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Revision as of 12:44, 26 June 2005 editDbachmann (talk | contribs)227,714 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 00:20, 27 June 2005 edit undo4.241.218.127 (talk) see Prehistoric Britain#The Bronze AgeNext edit →
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The '''Beaker culture''' (ca. 2200 BC – 1500 BC, also called the '''Beaker people''' or '''Beaker folk''') is the term for an ] representing a wide range of scattered peoples present in ] ] during the late ] and early ]. The '''Beaker culture''' (ca. 2500 BC – 1500 BC, also called the '''Beaker people''' or '''Beaker folk''') is the term for an ] representing a wide range of scattered peoples present in ] ] during the late ] and early ].


In around 2,500 BC a new ] arrived in ], often referred to as the ]. Beaker techniques brought to Britain the skill of refining ]. At first they made things from ], but from around 2,150 BC, smiths had discovered how to make ] (which was much harder than copper) by mixing copper with a small amount of ]. And thus the ] arrived in ]. Over the next thousand years, bronze gradually replaced stone as the main material for tool and weapon making (see ]).
They are defined by the common use of a ] style -- a ] with a distinctive bell-shaped profile -- that many ] believe spread across the western part of the Continent during the late ]. Evidence of the Beaker culture has been found along the coast of ] and in southern ], in ] and along the banks of the ] as far east as ]. Beaker remains are most concentrated in the valley of the ] and fringing the coasts around the ] where fertile agricultural land may have led to the development of Beaker culture out of the earlier cultures such as the ]. Other scholars believe it to be of ] origin (modern day ] and ]).

Beaker peoples are defined by the common use of a ] style -- a ] with a distinctive bell-shaped profile -- that many ] believe spread across the western part of the Continent during the late ]. Evidence of the Beaker culture has been found along the coast of ] and in southern ], in ] and along the banks of the ] as far east as ]. Beaker remains are most concentrated in the valley of the ] and fringing the coasts around the ] where fertile agricultural land may have led to the development of Beaker culture out of the earlier cultures such as the ]. Other scholars believe it to be of ] origin (modern day ] and ]).


Given the unusual form and fabric of Beaker pottery, and its abrupt appearance in the archaeological record, the traditional explanation for the Beaker culture has been to interpret it as a ] of one group of people across Europe. During the early twentieth century, Beaker pottery was seen as one element of a people who, through repeated waves of invasion, brought with them metal-working, crouched burials and ]s, replacing an earlier Neolithic race of Europeans. ] wrote of the Beaker culture as: Given the unusual form and fabric of Beaker pottery, and its abrupt appearance in the archaeological record, the traditional explanation for the Beaker culture has been to interpret it as a ] of one group of people across Europe. During the early twentieth century, Beaker pottery was seen as one element of a people who, through repeated waves of invasion, brought with them metal-working, crouched burials and ]s, replacing an earlier Neolithic race of Europeans. ] wrote of the Beaker culture as:

Revision as of 00:20, 27 June 2005

The Beaker culture (ca. 2500 BC – 1500 BC, also called the Beaker people or Beaker folk) is the term for an archaeological culture representing a wide range of scattered peoples present in prehistoric Europe during the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age.

In around 2,500 BC a new culture arrived in Prehistoric Britain, often referred to as the Beaker culture. Beaker techniques brought to Britain the skill of refining metal. At first they made things from copper, but from around 2,150 BC, smiths had discovered how to make bronze (which was much harder than copper) by mixing copper with a small amount of tin. And thus the bronze age arrived in Great Britain. Over the next thousand years, bronze gradually replaced stone as the main material for tool and weapon making (see Prehistoric Britain: The Bronze Age).

Beaker peoples are defined by the common use of a pottery style -- a beaker with a distinctive bell-shaped profile -- that many archaeologists believe spread across the western part of the Continent during the late 3rd millennium BC. Evidence of the Beaker culture has been found along the coast of North Africa and in southern Scotland, in Portugal and along the banks of the Dneiper as far east as Ukraine. Beaker remains are most concentrated in the valley of the Rhine and fringing the coasts around the North Sea where fertile agricultural land may have led to the development of Beaker culture out of the earlier cultures such as the corded ware culture. Other scholars believe it to be of Iberian origin (modern day Spain and Portugal).

Given the unusual form and fabric of Beaker pottery, and its abrupt appearance in the archaeological record, the traditional explanation for the Beaker culture has been to interpret it as a diffusion of one group of people across Europe. During the early twentieth century, Beaker pottery was seen as one element of a people who, through repeated waves of invasion, brought with them metal-working, crouched burials and round barrows, replacing an earlier Neolithic race of Europeans. Vere Gordon Childe wrote of the Beaker culture as:

Warlike invaders imbued with domineering habits and an appreciation of metal weapons and ornaments which inspired them to impose sufficient political unity on their new domain for some economic unification to follow

There is no necessary correlation between an archaeological culture and an ethnic group however, as there is no one-to-one correlation between the material culture excavated by archaeologists and an ethnicity or society. Additionally, material culture and technological innovations can spread independently of population movement that is, through cultural diffusion rather than demic diffusion. Childe's view is now seen as being incorrect, its connections erroneous and based on limited knowledge, whilst its assumption of a Beaker invasion is considered an attempt to attribute numerous different cultural changes to one cause.

Many archaeologists now believe that the Beaker 'people' did not exist as a group, and that the beakers and other new artefacts and practices found across Europe at the time that are attributed to the Beaker people are indicative of the development of particular manufacturing skills. This new knowledge may have come about through the influence of neighbouring peoples, rather than as a result of mass migrations, knowledge that could spread independently of any population movement. An example might be as part of a prestige cult related to the production and consumption of beer, or trading links such as those demonstrated by finds made along the sea-ways of Atlantic Europe.

This non-invasionist theory was first propounded by Colin Burgess and Steve Shennan in the mid 1970s and it is now common to see the Beaker culture as a 'package' of knowledge adopted and adapted by the indigenous peoples of Europe to varying degrees.


See also

External links

Source

Oxford Concise Dictionary of Archaeology, Darvill, T, OUP, 2003

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