Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pjpqr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-27T02:10:54.341Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On variations in Bronze-Age social and economic structures in a homogeneous area

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Martin Skjöldebrand*
Affiliation:
RÄ, UV Linköping, Järnvägsg 8, S-582 22 Linköping, Sweden
Get access

Abstract

Investigating three Bronze-Age cemeteries in a small area near the rock carvings of Norrköping, Östergötland, Sweden, this paper suggests that the social and economic structure of the area was not necessarily homogeneous, although this is the traditional view. Variations in the burial practices are analysed: burial construction, grave goods present, and treatment of cremated bones. An elite is suggested as having existed at settlements using the cemeteries at Klinga and Fiskeby, those using Ringeby were less organised or controlled. A speculative interpretation is offered: that Ringeby served as a subsistence area for the ‘central place’ of rock-carving activity, and lacked the benefits of trade and bronze supplies.

Dieser Beitrag befaßt sich mit drei bronzezeitlichen Friedhöfen in einem kleinen Gebiet nahe den Felsritzungen von Norrköping, Östergötland, Schweden. Es wird argumentiert, daß die Sozial- und Wirtschaftsstruktur des Gebietes nicht unbedingt einheitlich war, obwohl dies traditionell so gesehen wird. Variationen der Begräbnisse in der Grabkonstruktion, bei den vorhandenen Grabbeigaben und der Behandlung verbrannter Knochen werden analysiert. Eine nicht zu mächtige Elite hat vermutlich in Siedlungen gelebt, die die Friedhüfe von Klinga und Fiskeby benutzt haben, während Ringeby von sogar noch weniger organisierten oder kontrollierten Gruppen genutzt wurde. Am Ende wird eine spekulative Interpretation angeboten, nach der Ringeby als Gebiet diente, in dem der Unterhalt für den ‘zentralen Platz’ der Felsritzungsaktivität sichergestellt wurde, wobei die Gunst von Handelsverbindungen und Bronzelieferungen dort aber fehlte.

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

Arnold (the third), Philip, J., 1991. Domestic Ceramic Production and Spatial Organisation. A Mexican case study in ethnoarchaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Arnold, Dean E. 1985. Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Asingh, Pauline and Rasmussen, Marianne, 1989. Mange slags grænser. Et eksempel på regional variation i sydvestdansk ældre bronzealder. In Poulsen, (ed.), Regionale forhold i Nordisk bronzealder. 5 Nordiske Symposium for Bronzealderfórskning på Sandbjerg Slot 1987: 7988. Aarhus (Jysk Arkæologisk Selskabs Skrifter 24).Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R., 1962. Archaeology as anthropology. American Antiquity 28: 217225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Binford, Lewis R., 1972. An Archaeological Perspective. New York: Seminar Press.Google Scholar
Björkhager, Viktoria, 1995. Gravskicket under barnaåren. In Welinder, S. and Johnsen, B. (eds), Arkeologi om barn. Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis (Occasional Papers in Archaeology 10).Google Scholar
Burstrom, Mats, 1991. Arkeologisk samhällsavgränsning. En Studie av vikingatida samhälls-territorier i Smålands inland. Stockholm (Stockholm Studies in Archaeology 9 Diss.).Google Scholar
Carlsson, Tom, forthcoming. Form, norms and attitudes – Lusatian impact on material and mental culture in south-east Sweden during the late Bronze Age.Google Scholar
Gejvall, Nils-Gustav, no date. Antropologisk undersökning av de brända benen från Östergötland, Ö Eneby sn, Fiskeby, östra gravfältet, 24568. Unpublished paper.Google Scholar
Hedeager, Lotte, 1990. Danmarks jernalder. Meilern stamme og stat. (Diss.) Aarhus: Aarhus University Press.Google Scholar
Hodder, Ian, 1986. Reading the Past. Current approaches to interpretation in archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hyenstrand, Åke, 1979. Arkeologisk regionindelning av Sverige. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet.Google Scholar
Jensen, Ronny, 1989. Models in Scandinavian Bronze Age studies – a review. In Larsson, Thomas B. and Lundmark, Hans (eds), Approaches to Swedish Prehistory. A spectrum of problems and perspectives in contemporary research. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 500).Google Scholar
Kaliff, Anders, 1992. Brandgravskick och föreställningsvärld. Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis (Occasional Papers in Archaeology 4).Google Scholar
Kaliff, Anders, 1994. Skärvstenshögar och kremeringsplatser. Exempel och experiment med utgångspunkt från en utgrävning i Ringeby, Kvillinge sn, Östergötland. TOR 26: 3556.Google Scholar
Kaliff, Anders, forthcoming. Kulthus och spår av gravritualer från bronsålder. TOR 27.Google Scholar
Kjellén, Erik and Hyenstrand, Åke, 1977. Hällristningar och bronsåldersamhälle i syd-västra Uppland. Uppsala (Upplands fornminnesförenings tidsskrift 49).Google Scholar
Larsson, Thomas B., 1985. Soziale Veränderung im Übergang von Bronzezeit zu Eisenzeit. Eine Analyse der Bestattungsdaten des Fiskeby Gräberfeldes in Östergötland. In In Honorem Evert Baudou: 415424. Umeå: Umeå universitet (Archaeology and Environment 4).Google Scholar
Larsson, Thomas B., 1986. The Bronze Age Metalwork in Southern Sweden. Aspects of sodai and spatial organization 1800 – 500 BC. Umeå: Umeå universitet (Archaeology and Environment 6 Dissertation).Google Scholar
Larsson, Thomas B., 1993. Vistad. Kring en befäst gård i Östergötland och östersjökontakter under yngre bronsålder. Umeå (Studia Archaeologica Universitatis Umensis 4).Google Scholar
Lundström, Per, 1965. Gravfälten vid Fiskeby i Norrköping, 2, Fornlämningar och fynd. Stockholm: Kungliga Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien Google Scholar
Lundström, Per, 1970. Gravfälten vid Fiskeby i Norrköping. I: Studier kring ett totalundersökt komplex. Stockholm: Kungliga Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien.Google Scholar
Malmer, Mats P., 1982. A Chorological Study of North European Rock Art. Stockholm: Kungliga Vitterhets Historie och Antikvitets Akademien.Google Scholar
Norden, Arthur, 1925. Östergötlands bronsålder. Linköping.Google Scholar
Olausson, Deborah, 1989. Comparison and Contrast. Looking for evidence for regional groups in two later Bronze Age cemeteries. In Poulsen, (ed.), Regionale forhold i Nordisk bronzealder. 5 Nordiske Symposium for Bronzealderforskning på Sandbjerg Slot 1987: 6168. Aarhus (Jysk Arkæologisk Selskabs Skrifter 24).Google Scholar
Olausson, Deborah, 1992. The archaeology of the Bronze Age cultural landscape – research goals, methods and results. In Larsson, L., Callmer, J., and Stjernquist, B. (eds), The Archaeology of the Cultural Landscape. Fieldwork and research in a south Swedish rural region: 251282. Lund (Acta Archaeologica Lundensia. Series in 4° 19).Google Scholar
Ostoja-Zagórski, Janusz, 1989. Changes in the Economic and Social Structures in northern Poland at the Transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age. In Louise Stig Sørensen, Marie and Thomas, Roger (eds), The Bronze Age – Iron Age Transition in Europe. Aspects of continuity and change in European societies c 1200 – 500 BC: 389407. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 483 vol. 2).Google Scholar
Seunge, Klas-Göran, 1989. Östergötland. In Jansson, Sven, Lundberg, E. B., and Bertilsson, Ulf (eds), Hällristningar och hàllmålningar i Sverige. Stockholm: Forum.Google Scholar
Skjöldebrand, Martin, 1989. Norrköpings bronsålder. En kronologisk och korologisk hällristningsstudie med samhälleliga aspekter. Unpublished seminar paper.Google Scholar
Ståhlbom, Ulf, 1994a. Klinga – ett gravfält. Rapport Riksantikvarieämbetet, UV-Linköping 1994:11. Linköping.Google Scholar
Ståhlbom, Ulf, 1994b. Bodde de här, de som gjorde de berömda hällristningarna? Populär arkeologi 2: 2426.Google Scholar
Tainter, J. A., 1977. Modeling change in prehistoric social systems. In Binford, L. R. (ed.), For Theory Building in Archaeology: 327351. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce, 1991. Post-processual development in Anglo-American Archaeology. Norwegian Archaeological Review 24 (2): 6576.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welinder, Stig, 1977. Ekonomiska processer i förhistorisk expansion. Lund (Acta Archaeologica Lundensia, series in 8° Minore).Google Scholar