.[4][5][6]

The Nordic Bronze Age maintained close trade links with Mycenaean Greece, with whom it shares several striking similarities.[7][8][1][9] Some cultural similarities between the Nordic Bronze Age, the Sintashta/Andronovo culture and peoples of the Rigveda have also been detected.[a][10] The Nordic Bronze Age region included part of northern Germany,[11] and some scholars also include sites in what is now Estonia, Finland and Pomerania as part of its cultural sphere.[12][13]

The people of the Nordic Bronze Age were actively engaged in the export of amber, and imported metals in return, becoming expert metalworkers. With respect to the number and density of metal deposits, the Nordic Bronze Age became the richest culture in Europe during its existence.[14][15][16]

Around the 5th century BC, the Nordic Bronze Age was succeeded by the Pre-Roman Iron Age and the Jastorf culture. The Nordic Bronze Age is often considered ancestral to the Germanic peoples.[17]

History

Origins

The Nordic Bronze Age is a successor of the Corded Ware culture in southern Scandinavia and Northern Germany. It appears to represent a fusion of elements from the Corded Ware culture and the preceding Pitted Ware culture.[18][19] The decisive factor that triggered the change from the Chalcolithic Battle Axe culture into the Nordic Bronze Age is often believed to have been metallurgical influence as well as general cultural influence from Central Europe, similar in custom to those of the Unetice culture.[20][21][22]

Chronology

Oscar Montelius, who coined the term used for the period, divided it into six distinct sub-periods in his piece Om tidsbestämning inom bronsåldern med särskilt avseende på Skandinavien ("On Bronze Age dating with particular focus on Scandinavia") published in 1885, which is still in wide use. His relative chronology has held up well against radiocarbon dating, with the exception that the period's start is closer to 1700 BC than 1800 BC, as Montelius suggested. For Central Europe a different system developed by Paul Reinecke is commonly used, as each area has its own artifact types and archaeological periods.

A broader subdivision is the Early Bronze Age, between 1700 BC and 1100 BC, and the Late Bronze Age, 1100 BC to 550 BC. These divisions and periods are followed by the Pre-Roman Iron Age.

Culture

Settlements

Settlement in the Nordic Bronze Age period consisted mainly of single farmsteads, which usually consisted of a longhouse plus additional four-post built structures (helms). Longhouses were initially two aisled, and after c. 1300 BC three aisled structure became normal. Some longhouses were exceptionally large (up to about 500 m2 in area),[23] and have been described as "chiefly halls",[24] "the sitting area of which is the size of a megaron in contemporary Mycenean palaces".[23] Larger settlements are also known (such as Hallunda and Apalle in Sweden and Voldtofte in Denmark), as well as fortified sites, specialist workshops for metalwork and ceramic production, and dedicated cult houses.[25][26][27][28] Settlements were geographically located on higher ground, and tended to be concentrated near the sea.[29] Certain settlements functioned as regional centres of power, trade, craft production, and ritual activity.[30][31][32] The Bronze Age fortified town of Hünenburg bei Watenstedt in northern Germany (12th c. BC) has been described as a trading post for people from Scandinavia and the Baltic Sea region, as well as a cult centre and seat of a ruling elite.[33][34]

Burials

 
Kivik 'King's Grave', Sweden, c.1400 BC

Associated with Nordic Bronze Age settlements are burial cairns, mounds and cemeteries, with interments including oak coffins and urn burials; other settlement associations include rock carvings, or bronze hoards in wetland sites.[29] Some burial mounds are especially large and, with respect to the amount of gold and bronze in them, extraordinarily rich for this time period. Examples of prominent burial mounds include the Håga mound and Kivik King's Grave in Sweden, and the Lusehøj in Denmark.[35] A minimum of 50,000 burial mounds were constructed between 1500 and 1150 BC in Denmark alone.[36]

Oak coffin burials dating from the 14th-13th centuries BC contained well-preserved mummified bodies, along with their clothing and burial goods. The bodies were intentionally mummified by watering the burial mounds to create a bog-like, oxygen-free environment within the graves.[23][37][38] This practice may have been stimulated by cultural influence from Egypt, as it coincided with the appearance of Egyptian artefacts in Scandinavia and the appearance of Baltic amber in Egypt (e.g. in the tomb of Tutankhamun).[38][39] However, intentional mummification within oak coffin burials has also been noted in Britain at an earlier date (c. 2300 BC).[40][41]

The Late Bronze Age King's Grave of Seddin in northern Germany (9th century BC) has been described as a "Homeric burial" due to its close similarity to contemporary elite burials in Greece and Italy.[42][43]

Agriculture

In the Nordic Bronze Age, both agriculture (including cultivation of wheat, millet, and barley) and animal husbandry (keeping of domesticated animals such as cattle, sheep and pigs) were practiced. Fishing and hunting were also sources of food, which included shellfish, deer, elk, and other wild animals. There is evidence that oxen were used as draught animals; domesticated dogs were common, but horses were rarer and probably status symbols.[29]

Metalwork

Scandinavian Bronze Age sites present a rich and well-preserved legacy of bronze and gold objects. These valuable metals were all imported, primarily from Central Europe, but they were often crafted locally and the craftsmanship and metallurgy of the Nordic Bronze Age was of a high standard. The lost-wax casting method was used to produce artefacts such as the Trundholm Sun Chariot and the Langstrup belt plate.[44][45] The archaeological legacy also encompasses locally crafted wool and wooden objects.

During the 15th and 14th centuries BC, southern Scandinavia produced and deposited more elaborate bronzes in graves and hoards than any other region of Europe.[14] As regards the number and density of metal deposits, the Nordic Bronze Age became the richest culture in Europe.[15] More Bronze Age swords have also been found in Denmark than anywhere else in Europe.[15] Uniform crucibles found at metal workshop sites further indicate the mass production of certain metal artefacts.[27]

Rock carvings

The west coast of Sweden, namely Bohuslän, has the largest concentration of Bronze Age rock carvings in Scandinavia; and Scandinavia has the largest number of Bronze Age rock carvings in Europe. The west coast of Sweden is home to around 1,500 recorded rock engraving sites, with more being discovered every year. When the rock carvings were made, the area was the coastline; but it is now 25 meters above sea level. The engravings in the region depict everyday life, weapons, human figures, fishing nets, ships, chariots, plows, the sun, deer, bulls, horses, and birds. By far, the most dominant theme is human figures and ships, especially ships  —  10,000 of which have recorded. The typical ship depicts a crew of six to thirteen. Rock carvings in the late Bronze Age, and even the early Iron Age, often depict conflict, power, and mobility.[46]

Warrior ethos

The culture of the Nordic Bronze Age was that of a warrior culture, with a strong emphasis on weapons and status.[47] Helle Vandkilde of Aarhus University, in her publications from 1995, describes most men of the period as having followed a warrior ethos.[48] More than 70% of burials dating to the Nordic Bronze Age contain metal objects of various kinds, the most common objects being swords and daggers.[49] It is noted that the people of the Nordic Bronze Age also placed great importance on helmets of intricate design, which they put much effort into making. However, not all of the weapons and armour of the Nordic Bronze Age were used for warfare. Some of them are believed to have been ceremonial, especially the helmets.

Despite the importance of weapons in their society, archaeological discoveries suggest that intrasocietal violence was not particularly common in the Nordic Bronze Age, especially not when compared to contemporary European Bronze Age cultures.[50] The people of the Nordic Bronze Age seem to instead have been directing their military efforts outwards, likely against people of neighbouring cultures, and are believed to have participated in battles along the Amber Road and other trade routes that were important for the continuous prosperity of their society.

Many of the stone carvings from the Nordic Bronze Age depict boats in great numbers as well as groups of armed men manning the boats. Finds such as the Hjortspring boat, among others, give further credence to the theory that Bronze Age people in Scandinavia relied heavily on naval dominance of the waters surrounding their region in order to secure trade and safety.

Ancient DNA and archaeological evidence indicates that people from the Nordic Bronze Age sphere were involved in the conflict at the Tollense valley battlefield in northern Germany (13th century BC),[51] "the largest excavated and archaeologically verifiable battle site of this age in the world".[52]

International contacts

The Nordic Bronze Age maintained intimate trade links with the Tumulus culture and Mycenaean Greece. The Nordic Bronze Age exported amber through the Amber Road, and imported metals in return. During the time of the Nordic Bronze Age, metals, such as copper, tin and gold, were imported into Scandinavia on a massive scale.[53] Copper was imported from Sardinia, Iberia and Cyprus.[53][54] The trade network was briefly disrupted during the Late Bronze Age collapse in the 12th century BC.[55]

Evidence for horse-drawn chariots appears in Scandinavia c. 1700 BC, around the same time as it appears in Greece. In both cases the chariots appear to have come from the region of the Carpathian Basin or the western steppe. Chariot bits and whip handles in Denmark dating from this time feature the same curvilinear designs that are found on contemporary artefacts from the Carpathian Basin and in the elite shaft graves at Mycenae. These designs subsequently appear on Nordic Bronze Age metalwork, including on the gold disc of the Trundholm Sun Chariot. Depictions of chariots also appear in Scandinavian rock art dating from c. 1700, as they do on engraved stone stelae from Mycenae. The introduction of the chariot in Scandinavia coincided with the introduction of socketed spearheads, whose origin Vandkilde (2014) ascribes to the Seima-Turbino culture.[56][57][58]

During the 15th–14th centuries BC the Nordic Bronze Age and Mycenaean Greece shared the use of similar flange-hilted swords, as well as select elements of shared lifestyle, such as campstools, drinking vessels decorated with solar symbols, and tools for body care including razors and tweezers. This "Mycenaean package", including spiral decoration, was directly adopted in southern Scandinavia after 1500 BC, creating "a specific and selective Nordic variety of Mycenaean high culture" that was not adopted in the intermediate region of Central Europe.[7] These similarities can not have come about without intimate contacts, probably through the travels of warriors and mercenaries.[7] Archaeological evidence further indicates the existence in both regions of shared institutions linked to warriors. Specifically, the dual organisation of leadership between a Wanax and a Lawagetas in Mycenaean Greece was apparently replicated in the Nordic Bronze Age. However this dual organization may have also been part of a shared Indo-European tradition.[7] Other similarities have been noted in artistic iconography from both regions and its associated cosmology.[59] Some of the contacts between Scandinavia and Greece were probably conveyed through Central Europe. [7][1]

Trade and cultural contacts have also been noted between the Nordic Bronze Age and New Kingdom Egypt.[60][38]

The contacts during the Late Bronze Age (period IV-VI) were more intensive with Central Europe and Italy. A lot of similarities are seen in art and iconography between different continental Urnfield cultures and the Hallstatt culture. Copper was imported from Central Europe and Italy.

Religion and cult

There is no coherent knowledge about the Nordic Bronze Age religion, its pantheon, world view and how it was practised. Written sources are lacking, but archaeological finds draw a vague and fragmented picture of the religious practices and the nature of the religion of this period. Only some possible sects and only certain possible tribes are known. Some of the best clues come from tumuli, elaborate artifacts, votive offerings and rock carvings scattered across Northern Europe.

Many finds indicate a strong sun-worshipping cult in the Nordic Bronze Age and various animals have been associated with the sun's movement across the sky, including horses, birds, snakes and marine creatures (see also Sól).

A female or mother goddess is believed to have been widely worshipped (see Nerthus).[citation needed][clarification needed] There have been several finds of fertility symbols.

Hieros gamos rites may have been common.

A pair of twin gods are believed to have been worshipped, and is reflected in a duality in all things sacred: where sacrificial artifacts have been buried they are often found in pairs. Sacrifices (animals, weapons, jewellery and humans) often had a strong connection to bodies of water.

Boglands, ponds, streams or lakes were often used as ceremonial and holy places for sacrifices and many artifacts have been found in such locations.

There are many rock carving sites from this period. The rock carvings have been dated through comparison with depicted artifacts, for example bronze axes and swords. Many rock carvings are uncanny in resemblance to those found in the Corded Ware culture. There are also numerous Nordic Stone Age rock carvings, those of northern Scandinavia mostly portray elk.

Ritual instruments such as bronze lurs have been uncovered, especially in the region of Denmark and western Sweden. Lur horns are also depicted in several rock carvings and are believed to have been used in ceremonies.

Remnants of the Bronze Age religion and mythology are believed to exist in Norse mythology and wider Germanic mythology, such as Skinfaxi and Hrímfaxi and Nerthus, and it is believed to itself be descended from the earlier Indo-European religion.

Seamanship

Thousands of rock carvings from the Nordic Bronze Age depict ships, and the large stone burial monuments known as stone ships. Those sites suggest that ships and seafaring played an important role in the culture at large. The depicted ships, most likely represents sewn plank built canoes used for warfare, fishing and trade. These ship types may have their origin as far back as the neolithic period and they continue into the Pre-Roman Iron Age, as exemplified by the Hjortspring boat.[65] 3,600-year-old bronze axes and other tools made from Cypriot copper have been found in the region.[66]

Researchers note that there is great continuity in the way that ships continuously had a strong importance in Scandinavian society. The boat building and seafaring traditions that were established during the Nordic Bronze Age lasted throughout the ages and were further developed upon during the Iron Age. Some archaeologists and historians believe that the culmination of this sea-focused culture was the Viking Age.[67]

Climate

The Nordic Bronze Age was initially characterized by a warm climate that began with a climate change around 2700 BC. The climate was comparable to that of present-day central Germany and northern France and permitted a fairly dense population and good opportunities for farming; for example, grapes were grown in Scandinavia at this time. A minor change in climate occurred between 850 BC and 760 BC, introducing a wetter, colder climate and a more radical climate change began around 650 BC.[68]

Genetics

A June 2015 study published in Nature found the people of the Nordic Bronze Age to be closely genetically related to the Corded Ware culture, the Beaker culture and the Unetice culture. People of the Nordic Bronze Age and Corded Ware show the highest lactose tolerance among Bronze Age Europeans. The study suggested that the Sintashta culture, and its succeeding Andronovo culture, represented an eastward migration of Corded Ware peoples. [a]

In the June 2015 study, the remains of nine individuals of the Northern Bronze Age and earlier Neolithic cultures in Denmark and Sweden from ca. 2850 BC to 500 BC, were analyzed. Among the Neolithic individuals, the three males were found to be carrying haplogroup I1, R1a1a1 and R1b1a1a2a1a1. Among the individuals from the Nordic Bronze Age, two males carried I1, while two carried R1b1a1a2.[69][70][71]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "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."[69]

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  56. ^ Vandkilde, Helle (April 2014). "Breakthrough of the Nordic Bronze Age: Transcultural Warriorhood and a Carpathian Crossroad in the Sixteenth Century BC". European Journal of Archaeology. 17 (4): 602–633. doi:10.1179/1461957114Y.0000000064. S2CID 162256646. In NBA IB, the horse was not yet dominant within cultural expressions, but is nevertheless a candidate for inclusion among the list of novelties which originated from the Carpathian Basin (Kristiansen & Larsson. Belt hooks are sometimes adorned with a horse head. The whip handles mentioned above in the burials at Strantved and Buddinge correspond with Carpathian bone versions. A pair of imported antler bridle cheek-pieces from a bog at Østrup near Roskilde in Zealand also testifies to horse handling. The Østrup cheek-pieces share the geometric zone-organized ornamentation with other Carpathian bone cheek-pieces and bone whip-handles ... These designs are typical of the Otomani-Fuzesabony-Gyolavársand culture and associated metalwork styles, and even adorn material culture inside and above the shaft graves in the two circles in Mycenae. It was precisely decorations like this that were translated to decorate locally made NBA IB metalwork
  57. ^ Pankau, Claudia; Krause, Rüdiger (2017). "Chariots between Africa and China – Distribution and Development of Wagons with Two-Spoked Wheels". In Rupp, Nicole; Beck, Christina; Franke, Gabriele; Wendt, Karl Peter (eds.). Winds of Change: Archaeological Contributions in Honour of Peter Breunig. Verlag Dr. Rudolf Habelt GmbH. pp. 355–371. ISBN 978-3-7749-4074-1. Chariots are evidenced in Scandinavia almost exclusively in the form of rock art, represented as of period I to V/VI. The oldest representations, most likely dating already to ca. 1700 BCE, are found at the site of Simrishamn in southeast Scania. ... This very early date indicates that the Nordic chariot should not be interpreted as embodying Mycenaean influence, but instead traced back to chariots of the Eurasian steppe that arrived via the Carpathian Basin and central Europe. This concurs with the observation of H. Vandkilde (2014) that around 1700 BCE the first Carpathian influences are tangible in the north in the form of socketed lanceheads. Vandkilde traces the lanceheads to the Seima-Turbino complex, which likely played a role during the spread of the chariot to China in ca. 1600 BCE. ... Tracing the Scandinavian chariot back to the Mycenaean chariot, often favoured in older literature, must be dismissed in view of the present state of discussions on chronology, for the oldest Scandinavian chariots probably are 100 years older than those of Mycenae, or at least of the same age.
  58. ^ Maran, Joseph; Van de Moortel, Alexis (October 2014). "A Horse-Bridle Piece with Carpatho-Danubian Connections from Late Helladic I Mitrou and the Emergence of a Warlike Elite in Greece During the Shaft Grave Period". American Journal of Archaeology. 118 (4): 529–548. doi:10.3764/aja.118.4.0529. S2CID 170077187.
  59. ^ Kristiansen, Kristian; Larsson, Thomas B. (2005). "The cosmological structure of Bronze Age society". The Rise of Bronze Age Society. Cambridge University Press. pp. 251–319. ISBN 9780521843638.
  60. ^ Varberg, Jeanette (2014). "Between Egypt, Mesopotamia and Scandinavia: Late Bronze Age glassbeads found in Denmark". Journal of Archaeological Science. 54: 168–181. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2014.11.036.
  61. ^ "The Sun Chariot". Denmark National Museum.
  62. ^ "The belt plate from Langstrup". Denmark National Museum.
  63. ^ Meller, Harald (2021). "The Nebra Sky Disc – astronomy and time determination as a source of power". Time is power. Who makes time?: 13th Archaeological Conference of Central Germany. Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte Halle (Saale). ISBN 978-3-948618-22-3.
  64. ^ "The woman from Skrydstrup". Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  65. ^ Ling 2008. Elevated Rock Art. GOTARC Serie B. Gothenburg Archaeological Thesis 49. Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Gothenburg, Goumlteborg, 2008. ISBN 978-91-85245-34-5.
  66. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 September 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  67. ^ Skoglund, Peter (2008). "Stone Ships: Continuity and Change in Scandinavian Prehistory". World Archaeology. 40 (3): 390–406. doi:10.1080/00438240802261440. ISSN 0043-8243. JSTOR 40388220. S2CID 161302612.
  68. ^ Kane, Njord (1 November 2016). The Viking Stone Age: Birth of the Ax Culture. Spangenhelm Publishing.
  69. ^ a b Allentoft 2015.
  70. ^ Mathieson 2015.
  71. ^ Mathieson 2018.

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nordic, bronze, also, northern, bronze, scandinavian, bronze, period, scandinavian, prehistory, from, 2000, 1750, geographical, rangesouthern, scandinavia, northern, germanyperiodbronze, agedatescirca, 2000, 1750, circa, bcepreceded, bybattle, culture, bell, b. The Nordic Bronze Age also Northern Bronze Age or Scandinavian Bronze Age is a period of Scandinavian prehistory from c 2000 1750 500 BC Nordic Bronze AgeGeographical rangeSouthern Scandinavia northern GermanyPeriodBronze AgeDatescirca 2000 1750 BCE circa 500 BCEPreceded byBattle Axe culture Bell Beaker culture Pitted Ware cultureFollowed byJastorf culture Pre Roman Iron AgeThe Nordic Bronze Age culture emerged about 1750 BC as a continuation of the Battle Axe culture the Scandinavian Corded Ware variant as well as from influence that came from Central Europe 1 This influence most likely came from people similar to those of the Unetice culture since they brought customs that were derived from Unetice or from local interpretations of the Unetice culture located in North Western Germany The metallurgical influences from Central Europe are especially noticeable 2 3 The Bronze Age in Scandinavia can be said to begin shortly after 2000 BC with the introduction and use of bronze tools followed by a more systematic adoption of bronze metalworking technology from 1750 BC 4 5 6 The Nordic Bronze Age maintained close trade links with Mycenaean Greece with whom it shares several striking similarities 7 8 1 9 Some cultural similarities between the Nordic Bronze Age the Sintashta Andronovo culture and peoples of the Rigveda have also been detected a 10 The Nordic Bronze Age region included part of northern Germany 11 and some scholars also include sites in what is now Estonia Finland and Pomerania as part of its cultural sphere 12 13 The people of the Nordic Bronze Age were actively engaged in the export of amber and imported metals in return becoming expert metalworkers With respect to the number and density of metal deposits the Nordic Bronze Age became the richest culture in Europe during its existence 14 15 16 Around the 5th century BC the Nordic Bronze Age was succeeded by the Pre Roman Iron Age and the Jastorf culture The Nordic Bronze Age is often considered ancestral to the Germanic peoples 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Chronology 2 Culture 2 1 Settlements 2 2 Burials 2 3 Agriculture 2 4 Metalwork 2 5 Rock carvings 2 6 Warrior ethos 2 7 International contacts 2 8 Religion and cult 2 9 Seamanship 3 Climate 4 Genetics 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyHistory EditOrigins Edit The Nordic Bronze Age is a successor of the Corded Ware culture in southern Scandinavia and Northern Germany It appears to represent a fusion of elements from the Corded Ware culture and the preceding Pitted Ware culture 18 19 The decisive factor that triggered the change from the Chalcolithic Battle Axe culture into the Nordic Bronze Age is often believed to have been metallurgical influence as well as general cultural influence from Central Europe similar in custom to those of the Unetice culture 20 21 22 Chronology Edit Oscar Montelius who coined the term used for the period divided it into six distinct sub periods in his piece Om tidsbestamning inom bronsaldern med sarskilt avseende pa Skandinavien On Bronze Age dating with particular focus on Scandinavia published in 1885 which is still in wide use His relative chronology has held up well against radiocarbon dating with the exception that the period s start is closer to 1700 BC than 1800 BC as Montelius suggested For Central Europe a different system developed by Paul Reinecke is commonly used as each area has its own artifact types and archaeological periods A broader subdivision is the Early Bronze Age between 1700 BC and 1100 BC and the Late Bronze Age 1100 BC to 550 BC These divisions and periods are followed by the Pre Roman Iron Age Culture EditSettlements Edit Settlement in the Nordic Bronze Age period consisted mainly of single farmsteads which usually consisted of a longhouse plus additional four post built structures helms Longhouses were initially two aisled and after c 1300 BC three aisled structure became normal Some longhouses were exceptionally large up to about 500 m2 in area 23 and have been described as chiefly halls 24 the sitting area of which is the size of a megaron in contemporary Mycenean palaces 23 Larger settlements are also known such as Hallunda and Apalle in Sweden and Voldtofte in Denmark as well as fortified sites specialist workshops for metalwork and ceramic production and dedicated cult houses 25 26 27 28 Settlements were geographically located on higher ground and tended to be concentrated near the sea 29 Certain settlements functioned as regional centres of power trade craft production and ritual activity 30 31 32 The Bronze Age fortified town of Hunenburg bei Watenstedt in northern Germany 12th c BC has been described as a trading post for people from Scandinavia and the Baltic Sea region as well as a cult centre and seat of a ruling elite 33 34 Burials Edit Kivik King s Grave Sweden c 1400 BC Associated with Nordic Bronze Age settlements are burial cairns mounds and cemeteries with interments including oak coffins and urn burials other settlement associations include rock carvings or bronze hoards in wetland sites 29 Some burial mounds are especially large and with respect to the amount of gold and bronze in them extraordinarily rich for this time period Examples of prominent burial mounds include the Haga mound and Kivik King s Grave in Sweden and the Lusehoj in Denmark 35 A minimum of 50 000 burial mounds were constructed between 1500 and 1150 BC in Denmark alone 36 Oak coffin burials dating from the 14th 13th centuries BC contained well preserved mummified bodies along with their clothing and burial goods The bodies were intentionally mummified by watering the burial mounds to create a bog like oxygen free environment within the graves 23 37 38 This practice may have been stimulated by cultural influence from Egypt as it coincided with the appearance of Egyptian artefacts in Scandinavia and the appearance of Baltic amber in Egypt e g in the tomb of Tutankhamun 38 39 However intentional mummification within oak coffin burials has also been noted in Britain at an earlier date c 2300 BC 40 41 The Late Bronze Age King s Grave of Seddin in northern Germany 9th century BC has been described as a Homeric burial due to its close similarity to contemporary elite burials in Greece and Italy 42 43 Agriculture Edit In the Nordic Bronze Age both agriculture including cultivation of wheat millet and barley and animal husbandry keeping of domesticated animals such as cattle sheep and pigs were practiced Fishing and hunting were also sources of food which included shellfish deer elk and other wild animals There is evidence that oxen were used as draught animals domesticated dogs were common but horses were rarer and probably status symbols 29 Metalwork Edit Scandinavian Bronze Age sites present a rich and well preserved legacy of bronze and gold objects These valuable metals were all imported primarily from Central Europe but they were often crafted locally and the craftsmanship and metallurgy of the Nordic Bronze Age was of a high standard The lost wax casting method was used to produce artefacts such as the Trundholm Sun Chariot and the Langstrup belt plate 44 45 The archaeological legacy also encompasses locally crafted wool and wooden objects During the 15th and 14th centuries BC southern Scandinavia produced and deposited more elaborate bronzes in graves and hoards than any other region of Europe 14 As regards the number and density of metal deposits the Nordic Bronze Age became the richest culture in Europe 15 More Bronze Age swords have also been found in Denmark than anywhere else in Europe 15 Uniform crucibles found at metal workshop sites further indicate the mass production of certain metal artefacts 27 Rock carvings Edit The west coast of Sweden namely Bohuslan has the largest concentration of Bronze Age rock carvings in Scandinavia and Scandinavia has the largest number of Bronze Age rock carvings in Europe The west coast of Sweden is home to around 1 500 recorded rock engraving sites with more being discovered every year When the rock carvings were made the area was the coastline but it is now 25 meters above sea level The engravings in the region depict everyday life weapons human figures fishing nets ships chariots plows the sun deer bulls horses and birds By far the most dominant theme is human figures and ships especially ships 10 000 of which have recorded The typical ship depicts a crew of six to thirteen Rock carvings in the late Bronze Age and even the early Iron Age often depict conflict power and mobility 46 Warrior ethos Edit The culture of the Nordic Bronze Age was that of a warrior culture with a strong emphasis on weapons and status 47 Helle Vandkilde of Aarhus University in her publications from 1995 describes most men of the period as having followed a warrior ethos 48 More than 70 of burials dating to the Nordic Bronze Age contain metal objects of various kinds the most common objects being swords and daggers 49 It is noted that the people of the Nordic Bronze Age also placed great importance on helmets of intricate design which they put much effort into making However not all of the weapons and armour of the Nordic Bronze Age were used for warfare Some of them are believed to have been ceremonial especially the helmets Despite the importance of weapons in their society archaeological discoveries suggest that intrasocietal violence was not particularly common in the Nordic Bronze Age especially not when compared to contemporary European Bronze Age cultures 50 The people of the Nordic Bronze Age seem to instead have been directing their military efforts outwards likely against people of neighbouring cultures and are believed to have participated in battles along the Amber Road and other trade routes that were important for the continuous prosperity of their society Many of the stone carvings from the Nordic Bronze Age depict boats in great numbers as well as groups of armed men manning the boats Finds such as the Hjortspring boat among others give further credence to the theory that Bronze Age people in Scandinavia relied heavily on naval dominance of the waters surrounding their region in order to secure trade and safety Ancient DNA and archaeological evidence indicates that people from the Nordic Bronze Age sphere were involved in the conflict at the Tollense valley battlefield in northern Germany 13th century BC 51 the largest excavated and archaeologically verifiable battle site of this age in the world 52 International contacts Edit The Nordic Bronze Age maintained intimate trade links with the Tumulus culture and Mycenaean Greece The Nordic Bronze Age exported amber through the Amber Road and imported metals in return During the time of the Nordic Bronze Age metals such as copper tin and gold were imported into Scandinavia on a massive scale 53 Copper was imported from Sardinia Iberia and Cyprus 53 54 The trade network was briefly disrupted during the Late Bronze Age collapse in the 12th century BC 55 Evidence for horse drawn chariots appears in Scandinavia c 1700 BC around the same time as it appears in Greece In both cases the chariots appear to have come from the region of the Carpathian Basin or the western steppe Chariot bits and whip handles in Denmark dating from this time feature the same curvilinear designs that are found on contemporary artefacts from the Carpathian Basin and in the elite shaft graves at Mycenae These designs subsequently appear on Nordic Bronze Age metalwork including on the gold disc of the Trundholm Sun Chariot Depictions of chariots also appear in Scandinavian rock art dating from c 1700 as they do on engraved stone stelae from Mycenae The introduction of the chariot in Scandinavia coincided with the introduction of socketed spearheads whose origin Vandkilde 2014 ascribes to the Seima Turbino culture 56 57 58 During the 15th 14th centuries BC the Nordic Bronze Age and Mycenaean Greece shared the use of similar flange hilted swords as well as select elements of shared lifestyle such as campstools drinking vessels decorated with solar symbols and tools for body care including razors and tweezers This Mycenaean package including spiral decoration was directly adopted in southern Scandinavia after 1500 BC creating a specific and selective Nordic variety of Mycenaean high culture that was not adopted in the intermediate region of Central Europe 7 These similarities can not have come about without intimate contacts probably through the travels of warriors and mercenaries 7 Archaeological evidence further indicates the existence in both regions of shared institutions linked to warriors Specifically the dual organisation of leadership between a Wanax and a Lawagetas in Mycenaean Greece was apparently replicated in the Nordic Bronze Age However this dual organization may have also been part of a shared Indo European tradition 7 Other similarities have been noted in artistic iconography from both regions and its associated cosmology 59 Some of the contacts between Scandinavia and Greece were probably conveyed through Central Europe 7 1 Trade and cultural contacts have also been noted between the Nordic Bronze Age and New Kingdom Egypt 60 38 The contacts during the Late Bronze Age period IV VI were more intensive with Central Europe and Italy A lot of similarities are seen in art and iconography between different continental Urnfield cultures and the Hallstatt culture Copper was imported from Central Europe and Italy Religion and cult Edit There is no coherent knowledge about the Nordic Bronze Age religion its pantheon world view and how it was practised Written sources are lacking but archaeological finds draw a vague and fragmented picture of the religious practices and the nature of the religion of this period Only some possible sects and only certain possible tribes are known Some of the best clues come from tumuli elaborate artifacts votive offerings and rock carvings scattered across Northern Europe Many finds indicate a strong sun worshipping cult in the Nordic Bronze Age and various animals have been associated with the sun s movement across the sky including horses birds snakes and marine creatures see also Sol A female or mother goddess is believed to have been widely worshipped see Nerthus citation needed clarification needed There have been several finds of fertility symbols Hieros gamos rites may have been common A pair of twin gods are believed to have been worshipped and is reflected in a duality in all things sacred where sacrificial artifacts have been buried they are often found in pairs Sacrifices animals weapons jewellery and humans often had a strong connection to bodies of water Boglands ponds streams or lakes were often used as ceremonial and holy places for sacrifices and many artifacts have been found in such locations There are many rock carving sites from this period The rock carvings have been dated through comparison with depicted artifacts for example bronze axes and swords Many rock carvings are uncanny in resemblance to those found in the Corded Ware culture There are also numerous Nordic Stone Age rock carvings those of northern Scandinavia mostly portray elk Ritual instruments such as bronze lurs have been uncovered especially in the region of Denmark and western Sweden Lur horns are also depicted in several rock carvings and are believed to have been used in ceremonies Remnants of the Bronze Age religion and mythology are believed to exist in Norse mythology and wider Germanic mythology such as Skinfaxi and Hrimfaxi and Nerthus and it is believed to itself be descended from the earlier Indo European religion Nordic Bronze Age culture Solar boat petroglyph Madsebakke at Bornholm Denmark Amphora and golden bowls from Funen Denmark Reconstruction of Daensen folding chair northern Germany Sun cult artifacts The Trundholm sun chariot Denmark c 1400 BC 61 Lur from Brudevaelte Denmark Bronze belt plates collars and arm rings Denmark Haga burial mound Sweden Skallerup ritual vessel Denmark Ceremonial helmets Vekso Denmark Langstrup belt plate Denmark 1400 BC 62 Bronze figurines Denmark Mound burials with oak coffins Borum Eshoj Man in Borum Denmark Stone ship monuments Gotland in Sweden National Museum display Denmark Grave goods Haga burial mound Sweden Ceremonial axe Denmark Golden vessels from Borgbjerg Denmark Bronze animal figurines Denmark Bronze and gold votive items Ceremonial axe Denmark Boat petroglyph Tanum Sweden Votive shields from Froslunda Sweden Gold bowls Denmark Bronze saw mold Sweden Wool clothing Trindhoj man Denmark Clothes from Borum Eshoj Bronze combs Gotland Sweden Bronze razor for shaving Scania Sweden Bronze swords Rorby Denmark dagger tweezers and button Sweden Bronze collar Sweden Miniature gold boats from Nors Denmark Amber sun cross Denmark 63 Balkakra Ritual Object Sweden Skrydstrup woman mummified remains in oak coffin Denmark 64 Men with weapons Tanumshede western Sweden Agriculture Ploughing with bulls Petroglyph depiction from Tanum Sweden Chariot petroglyph Kivik grave Sweden Outline of a Bronze Age longhouse Hunenburg bei Watenstedt central settlement reconstruction c 1000 BC Bronze Age house reconstruction Landa Norway Bronze Age house model National Museum Denmark Seamanship Edit Thousands of rock carvings from the Nordic Bronze Age depict ships and the large stone burial monuments known as stone ships Those sites suggest that ships and seafaring played an important role in the culture at large The depicted ships most likely represents sewn plank built canoes used for warfare fishing and trade These ship types may have their origin as far back as the neolithic period and they continue into the Pre Roman Iron Age as exemplified by the Hjortspring boat 65 3 600 year old bronze axes and other tools made from Cypriot copper have been found in the region 66 Researchers note that there is great continuity in the way that ships continuously had a strong importance in Scandinavian society The boat building and seafaring traditions that were established during the Nordic Bronze Age lasted throughout the ages and were further developed upon during the Iron Age Some archaeologists and historians believe that the culmination of this sea focused culture was the Viking Age 67 Climate EditThe Nordic Bronze Age was initially characterized by a warm climate that began with a climate change around 2700 BC The climate was comparable to that of present day central Germany and northern France and permitted a fairly dense population and good opportunities for farming for example grapes were grown in Scandinavia at this time A minor change in climate occurred between 850 BC and 760 BC introducing a wetter colder climate and a more radical climate change began around 650 BC 68 Genetics EditSee also Motala Archaeogenetics A June 2015 study published in Nature found the people of the Nordic Bronze Age to be closely genetically related to the Corded Ware culture the Beaker culture and the Unetice culture People of the Nordic Bronze Age and Corded Ware show the highest lactose tolerance among Bronze Age Europeans The study suggested that the Sintashta culture and its succeeding Andronovo culture represented an eastward migration of Corded Ware peoples a In the June 2015 study the remains of nine individuals of the Northern Bronze Age and earlier Neolithic cultures in Denmark and Sweden from ca 2850 BC to 500 BC were analyzed Among the Neolithic individuals the three males were found to be carrying haplogroup I1 R1a1a1 and R1b1a1a2a1a1 Among the individuals from the Nordic Bronze Age two males carried I1 while two carried R1b1a1a2 69 70 71 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nordic Bronze Age Bronze Age Europe Bronze Age sword Egtved Girl The King s Grave Stone ships Tanumshede Pomeranian culture Single Grave cultureNotes Edit a b 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 69 References Edit a b c Vandkilde Helle April 2014 Breakthrough of the Nordic Bronze Age Transcultural Warriorhood and a Carpathian Crossroad in the Sixteenth Century BC European Journal of Archaeology 17 4 602 633 doi 10 1179 1461957114Y 0000000064 S2CID 162256646 Bergerbrant Sophie May 2007 Bronze Age Identities Costume Conflict and Contact in Northern Europe 1600 1300 BC PDF Stockholm Studies in Archaeology 43 7 201 via diva portal org Ling Johan Persson Per Olof Billstrom Kjell 14 March 2013 Moving metals II provenancing Scandinavian Bronze Age artefacts by lead isotope and elemental analyses PDF Journal of Archaeological Science 41 107 129 via shfa se Kristiansen Kristian 2010 Decentralized Complexity The Case of Bronze Age Northern Europe Pathways to Power Fundamental Issues in Archaeology Springer New York NY pp 169 192 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 6300 0 7 ISBN 978 1 4419 6299 7 The northern Bronze Age may be said to begin shortly after 2000 BC with the introduction and use of simple bronze tools especially axes At the same time huge longhouses for large chiefly households emerged With the more systematic adoption of metalworking bronze technology after 1750 BC a diversified use of new tools weapons and ornaments made of bronze appeared together with a new warrior elite Vandkilde Helle 2004 Bronze Age Scandinavia In Bogucki Peter Crabtree Pam J eds Ancient Europe 8000 B C to A D 1000 Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World p 73 ISBN 0 684 80668 1 The Bronze Age proper commenced c 1700 B C and concluded c 500 B C but metals became socially integrated by about 2000 B C during the Late Neolithic period already a bronze age in all but name Norgaard HW Pernicka E Vandkilde H 2019 On the trail of Scandinavia s early metallurgy Provenance transfer and mixing PLOS ONE 14 7 e0219574 Bibcode 2019PLoSO 1419574N doi 10 1371 journal pone 0219574 PMC 6655661 PMID 31339904 As early as c 4400 BC there are signs of a faint awareness of copper technologies in Scandinavia in the form of rare imports of copper axes into the region s Late Mesolithic communities A thousand years later local metallurgy was likely practiced in the Middle Neolithic Funnelbeaker culture only to disappear again subsequently During most of the third millennium metallurgy seems absent from the region even if experiments with casting copper axes and hammering sheet ornaments reappear in Bell Beaker environments in Jutland 2400 2100 BC At 2000 BC however a copper based technology begins to achieve full economic and social integration in Scandinavia simultaneously with the spread of bronze or copper with similar properties across Europe a b c d e Kristiansen amp Suchowska Ducke 2015 pp 371 372 Gubanov 2012 pp 99 103 Kristiansen Kristian Larsson Thomas B 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press p 186 ISBN 9780521843638 In the Nordic Bronze Age of period 2 one finds more east Mediterranean and Mycenaean influences in metalwork prestige goods and cosmology than in any other region in Europe Kristiansen Kristian 2011 Bridging India and Scandinavia Institutional Transmission and Elite Conquest during the Bronze Age Interweaving worlds systemic interactions in Eurasia 7th to 1st millennia BC Oxbow Books pp 243 265 ISBN 978 1 84217 998 7 Vandkilde Helle 2004 Bronze Age Scandinavia In Bogucki Peter Crabtree Pam J eds Ancient Europe 8000 B C to A D 1000 Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World p 73 ISBN 0 684 80668 1 The core region of the classic Nordic Bronze Age is southern Scandinavia consisting of Denmark Schleswig and Scania The adjoining northern European lowland in present day Germany as well as southern Norway and south central Sweden can be considered to be closely associated Minkevicius Karolis Podenas Vytenis Urbonaite Ube Migle Ubis Edvinas Kisieliene Dalia 1 May 2020 New evidence on the southeast Baltic Late Bronze Age agrarian intensification and the earliest AMS dates of Lens culinaris and Vicia faba Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 29 3 327 338 doi 10 1007 s00334 019 00745 2 ISSN 1617 6278 S2CID 202194880 Bronze Age Finland SpottingHistory com www spottinghistory com Retrieved 30 November 2020 a b Kristiansen amp Suchowska Ducke 2015 p 369 a b c Frei 2019 Kristiansen Kristian Larsson Thomas B 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press p 186 ISBN 9780521843638 Qualitatively the artistic and technical expressions of the Nordic Bronze Age are above anything in Europe except Minoan Mycenaean culture quantitatively there is no region in Europe with such an accumulation of high quality weapons and ornaments during the period 1500 1000 BC and that includes the Minoan Mycenaean culture Schmidt 1991 pp 129 133 Zvelebil 1997 pp 431 435 Thomas 1992 p 295 Stenskold Eva 2004 The Telling of a Late Neolithic Story Stone and Metal in Southern Sweden 2350 1700 BC Stockholm Studies in Archaeology 34 7 ISSN 0349 4128 via diva portal Norgaard Heide W 2018 Bronze Age Metalwork Techniques and traditions in the Nordic Bronze Age 1500 1100 BC Archaeopress doi 10 2307 j ctvndv72s JSTOR j ctvndv72s S2CID 202513736 North European Symposium for Archaeological Textiles X Vol 5 Oxbow Books 2010 ISBN 978 1 84217 370 1 JSTOR j ctt1cfr79q a b c Randsborg Klavs 2007 Bronze Age Oak Coffin Graves IX Lure of the Sun Acta Archaeologica 77 1 61 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0390 2006 00046 x Kristiansen Kristian 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press p 278 ISBN 9780521843638 Thrane Henrik 2013 Scandinavia The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age Oxford University Press pp 746 764 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199572861 013 0041 Goldhahn Joakim 2013 Rethinking Bronze Age Cosmology A North European Perspective The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age Oxford University Press pp 248 265 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199572861 013 0014 ISBN 9780199572861 a b Wilkes Adam 2018 The Nordic Bronze Age academia edu Elliott Rachel 2020 Haga in context An analysis of the Haga complex in the Bronze Age landscape of the Malar Valley region PDF Thesis Uppsala university a b c Thrane Henrik Scandinavian Bronze Age in Peregrine Peter N Ember Melvin eds Encyclopedia of Prehistory vol 4 Europe pp 299 314 Elliott Rachel 2020 Haga in context An analysis of the Haga complex in the Bronze Age landscape of the Malar Valley region PDF Thesis Uppsala University Henriksen Mogens 2021 Voldtofte a Bronze Age power centre from south western Funen Outlining 180 years of research and still working Arbogen Odense Bys Museer Odense City Museums pp 70 91 ISBN 978 87 902674 0 7 Melheim Lene 2016 Bronze casting and cultural connections Bronze Age workshops at Hunn Norway Praehistorische Zeitschrift 91 1 42 67 doi 10 1515 pz 2016 0003 S2CID 165147445 Speiseplatz der Gotter Archaeologie Online 2014 Ausgrabungen in der Hunenburg Ein Herrschaftssitz der Bronzezeit Archaeologie Online 2007 Andren Anders 2013 Places Monuments and Objects The Past in Ancient Scandinavia Scandinavian Studies 85 3 267 281 doi 10 5406 scanstud 85 3 0267 ISSN 0036 5637 JSTOR 10 5406 scanstud 85 3 0267 Holst Mads Kahler 2013 Bronze Age Herostrats Ritual Political and Domestic Economies in Early Bronze Age Denmark Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 79 265 296 doi 10 1017 ppr 2013 14 S2CID 129517784 Aufderheide Arthur 2003 The Scientific Study of Mummies Cambridge University Press p 183 ISBN 9780521818261 a b c Iversen Rune 2014 Bronze Age acrobats Denmark Egypt Crete World Archaeology 46 2 242 255 doi 10 1080 00438243 2014 886526 S2CID 162668376 Smith Jeanette 2014 Between Egypt Mesopotamia and Scandinavia Late Bronze Age glassbeads found in Denmark Journal of Archaeological Science 54 168 181 doi 10 1016 j jas 2014 11 036 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 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 S2CID 53412188 Hansen Svend 2018 Seddin ein homerisches Begrabnis Arbeitsberichte zur Bodendenkmalpflege in Brandenburg 33 Brandenburgisches Landesamt fur Denkmalpflege und Archaologisches Landesmuseum pp 65 84 ISBN 978 3 910011 92 2 Nykamp Moritz 2021 Towards timing and stratigraphy of the Bronze Age burial mound royal tomb Konigsgrab of Seddin Brandenburg northeastern Germany E amp G Quaternary Science Journal 70 1 1 17 Bibcode 2021EGQSJ 70 1N doi 10 5194 egqsj 70 1 2021 S2CID 231839079 Norgaard Heide 2018 Bronze Age Metalwork Techniques and traditions in the Nordic Bronze Age 1500 1100 BC Archaeopess ISBN 9781789690200 Trundholm Sun Chariot World Archaeology 19 January 2017 Retrieved 29 April 2022 Douglas Price 2015 p 196 Bergerbrant Sophie May 2007 Bronze Age Identities Costume Conflict and Contact in Northern Europe 1600 1300 BC PDF Stockholm Studies in Archaeology 43 38 via diva portal Vandkilde Helle Northover Jeremy P 1996 From stone to bronze the metalwork of the late neolithic and earliest bronze age in Denmark Moesgard Aarhus Jutland Archaeological Society ISBN 978 87 7288 582 7 OCLC 36181183 Nerman Birger 1954 The early Nordic Bronze Age A time before the Vikings PDF Journal of Swedish Antiquarian Research 257 258 via diva portal Wikborg Jonas 2014 Bronze Age lifestyle Smiths pastoralists and farmers in the Northern edge of Europe PDF Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis 22 65 via sau Nerman Birger 1954 Low Prevalence of Lactase Persistence in Bronze Age Europe Indicates Ongoing Strong Selection over the Last 3 000 Years Current Biology 30 21 Bowdler Neil 22 May 2011 Early Bronze Age battle site found on German river bank BBC News Retrieved 11 March 2017 a b Kristiansen amp Suchowska Ducke 2015 p 367 Ling Johan Stos Gale Zofia February 2015 Representations of oxhide ingots in Scandinavian rock art the sketchbook of a Bronze Age traveller Antiquity 89 343 191 209 doi 10 15184 aqy 2014 1 S2CID 162941422 Kristiansen amp Suchowska Ducke 2015 p 362 Vandkilde Helle April 2014 Breakthrough of the Nordic Bronze Age Transcultural Warriorhood and a Carpathian Crossroad in the Sixteenth Century BC European Journal of Archaeology 17 4 602 633 doi 10 1179 1461957114Y 0000000064 S2CID 162256646 In NBA IB the horse was not yet dominant within cultural expressions but is nevertheless a candidate for inclusion among the list of novelties which originated from the Carpathian Basin Kristiansen amp Larsson Belt hooks are sometimes adorned with a horse head The whip handles mentioned above in the burials at Strantved and Buddinge correspond with Carpathian bone versions A pair of imported antler bridle cheek pieces from a bog at Ostrup near Roskilde in Zealand also testifies to horse handling The Ostrup cheek pieces share the geometric zone organized ornamentation with other Carpathian bone cheek pieces and bone whip handles These designs are typical of the Otomani Fuzesabony Gyolavarsand culture and associated metalwork styles and even adorn material culture inside and above the shaft graves in the two circles in Mycenae It was precisely decorations like this that were translated to decorate locally made NBA IB metalwork Pankau Claudia Krause Rudiger 2017 Chariots between Africa and China Distribution and Development of Wagons with Two Spoked Wheels In Rupp Nicole Beck Christina Franke Gabriele Wendt Karl Peter eds Winds of Change Archaeological Contributions in Honour of Peter Breunig Verlag Dr Rudolf Habelt GmbH pp 355 371 ISBN 978 3 7749 4074 1 Chariots are evidenced in Scandinavia almost exclusively in the form of rock art represented as of period I to V VI The oldest representations most likely dating already to ca 1700 BCE are found at the site of Simrishamn in southeast Scania This very early date indicates that the Nordic chariot should not be interpreted as embodying Mycenaean influence but instead traced back to chariots of the Eurasian steppe that arrived via the Carpathian Basin and central Europe This concurs with the observation of H Vandkilde 2014 that around 1700 BCE the first Carpathian influences are tangible in the north in the form of socketed lanceheads Vandkilde traces the lanceheads to the Seima Turbino complex which likely played a role during the spread of the chariot to China in ca 1600 BCE Tracing the Scandinavian chariot back to the Mycenaean chariot often favoured in older literature must be dismissed in view of the present state of discussions on chronology for the oldest Scandinavian chariots probably are 100 years older than those of Mycenae or at least of the same age Maran Joseph Van de Moortel Alexis October 2014 A Horse Bridle Piece with Carpatho Danubian Connections from Late Helladic I Mitrou and the Emergence of a Warlike Elite in Greece During the Shaft Grave Period American Journal of Archaeology 118 4 529 548 doi 10 3764 aja 118 4 0529 S2CID 170077187 Kristiansen Kristian Larsson Thomas B 2005 The cosmological structure of Bronze Age society The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press pp 251 319 ISBN 9780521843638 Varberg Jeanette 2014 Between Egypt Mesopotamia and Scandinavia Late Bronze Age glassbeads found in Denmark Journal of Archaeological Science 54 168 181 doi 10 1016 j jas 2014 11 036 The Sun Chariot Denmark National Museum The belt plate from Langstrup Denmark National Museum Meller Harald 2021 The Nebra Sky Disc astronomy and time determination as a source of power Time is power Who makes time 13th Archaeological Conference of Central Germany Landesmuseum fur Vorgeschichte Halle Saale ISBN 978 3 948618 22 3 The woman from Skrydstrup Retrieved 2 May 2022 Ling 2008 Elevated Rock Art GOTARC Serie B Gothenburg Archaeological Thesis 49 Department of Archaeology and Ancient History University of Gothenburg Goumlteborg 2008 ISBN 978 91 85245 34 5 Cypriot Copper Made Axes Found In Bronze Age Sweden Archived from the original on 13 September 2018 Retrieved 13 September 2018 Skoglund Peter 2008 Stone Ships Continuity and Change in Scandinavian Prehistory World Archaeology 40 3 390 406 doi 10 1080 00438240802261440 ISSN 0043 8243 JSTOR 40388220 S2CID 161302612 Kane Njord 1 November 2016 The Viking Stone Age Birth of the Ax Culture Spangenhelm Publishing a b Allentoft 2015 Mathieson 2015 Mathieson 2018 Bibliography EditAllentoft ME 11 June 2015 Population genomics of Bronze Age Eurasia Nature Nature Research 522 7555 167 172 Bibcode 2015Natur 522 167A doi 10 1038 nature14507 PMID 26062507 S2CID 4399103 Dabrowski J 1989 Nordische Kreis un Kulturen Polnischer Gebiete Die Bronzezeit im Ostseegebiet Ein Rapport der Kgl Schwedischen Akademie der Literatur Geschichte und Alter unt Altertumsforschung uber das Julita Symposium 1986 Ed Ambrosiani B Kungl Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien Konferenser 22 Stockholm Davidson H R Ellis and Gelling Peter The Chariot of the Sun and other Rites and Symbols of the Northern European Bronze Age K Demakopoulou ed Gods and Heroes of the European Bronze Age published on the occasion of the exhibition Gods and Heroes of the Bronze Age Europe at the Time of Ulysses from 19 December 1998 to 5 April 1999 at the National Museum of Denmark Copenhagen London 1999 ISBN 0 500 01915 0 Demougeot E La formation de l Europe et les invasions barbares Paris Editions Montaigne 1969 1974 Douglas Price Theron 2015 Ancient Scandinavia An Archaeological History from the First Humans to the Vikings Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190231972 Elliott Rachel 2020 Haga in context An analysis of the Haga complex in the Bronze Age landscape of the Malar Valley region PDF Thesis Uppsala University Frei Karin Margarita 21 August 2019 Mapping human mobility during the third and second millennia BC in present day Denmark PLOS One PLOS 14 8 e0219850 Bibcode 2019PLoSO 1419850F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0219850 PMC 6703675 PMID 31433798 Goldhahn Joakim 2013 Rethinking Bronze Age Cosmology A North European Perspective The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age Oxford University Press pp 248 265 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199572861 013 0014 ISBN 9780199572861 Gubanov I B June 2012 Grave Circle B at Mycenae in the Context of Links Between the Eastern Mediterranean and Scandinavia in the Bronze Age Archaeology Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia Elsevier B V 40 2 99 103 doi 10 1016 j aeae 2012 08 011 Henriksen Mogens 2021 Voldtofte a Bronze Age power centre from south western Funen Outlining 180 years of research and still working Arbogen Odense Bys Museer Odense City Museums pp 70 91 ISBN 978 87 902674 0 7 Holst Mads Kahler 2013 Bronze Age Herostrats Ritual Political and Domestic Economies in Early Bronze Age Denmark Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 79 265 296 doi 10 1017 ppr 2013 14 S2CID 129517784 Iversen Rune 2014 Bronze Age acrobats Denmark Egypt Crete World Archaeology 46 2 242 255 doi 10 1080 00438243 2014 886526 S2CID 162668376 Kaliff Anders 2001 Gothic Connections Contacts between eastern Scandinavia and the southern Baltic coast 1000 BC 500 AD Kristiansen Kristian Suchowska Ducke Paulina December 2015 Connected Histories the Dynamics of Bronze Age Interaction and Trade 1500 1100 bc Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society Cambridge University Press 81 361 392 doi 10 1017 ppr 2015 17 Kristiansen Kristian 2005 The Rise of Bronze Age Society Cambridge University Press p 278 ISBN 9780521843638 Kristiansen Kristian 2010 Decentralized Complexity The Case of Bronze Age Northern Europe Pathways to Power Fundamental Issues in Archaeology Springer New York NY pp 169 192 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 6300 0 7 ISBN 978 1 4419 6299 7 Mathieson Iain 23 November 2015 Genome wide patterns of selection in 230 ancient Eurasians Nature Nature Research 528 7583 499 503 Bibcode 2015Natur 528 499M doi 10 1038 nature16152 PMC 4918750 PMID 26595274 Mathieson Iain 21 February 2018 The Genomic History of Southeastern Europe Nature Nature Research 555 7695 197 203 Bibcode 2018Natur 555 197M doi 10 1038 nature25778 PMC 6091220 PMID 29466330 Melheim Lene 2016 Bronze casting and cultural connections Bronze Age workshops at Hunn Norway Praehistorische Zeitschrift 91 1 42 67 doi 10 1515 pz 2016 0003 S2CID 165147445 Montelius Oscar 1885 Om tidsbestamning inom bronsaldern med sarskilt avseende pa Skandinavien Musset L Les invasions les vagues germanique Paris Presses universitaires de France 1965 Nykamp Moritz 2021 Towards timing and stratigraphy of the Bronze Age burial mound royal tomb Konigsgrab of Seddin Brandenburg northeastern Germany E amp G Quaternary Science Journal 70 1 1 17 Bibcode 2021EGQSJ 70 1N doi 10 5194 egqsj 70 1 2021 S2CID 231839079 Norgaard Heide W 2018 Bronze Age Metalwork Techniques and traditions in the Nordic Bronze Age 1500 1100 BC Archaeopress doi 10 2307 j ctvndv72s JSTOR j ctvndv72s S2CID 202513736 Schmidt Karl Horst in German 1991 The Celts and the Ethnogenesis of the Germanic People Historische Sprachforschung Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht 104 1 129 152 JSTOR 40849016 Thomas Homer L 1992 Archaeology And Indo European Comparative Linguistics In Polome Edgar C ed Reconstructing Languages and Cultures Vol 1 Walter de Gruyter pp 281 315 ISBN 9783110126716 Thrane Henrik 2013 Scandinavia The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age Oxford University Press pp 746 764 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199572861 013 0041 Varberg Jeanette 2014 Between Egypt Mesopotamia and Scandinavia Late Bronze Age glassbeads found in Denmark Journal of Archaeological Science 54 168 181 doi 10 1016 j jas 2014 11 036 Zvelebil Marek 1997 Pitted Ware And Related Cultures Of Neolithic Northern Europe In Bogucki Peter I Crabtree Pam J eds Ancient Europe 8000 B C A D 1000 Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World Ancient Europe 8000 B C A D 1000 An Encyclopedia of the Barbarian World Vol 1 Scribner pp 431 435 ISBN 068480669X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nordic Bronze Age amp oldid 1144697397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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