Talaiotic culture
The Talaiotic culture or Talaiotic period is the name used to describe the society that existed on the Gymnesian Islands during the Iron Age. Its origins date from the end of the second millennium BC, when the inaccurately named Pre-Talaiotic Culture underwent a crisis and evolved into the Talaiotic Culture. Its name is derived from the talaiots, which are the most abundant and emblematic structures from the prehistoric period of the Balearic Islands.
Periodization
It is important to bear in mind that the cultural complex known as Talayotic spans a very broad time frame, and there is no unanimous agreement among researchers regarding the systematization of its phases and chronology. Furthermore, this culture displays distinct and significant differences between Mallorca and Menorca, for example, in terms of its chronological development.One of the first authors to address the material remains of this culture was Juan Ramis in 1818, in his work Celtic Antiquities of the Island of Menorca, which is the first book written entirely in Spanish to be dedicated to prehistory.
Interpretative and chronological proposals
Proposal from the Museum of Menorca
One of the chronological frameworks for the Talayotic period in Menorca has been proposed by Lluís Plantalamor. According to this author, around 1500 BCE a significant cultural shift occurred due to the arrival of foreign people to the island of Menorca. Previous ways of life began to be abandoned, and the first clusters of houses and villages appeared, with a clear emphasis on defense, social hierarchy, communal labor specialization, and a gradual increase in the complexity of rituals and religious beliefs. Four distinct periods are identified:Talayotic I (1500–1000 BCE)
A transitional period. Burial systems from the previous era persist, but new architectural models are introduced due to the community's defensive needs. Pottery production becomes more refined, and bronze metallurgy is introduced. The most characteristic monument of the new culture is the talayot, which can be defined as a large truncated conical tower, built with several concentric rings of large stones filled with smaller rocks. Unlike those in Mallorca, talayots in Menorca usually lack interior chambers.Talayotic II (1000–700 BCE)
Construction systems from the pre-Talayotic period are abandoned, and large urban settlements develop. Social stratification and division of labor are reinforced, reflecting a fully urban cultural stage. From this period onward, a unique type of sanctuary appears in the Mediterranean: the taulas. These are enclosures with a roughly horseshoe-shaped floor plan, surrounded by cyclopean walls interspersed with columns. At their center stands a large monolithic pillar with a rectangular base, topped with a wide, flat capital—evoking the image of a table.Talayotic III (700–300 BCE)
Increasing commercial contact with Greeks, Phoenicians, and Carthaginians leads the Talayotic people to reinforce their villages with additional defensive structures, such as bastions and watchtowers. New architectural styles are introduced, including circular houses with central courtyards. Luxurious bronze items and iron weaponry also begin to appear.Talayotic IV (400/300–123 BCE)
Trade with the great seafaring civilizations of the Mediterranean intensifies. The exchange evolves from rare prestige goods to the transfer of essential goods and foodstuffs. Rome emerges as a dominant power, which adversely affects Menorca as it becomes increasingly marginalized after the defeat of its Carthaginian ally. Inland villages are destroyed and rebuilt during the Punic Wars, eventually falling into decline. Talayotic sanctuaries are abandoned. In contrast, Talayotic settlements near major natural harbors gain prominence. The continued presence of foreign merchants attracts late Talayotic communities closer to their docking points.Chronological proposal from the Autonomous University of Barcelona
This proposal, developed by the Mediterranean Social Archaeology Group led by V. Llull, suggests that the first Talayotic manifestations emerged around 1000 BCE, at a time when the earliest talayots appear alongside the last pre-Talayotic naviform structures. Their periodization is based on research conducted at the settlement of Son Fornés and the caves of Es Càrritx and Mussol. The group opts to name each stage based on the characteristic elements that defined life in the Balearic Islands at the time.They divide the Talayotic period into three phases:
Pre-Talayotic (1050–850 BCE)
This phase sees the abandonment of domestic navetas, an increase in the establishment of larger settlements, a reduction in interaction with Mallorca, and the first signs of differentiated funerary treatment.Talayotic (850–550 BCE)
The construction of the first talayots is identified, along with initial evidence of social stratification.Post-Talayotic (550–123 BCE)
Monumental circular houses emerge, and taula sanctuaries become the main architectural feature of settlements. Large necropolises with artificial caves are established, and social complexity increases significantly. Contacts with the Punic world play a crucial role in integrating the islands into Mediterranean trade networks.Chronological proposal from the University of the Balearic Islands
Based on the research of V. Guerrero, M. Calvo, and B. Salvá—all affiliated with the University of the Balearic Islands—this proposal suggests that the Talayotic culture is essentially an Iron Age society. Its origins are placed around 900 BCE with the construction of the first talayots, and it ends in 123 BCE with the Roman conquest of the Balearic Islands. A key element of this periodization is the view that Talayotic culture emerged from the internal evolution of Late Bronze Age pre-Talayotic societies, stimulated by the influence of Punic trade in the western Mediterranean.Recent proposal
A more recent chronological proposal, focused specifically on Menorca and based on recent archaeological research, suggests that the development of Talayotic culture on the island has significantly different characteristics compared to Mallorca, and that the chronological development of both may not have been fully synchronous. According to this view, the Talayotic phenomenon in Menorca began around 1200 BCE. The first stage of this culture, Early Talayotic, is marked by the construction of monumental structures known as talayots, around which new settlements emerged, replacing earlier naveta-style dwellings. The second stage, from 500 BCE until the Romanization of the island in the 1st century BCE, is referred to as Late Talayotic. It is characterized by a series of social changes, likely related to the increasing influence of the Punic colonial world.The Talaiotic Period in Mallorca
The first great monuments on Mallorca from this period are the Layered Tumuli, which had a funerary purpose. The date of their construction dates from the end of the second millennium BC to the beginnings of the first millennium BC, and many of the Tumuli are associated with hypogea from the Bronze Age. In sum, the society of this era is called "Proto-Talaiotic," since many features of the subsequent Talaiotic society begin to appear at this time. These features include the clustering of the population into towns. It has been confirmed that in some of these Talaiotic towns naviforme structures were dismantled in order to use the building material to build ordinary dwellings.At the beginning of the first millennium BCE, talaiots began to proliferate on Mallorca, either appearing in isolated fashion as territorial markers, or in towns, but mostly grouped together in ceremonial centers. In Mallorca, these ceremonial centers were as abundant as the towns themselves. Some of them consisted of small groups of stone structures, scattered across the island, and frequently serving as boundary markers between the towns.
Some of these ceremonial centers consisted of a line of up to seven stone structures across a distance of more than half a kilometer. The abundance of these centers serves as evidence of their importance: possibly they were where disputes were resolved and various rituals and festivities celebrated. These also served as a seasonal and economic calendar regulating activities such as sowing, harvest and hunting, at which the people of various towns could meet.
Sanctuaries also existed on the island, some recognizable by their two rear walls being rounded. Sanctuaries situated within the towns were small, and their interiors had only a single column, which was more or less centered. The sanctuaries in the countryside were much bigger and tended to have many pairs of columns.
The funerary monuments of Mallorca were varied, a characteristic similar to the previous age: burials were made in natural caves and in hypogea. The Talaiotic hypogea were much bigger than those from the Bronze Age, sometimes with columns excavated from the surrounding rock, and the enlargement of these columns provided a reason for enlarging the hypogea themselves. A large cemetery was also built, the Necropolis of Son Real, unique to Mallorca and Menorca. The Necropolis served as a cemetery in which the tombs were similar to small talaiots, and were either circular or square-shaped. Small "navetas" can also be found in the Necropolis. Despite the Talaiotic preference for burials to occur in hypogea, during the time of the Talaiotic Culture a novelty was introduced: the burial of a body with lime.
A 3,200-year-old well-preserved Bronze Age sword was discovered by archaeologists under the leadership of Jaume Deya and Pablo Galera on the Mallorca Island in the Puigpunyent from the stone megaliths site Talaiot. Specialists assumed that the weapon was made when the Talaiotic culture was in critical comedown. The sword will be on display at the nearby Majorca Museum.