Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-24T17:04:27.172Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Objects and attitudes: the Lusatian impact on the material and mental culture in south-eastern Sweden in the late Bronze Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Tom Carlsson*
Affiliation:
RAÄ, UV Linköping, Järnvägsgatan 8, S-582 22 Linköping, Sweden
Get access

Abstract

This paper examines the cultural influences from the European continent on the material culture of Scandinavian local communities during the late Bronze Age. A connection between the cremation ritual and pottery as ritual equipment is claimed. The paper suggests a close link between religious ritual and the elaborate pottery types that characterise the late Bronze Age; a connection between material culture and mental ideas. The emphasis on pottery during the Bronze Age is thus a product of the change in meaning for pottery. The new pottery styles have an embodied symbolic meaning connected to the new religion with its different ideas and rites. There is also a change from a domestic sphere to a ritual one.

Dieser Beitrag untersucht die kulturellen Einflüsse vom europäischen Kontinent auf die materielle Kultur lokaler skandinavischer Gemeinschaften der späten Bronzezeit. Es wird eine Verbindung behauptet zwischen den Einäscherungsritualen und der Keramik als ritueller Ausrüstung. Der Beitrag legt eine enge Verbindung nahe zwischen religiösem Ritual und den kunstvollen Keramiktypen, die für die späte Bronzezeit typisch sind, d. h. eine Verbindung zwischen materieller Kultur und geistigen Ideen. Die Betonung von Keramik während der Bronzezeit ist demnach ein Produkt des Wandels der Bedeutung von Keramik. Die neuen Keramikstile haben eine verkörperte symbolische Bedeutung, die verbunden ist mit der neuen Religion und ihren anderen Ideen und Riten. Es findet außerdem ein Wandel statt von der häuslichen zur rituellen Sphäre.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © European Association of Archaeologists 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Björnhem, Nils and Sävestad, Ulf, 1993. Fosie IV. Bebyggelsen under brons och järnålder. Malmö: Malmö Museer (Malmöfynd 6).Google Scholar
Björkhager, Viktoria, 1995. Östgötska barngravar. Arkeologi om barn: 4357. Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis.Google Scholar
Edgren, T., 1993. Bronsåldern. In Edgren, T. and Törnblom, L. (eds), Finlands Historia: 116141. Ekenäs: Schildts.Google Scholar
Friedman, Jonathan, 1975. Tribes, states and transformations. In Bloch, Maurice (ed.), Marxist Analyses and Sodai Anthropology: 161202. London: A.S.A. Studies, Malaby Press.Google Scholar
Hodder, Ian, 1986. Reading the Past. Current approaches to interpretation in archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hultén, Birgitta, 1977. On Ceramic Technology during the Scanian Neolithic and Bronze Age. Stockholm: Institute of Archaeology, University of Stockholm.Google Scholar
Jaanusson, Hille, 1981. Hallunda. A Study of Pottery from Late Bronze Age Settlement in Central Sweden. Stockholm: Statens Historiska Museum.Google Scholar
Jensen, Jörgen, 1993. Dendrochronolgy of the Danish oak coffin graves. In Bronsålderns gravhögar. 187190. Lund: Institute of Archaeology, University of Lund (report series no 48).Google Scholar
Kaliff, Anders, 1992. En religionsarkeologisk syn på gravar. Tor 24: 125143.Google Scholar
Kaliff, Anders, 1994. Skärvstenshögar och kremeringsplatser. Exempel och experiment med utgångspunkt från en utgrävning i Ringeby, Kvillinge sn, Östergötland. Tor 26: 3555.Google Scholar
Kaliff, Anders, 1995. Kulthus och spår av gravritualer från bronsåldern. Tor 27: 233248.Google Scholar
Karlenby, Lfif, 1991. En grav och två bronsfynd från Linköping. Tor 23: 942.Google Scholar
Kristiansen, Kristian, 1987. From stone to bronze - the evolution of social complexity in northen Europe, 2300–1200 BC. In Brumfield, Elizabeth M. and Earle, Timothy K. (eds), Specialization, Exchange and Complex Societies: 3053. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Larsson, Thomas B., 1993. Vistad. Kring en befäst gård i Östergötland och Östersjökontakter under yngre bronsåldern. Umeå (Studia Archaeologica Universitatis Umensis 4).Google Scholar
Lundström, Per, 1965. Gravfålten vid Fiskeby i Norrköping. Studier kring ett totalundersökt komplex. Stockholm: Kungliga Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien.Google Scholar
Nilsson, Nikolas, 1992. Centralområden i Östergötland. Under perioden Bronsålder - Äldre järnälder. Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis.Google Scholar
Ramqvist, Per H., 1991. perspektiv på regional variation och samhälle i Nordens folk-vandringstid: In Samfundsorganisation og regional variation: 305319. Aarhus (Jysk arkeologisk selskabs skrifter 27).Google Scholar
Rasmussen, Marianne, 1993. Bopladskeramik i Äldre Bronsålder. Aarhus (Jysk arkeologisk selskabs skrifter 29).Google Scholar
Rosaldo, Marie, 1980. The uses and abuses of anthropology: reflection on feminism and crosscultural understanding. Signs 5: 400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherratt, Andrew, 1993. What would a Bronze-Age world system look like? Relations between temperate Europe and the Mediterranean in later prehistory. Journal of European Archaeology 1.2:157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skjöldebrand, Martin, 1995. On variations in Bronze-Age social and economic structures in a homogenous area. Journal of European Archaeology 3.1:91104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sörensen, Marie Louise Stig, 1987. Material order and cultural classification: the role of bronze objects in the transition from Bronze to Iron Age in Scandinavia. In Hodder, Ian (ed.), The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings: 90103. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sörensen, Marie Louise Stig, 1989. Period VI reconsidered: continuity and change at the transition from Bronze to Iron age in Scandinavia. In Sørensen, M. L. S. and Thomas, R. (eds), The Bronze Age - Iron Age Transition in Europe. Aspects of continuity and change in European societies c. 1200 to 500 B.C: 457492. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International series 483 (ii)).Google Scholar
Ståhlbom, Ulf, 1994a. Klinga, ett gravfält. Linköping: Riksantikvarieämbetets rapportserie, UV Linköping.Google Scholar
Ståhlbom, Ulf, 1994b. Var det här de bodde, de berömda hällristarna. Populär arkeologi 2: 2426.Google Scholar
Stilborg, Ole, 1995. Rapport om teknologisk analys av sen bronsålderkeramik från forni 6. Ringeby, en kult och gravplats från yngre bronsåldern. Linköping: Riksantikvarieämbetets rapportserie, UV Linköping.Google Scholar
Supplement, 1962. Gravfynd från Bronsåldern, Herstaberg, Kvillinge sn, Östergötland. Stockholm: Statens Historiska Museum.Google Scholar
Tesch, Sten, 1993. Houses, Farmsteads and Long-term Change. A regional study of prehistoric settlements in the Röping area, in Scania, southern Sweden. Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis.Google Scholar
Wolf, Eric, 1982. Europe and the People without History. London: University of California Press.Google Scholar