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Separation, Hybridisation, and Networks : Globular Amphora Sedentary Pastoralists Ca. 3200-2700 BCE.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Müller, Johannes.
- Series:
- Scales of Transformation Series
- Scales of Transformation Series ; v.17
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Globular Amphora culture.
- Environmental archaeology.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (398 pages)
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Leiden : Sidestone Press, 2023.
- Summary:
- Around 3000 BCE, a turning point occurred in Europe: Long-existing regional societies entered into a process of transformation. The result is a world in which new global communication networks brought different regions closer together. From 3200/3100 BCE, the Globular Amphora phenomenon (GA) was the trailblazer in Eastern and Central Europe. Due to a focus on pastoral subsistence, in comparison to more agrarian economic systems, new ritual practices formed in light of a more flexible form of settlement. We initially observe the symbolic separation manifested through the "Globular Amphora" in an area between the Lower Vistula and Middle Elbe. Communication networks form rapidly in the West (the Elbe-Network) and in the East (the Vistula-Podolia Network). The monopolisation of the practice of double cattle burials connected regional patterns of mobility in the lowlands between the Elbe and the Dniester.With the aid of spatial analyses of the systems of symbols (Zeichensysteme) on locally/micro-regionally produced Globular Amphorae, a proxy is developed for the degree of similarity of the GA-habitus in different regions. Bayesian modelling and spatial visualisations of the radiometric dates indicate temporal sequences and synchronic changes within the newly-developed "global" GA-connectivity.Genetic analyses attest to the indigenous character of the GA individuals in Central Europe. Both isotopic and ceramic technology analyses provide evidence for a mobility radius of up to 50 km for the local groups.In the main phase of the GA, the Elbe and Vistula-Podolia networks appear separated. In the West the core areas are in Bohemia/Moravia, the Middle Elbe-Saale-Havel area, and the north-western Baltic areas; in the East, they are along the Vistula, in Podolia-Volhynia, and in the Siret area.GA networks are mostly symbiotically connected with the local
- and regional agricultural groups. The GA is, among other things, heavily involved in the formation of the multicultural Corded Ware phenomenon. Its end in 2600 BCE is linked to processes of change which also affected the change from Corded Ware to the Bell Beaker phenomenon. Only in the eastern areas, where a strong reciprocal influence with elements from the Steppe existed, can GA still be found until c. 2400 BCE.The emergence of the GA networks is described as social separation on the basis of social disharmonies within the Funnel Beaker societies, which is also visible via a reduction of the human impact in the palaeoecological archives. A new connectivity of diversified groups developed as a form of levelling mechanism, which in the long-term was part of the transformation of the entirety of European prehistory around 3000 BCE.
- Contents:
- Intro
- Preface of the series editors
- Preface of the author
- 1. Globular Amphora communities: A matter of connectivity and transformation
- 1.1 Definitions
- 1.1.1 Transformation
- 1.1.2 Connectivity and globalisation
- 1.1.3 Mobility
- 1.1.4 Habitus
- 1.2 Globular Amphora perspectives
- 1.2.1 Globular Amphora and globalisation
- 1.2.2 Globular Amphora and separation: Identity construction?
- 1.2.3 Globular Amphora: Translocation and networks
- 1.3 Methods
- 1.4 Integration into previous research
- 1.4.1 Regional and transregional studies
- 1.4.2 Chronologies
- 1.4.3 Settlement patterns and economy
- 1.4.4 Graves
- 1.4.5 Distribution model
- 1.5 Distribution across space and landscape
- 2. Space and decoration: Patterns of Globular Amphorae
- 2.1 Research questions and methodology: General comments
- 2.1.1 Research questions
- 2.1.2 Methods
- 2.1.3 Sources
- 2.2 The database: Recorded ceramic finds
- 2.3 Investigations of vessel forms
- 2.3.1 Vessel types and individual observations
- 2.3.2 Vessel types: Univariate and multivariate analyses
- 2.3.3 Results and interpretation
- 2.4 Investigations on decoration techniques
- 2.4.1 Decoration techniques and individual observations
- 2.4.2 Correspondence analysis and spatial distribution of decoration techniques
- 2.4.3 Results and interpretation
- 2.5 Investigations on decoration motifs
- 2.5.1 Decoration motifs and individual observations
- 2.5.2 Decoration motifs: Univariate and multivariate analyses
- 2.5.3 Results and interpretation
- 2.6 Comprehensive analysis
- 2.6.1 Multivariate description of Globular Amphora ceramics
- 2.6.2 Interpretation
- 3. Absolute chronological dating of the Globular Amphora phenomenon
- 3.1 Methodological procedure
- 3.1.1 Approach
- 3.2 The database
- 3.3 Regional investigations with Bayesian dates
- 3.3.1 Western GAC.
- 3.3.2 Central GAC
- 3.3.3 Eastern GAC
- 3.4 Overall results of Bayesian dating
- 3.4.1 Beginnings
- 3.4.2 Decoration change
- 3.4.3 Disappearance
- 3.4.4 Modelling
- 3.4.5 Interpretation: Spatial distribution pattern
- 3.5 Overall consideration of the individual radiometric dates
- 3.5.1 Mapping of the individual 14C data
- 3.5.2 Spatial-temporal distribution according to hexagonal surfaces
- 3.6 Summary and consequences
- 4. The Middle Elbe-Saale region: A mosaic of diverse cultural and social practices around 3000 BCE
- 4.1 The Central German Bernburg society: Chronology and interpretation
- 4.1.1 Basic chronological trends
- 4.1.2 Chronology of the graves
- 4.1.3 Chronology of the chamber graves
- 4.1.4 Chronology of the settlement pits
- 4.1.5 Overall results: The chronology of a ceramic style
- 4.1.6 Interpretation: The Bernburg style in the multicultural environment of the Central German Late Neolithic
- 4.2 The Central German Globular Amphora societies: Chronology and interpretation
- 4.3 Economy and settlement patterns: A complex mosaic
- 4.3.1 Bernburg subsistence economy
- 4.3.2 Settlement distribution
- 4.3.3 Settlement types
- 4.3.4 Pit huts, posts and houses
- 4.3.5 Settlement patterns and chronology
- 4.4 Patrilocality and admixture
- 4.5 Consequences: Symbiotic relationships
- 4.6 A Western GAC pattern?
- 4.7 Conclusions
- 5. Environment, economy and nutrition of the Globular Amphora communities
- 5.1 The environment of the GAC
- 5.1.1 Topography, soils and climate
- 5.1.2 Vegetation and vegetation changes
- 5.1.3 Summary
- 5.2 Economic data from the Western GAC
- 5.2.1 Central Germany and the Southwest Baltic regions
- 5.2.2 Bohemia/Moravia
- 5.3 Economic data from Kuyavia and Lesser Poland
- 5.3.1 Flint raw material supply and tool use.
- 5.3.2 Examples of local economies: Rocks, Janowice and Wilostowo
- 5.3.3 Summary
- 5.4 Eastern Globular Amphorae
- 5.5 Economic catchment areas? Ceramic transport as a proxy
- 5.6 Overall interpretation
- 6. Discernible domestic activities: Settlement patterns and population densities
- 6.1 Western GAC
- 6.1.1 Central Germany and Northwest Germany
- 6.1.2 Bohemia/Moravia
- 6.2 Central Group
- 6.3 Summary and interpretation
- 6.4 Spatial patterns of GAC domestic sites
- 6.5 Population densities
- 7. Scales of Mobility: The historical dimension of the Globular Amphora phenomenon
- 7.1 Kinship and ancestry of GAC individuals: The database
- 7.2 Genetic continuities between Middle and Late Neolithic Groups and the GAC
- 7.3 Regional variances
- 7.3.1 Western Germany
- 7.3.2 Middle Elbe-Saale region
- 7.3.3 Bohemia
- 7.3.4 Northern Poland
- 7.3.5 Lesser Poland
- 7.3.6 Western Ukraine
- 7.4 The Central European Globular Amphora societies and the emergence of the Corded Ware societies
- 7.5 Kinship structures and marriage practices
- 7.6 Scales of sedentism and mobility of a phenomenon with new ritual practices: the Globular Amphora societies
- 8. Separation and hybridisation on a global scale: The Globular Amphora networks
- 8.1 A model
- References
- Plates
- Supplements
- Blank Page.
- Notes:
- Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
- Part of the metadata in this record was created by AI, based on the text of the resource.
- Other Format:
- Print version: Müller, Johannes Separation, Hybridisation, and Networks
- ISBN:
- 9789464270501
- 9464270500
- OCLC:
- 1410592450
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