Mobile craftspeople and orientalising transculturation in seventh-century BC Iberia

During the early first millennium BC, Phoenician peoples settled the Iberian coasts instigating cultural innovations known as the orientalising; indigenous communities of the interior have long been considered as passively dependent on, or isolated from, these developments. Recent excavations at the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Antiquity 2023-08, Vol.97 (394), p.908-926
Hauptverfasser: Blanco-González, Antonio, Padilla-Fernández, Juan Jesús, Dorado-Alejos, Alberto
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During the early first millennium BC, Phoenician peoples settled the Iberian coasts instigating cultural innovations known as the orientalising; indigenous communities of the interior have long been considered as passively dependent on, or isolated from, these developments. Recent excavations at the Early Iron Age village of Cerro de San Vicente in central Spain, however, have yielded domestic contexts that prompt reconsideration of this relationship. The authors use settlement layout, architecture and locally made tablewares to identify heterarchical organisation around virilocal and bilateral kinship and hybrid practices that attest to adoption of know-how and practices from distant places. Emphasis is placed on the role of embodied craftworking skills and female mobility in transculturation processes.
ISSN:0003-598X
1745-1744
DOI:10.15184/aqy.2023.96