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European Kingdoms

Early Cultures

 

Galician Bronze (Bronze Age) (Iberia)
c.1500 - 900 BC

FeatureThe system which has evolved to catalogue the various archaeological expressions of human progress is one which involves cultures. The task of cataloguing the vast range of human cultures which emerged from Africa and the Near East right up until human expansion reached the Americas is covered in the related feature (see link, right).

Early Iberia formed the south-western peninsula of Europe and comprises the modern countries of Portugal and Spain, plus the principality of Andorra and the British crown colony of Gibraltar. The peninsula's role in human development played a notable role in the first millennium BC, even before the coming of imperial ambitions which reached its southern and eastern shores.

The three thousand year-old Iberian Neolithic experienced some difficulties towards the end of the fourth millennium BC, seemingly as part of a wider climate-related transition which also affected Sumer. The early Chalcolithic (Copper Age) became dominant, leading directly into the Iberian Bronze Age around 2800 BC.

The Galician Bronze in Iberia was located in the peninsula's north-western corner, taking in Spain's Galicia and the northern reaches of Portugal. It emerged alongside the neighbouring Asturian-Cantabrian Bronze to incorporate the slightly earlier-appearing Montelavar group or horizon. Part of a relatively recent archaeological concept of a North-Western Iberian Bronze, this region would later be dominated by the Gallaeci tribal confederation.

While there have been some problems in collating the archaeological evidence for this region, there appears little doubt that the Bronze Age in Galicia was a period of social and cultural change, much of it due to mining and trade. Galicia was very much part of the Atlantic Bronze Age (or ABA) trade network.

The people here were able to access artefacts from other ABA regions, but also from the Mediterranean, quite possibly by way of the Phoenicians. Halfway through this period it was Phoenician traders who set up their first Iberian colony in Gadir.

Above all was the increase in the number of human settlements and increases in their sizes which led to changes in society and the development of a hierarchical system. Agriculture also benefited, with farming being carried out around the new settlements. Population growth naturally followed, with some of it coming from outsiders who were attracted by the region's improvements.

This was an era which was very much determined by mining and metallurgy. Centres in which Galician smiths could work were very much needed which, in turn, led to settlements being created which, again, increased in size. By the end of this period the first truly fortified settlements were emerging, heralding the start of the Castro culture.

It was also an era of greater interaction with the rest of the world, with Galician mined metal being used to craft various artefacts such as weapons and jewellery which began to circulate not only across the Iberian peninsula but throughout Europe, including Scandinavia. It also saw a change in the funerary rites and the arrival of burial places in dedicated necropoli, much of the available archaeological evidence being based on the analysis of this change.

A report delivered during a recent, twenty-first century archaeological congress showed the process of settlement formation and progression to have followed this general pattern: camps or transitory structures; then hamlets; then villages with more complex distributions of space and resources (including dwellings, workshops, and storage areas); then settlements being relocated to higher, more protected locations and with bigger dwellings in more varied shapes and forms; and then fortified villages which led into the Castro cultural period.

It has been proposed that Cogotas I, the Asturian-Cantabrian Bronze, the Galician Bronze, and the Western Bronze were those areas which were most heavily influenced by the Bell Beaker phenomenon, and therefore contributed to the gradual Indo-Europeanisation of the peninsula's western and central regions. Direct Bell Beaker influence on the Asturian-Cantabrian was light and indirect, while its effects on the Galician are not yet fully clear.


Egtved girl of the Bronze Age

(Information by Trish Wilson & Peter Kessler, with additional information by Edward Dawson, from Ceremonial spaces from Late Bronze Age to Roman in Cantabrian hillforts, Angel Villa Valdes, from De aldea fortificada a Caput Civitatis?, Angel Villa Valdes (in Spanish), from A Provenance Study of Early Bronze Age Artefacts Found in Asturias (Spain), A Reguera-Galan, T Barreiro-Grille, M Moldovan, L Lobo, M Á de Blas Cortina, & J I García Alonso, from Settlements and Houses in Galicia in the Middle and Late Bronze Age, M Pilar Prieto-Martinez & Mikel Diaz-Rodriguez, from Portuguese Castros - The Evolution of the Habitat and Proto-Urbanization Process, Armando Coelho Ferreira da Silva, from Mycenaean Contacts with the Iberian Peinsular during the Late Bronze Age, Alfredo Mederos Martin, from The horse in the Iberian peninsula, Arre Caballo, from The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World, David W Anthony, from The Archaeology of Bronze Age Iberia, Gonzalo Aranda Jiménez, Sandra Montón-Subías, & Margarita Sánchez Romero (Routledge, 2019), from Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (Departamento de Prehistoria, Trabajos de Prehistoria, Vols 26-51, in Spanish), from Amigos del museo arqueológico de Lorca, Salvador Fontela, Juan Antonio Gómez, & Miguel Miras (2004), from Atlantic Seaways, Barry Cunliffe, from Iberia, the Atlantic Bronze Age and the Mediterranean, Brendan O'Connor, from Bronze Age Iberia, Vicente Lull, Rafael Mico, Cristina Rihuete Herrada, & Roberto Risch, from First Bronzes of NW Iberia - The Data from the Fraga dos Corvos Habitat Site, Joao Carlos Senna-Martinez, Elsa Luís, Maria Fátima Araújo, Pedro Valério, from Contacto cultural entre el Mediterráneo y el Atlántico (siglos XII-VIII ane), S Celestino, N Rafel, & X-L Armada (Eds, Consejo superior de Investigaciones Cientificas Escuela Española de Historia y Arqueología en Roma, in Spanish), from Vida y muerte de una espada atlántica del Bronce Final en Europa: Reconstrucción de los procesos de fabricación, uso y destrucción, Bénédicte Quilliec (in Spanish), from Les ors de l'Europe atlantique à l'âge du bronze, Barbara Regine Armbruster (in French), and from External Links: The Beaker phenomenon and the genomic transformation of northwest Europe (Nature), and Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa (in Spanish), and Celtiberia.net (in Spanish), and Lista de pueblos prerromanos de Iberia (in Spanish, Hispanoteca.eu), and Euskomedia (in Spanish).)

c.1500 BC

The Galician Bronze emerges in the middle Iberian Bronze Age and within the wider archaeological concept of a North-Western Iberian Bronze. Its arrival also signals an end date for the concept of a Montelavar horizon of archaeological remains.

Petroglyphs of the Galician Bronze
The petroglyphs at Mogor Beach overlook the Atlantic around Galicia's Ria of Pontevedra, with the 'Labyrinth Stone' (or Pedra do Labirinto) one of the more famous carved stones which seem to represent mazes and labyrinths, dated to the early Bronze Age of about 2000 BC

It is located in Iberia's north-western corner, forming part of the Atlantic coast. This is around the same time as the Argaric culture in south-eastern Iberia is fading into the Post-Argaric.

The neighbouring Asturian-Cantabrian Bronze, the Western Bronze in western-central Iberia, and the more southerly Western Andalusian Bronze also all emerge at this approximate time.

c.1300 BC

The Atlantic Bronze Age begins to form along the Atlantic coast of France, specifically between Brittany and Gironde. It quickly expands northwards and also south into Iberia. The name is an umbrella term for a series of metalworking industries (or 'traditions').

Dates are somewhat movable, with a start of about 1300 BC or 1000 BC being offered, and a concluding date of about 700 BC or 500 BC. It quickly reaches southern early Britain to its north and the Iberian Bronze Age to its south. In the latter it encompasses Asturian-Cantabrian Bronze, the Galician Bronze, the Western Bronze, the Vila Nova de Sao Pedro, and the Western Andalusian Bronze.

Map of Late Bronze Age Iberia c.1300 BC
By around 1300 BC various changes had taken place in Iberia, with the Argaric culture having collapsed and others having experienced problems, including the Levantine Bronze, leaving the way clear for the emergence of a fresh wave of cultural zones (click or tap on map to view full sized)

It also succeeds the European Bell Beaker culture, the Bell Beaker and Wessex culture in Britain, and the Armorican Tumulus culture in what is now north-western France.

c.900 BC

In Central Europe the widespread Urnfield culture has also already heralded an Iron Age which has rendered the Bronze Age out-of-date. In Iberia the new iron-using order establishes itself in the form of the Castro culture in former Galician Bronze territory, with some overlap into the Asturian-Cantabrian as the locals head towards becoming the Galaeci and Astures respectively.

 
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