Nordic Bronze Age


The Nordic Bronze Age is a period of Scandinavian prehistory from.
The Nordic Bronze Age culture emerged in the period 2000-1750 BC as a continuation of the Late Neolithic Dagger period, which is rooted in the Battle Axe culture, the Single Grave Culture and Bell Beaker culture, as well as from influence that came from Central Europe. This influence most likely came from people similar to those of the Únětice culture, since they brought customs that were derived from Únětice or from local interpretations of the Únětice culture located in North Western Germany. The metallurgical influences from Central Europe are especially noticeable. 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.
The Nordic Bronze Age maintained close trade links with Mycenaean Greece, with whom it shares several striking similarities. Some cultural similarities between the Nordic Bronze Age, the Sintashta/Andronovo culture and peoples of the Rigveda have also been detected. The Nordic Bronze Age region included part of northern Germany, and some scholars also include sites in what is now Estonia, Finland and Pomerania as part of its cultural sphere.
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.
Iron metallurgy began to be practised in Scandinavia during the later Bronze Age, from at least the 9th century BC. 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.

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. 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 Únětice culture.

Chronology

, 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 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.

ImageSize = width:800 height:100
PlotArea = width:720 height:50 left:65 bottom:20
AlignBars = justify
Colors =
id:era value:rgb #
id:filler value:gray # background bar
id:black value:black
Period = from:-1900 till:-300
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:500 start:-1900
ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:100 start:-1900
PlotData =
align:center textcolor:black fontsize:8 mark: width:20 shift:
bar: color:era
from: -1700 till: -500 shift: text:Nordic Bronze Age
from: -1700 till: -1100 text:Early Nordic Bronze
from: -1100 till: -500 text:Late Nordic Bronze
bar:Phases color:era
from: -1700 till: -1500 text:I
from: -1500 till: -1300 text:II
from: -1300 till: -1100 text:III
from: -1100 till: -900 text:IV
from: -900 till: -700 text:V
from: -700 till: -500 text:VI

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. Longhouses were initially two aisled, and after three aisled structure became normal. Some longhouses were exceptionally large, and have been described as "chiefly halls", "the sitting area of which is the size of a megaron in contemporary Mycenean palaces". Larger settlements are also known, as well as fortified sites, specialist workshops for metalwork and ceramic production, and dedicated cult houses. Settlements were geographically located on higher ground, and tended to be concentrated near the sea. Certain settlements functioned as regional centres of power, trade, craft production, and ritual activity. The Late Bronze Age settlement of Vistad in Östergötland, Sweden, was surrounded by a wooden fortification pallisade. The Bronze Age fortified town of Hünenburg bei Watenstedt in northern Germany 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. The total population in Scandinavia during the Nordic Bronze Age is estimated to have been c. 300,000-500,000 people, with a relatively low population density of c. 12–15 people per km2 in the most densely populated micro-regions and four to six people in less dense areas.

Burials

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. 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, Buskehøj and Skelhøj in Denmark. A minimum of 50,000 burial mounds were constructed between 1500 and 1150 BC in Denmark alone.
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. 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. However, intentional mummification within oak coffin burials has also been noted in Britain at an earlier date.
A fundamental change in burial customs took place at the turn from the Older to the Younger Bronze Age. After a long period of inhumation burials, people gradually switched to cremation burials. During Period III of the Early Bronze Age, cremated remains were still buried in the old tradition in elongated pits or tree/oak coffins. With the beginning of the Later Bronze Age, urn burials became established, although for a long time they were still placed in and around barrows. It was not until the seventh century that the first urn fields were created. Researchers used to think that urnfields appeared at the beginning of the Iron Age, around 530 BCE, but new findings from a group of researchers at the Collaborative Research Centre 1266 at the University of Kiel show that this happened a century earlier than previously thought.
The Late Bronze Age King's Grave of Seddin in northern Germany has been described as a "Homeric burial" due to its close similarity to contemporary elite burials in Greece and Italy. A large 'king's hall' and an associated settlement were located near to the Seddin grave.

Agriculture

In the Nordic Bronze Age, both agriculture and animal husbandry 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.

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 usually 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. 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. With regards to the number and density of metal deposits, the Nordic Bronze Age became the richest culture in Europe. More Bronze Age swords have also been found in Denmark than anywhere else in Europe. Uniform crucibles found at metal workshop sites indicate the mass production of certain metal artefacts.

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.