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Defensive Structures from Central Europe to the Aegean in the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC

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ISBN: 978-83-7177-591-8
Description: hardback, 169pp. (21,5x30,5cm) drawings, plans, photographs
Condition: very good
Weight: 905g.

 

 

Janusz Czebreszuk, Sławomir Kadrow, Johannes Müller, (eds.), Defensive Structures from Central Europe to the Aegean in the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC, Studien zur Archäologie in Ostmitteleuropa, Band 5, Poznan-Bonn 2008


From the Publisher
Preface
Tomas Alusik
Defensive architecture in Crete in Late/Final Neolithic and Bronze Age.
Mariya Ivanova
It is not the walls that make the city: settlement defence in the 3rd mill. B.C. eastern Balkans
Florin Gogaltan
Fortified Bronze Age Tell Settlements in the Carpathian Basin. A general overview
Jan John
Some remarks on the Middle Eneolithic fortified settlements in Bohemia
Rudiger Krause
Bronze Age Hillforts in the Alps
Jozef Batora, Knut Rassmann
Die Ausgrabungen auf der befestigten Siedlung Nad Hronom bei Rybnik, Kr. Levice (Sudwestslowakei)
Jozef Batora, Bernhard Eitel, Frank Falkenstein, Knut Rassmann
Fidvar bei Vrable — Eine befestigte Zentralsiedlung der Fruhbronzezeit in der Slowakei
Szymon Nowacki
Typology of Early Bronze Defensive Settlements of Central Europe
Irena Lasak, Mirostaw Furmanek
Bemerkungen zum vermutlichen Wehrobjekt der Aunjetitzer Kultur in Radlowice in Schlesien
Mateusz Jaeger, Janusz Czebreszuk, Johanness Mutter
Pudliszki, site 5. An old hypothesis revisited
Jutta Kneisel, Ham-Rudolf Bork, Janusz Czebreszuk, Walter Dorfler, Piet Grootes, Jean Nicolas Haas, Karl-Uwe Heufiner, Iwona Hildebrandt-Radke, Helmut Kroll, Johannes Mutter, Notburga Wahlmuller, Tomasz Wazny
Bruszczewo — Early Bronze Defensive Settlement in Wielkopolska. Metallurgy, peat zone finds and changes in the environment


This volume focuses on defensive structures from the Early 2nd millennium BC located in the wide Belt covering the Central European Plain and the Aegean, with an emphasis on the former area.
The beginning of the 2nd millennium BC forms a turning point in Europe’s history. In the continent’s central and western parts, Early Bronze Age societies began to emerge. In terms of social organization, it was radically different from the Final Neolithic and Eneolithic/Chalcolithic. The introduction of meta (bronze) was related to the emergence of a new type of society characterized by deeper inner stratification, rise of stable hierarchies, development of far-reaching contacts, and new religious trends.
A similar turning point is observed in the Aegean in the first half of the 2nd millennium BC when the first civilization developed on the European mainland. The Myceanum culture rose to prominence and overshadowed the Minoans who had dominated the region earlier.
The changes in societies in both regions triggered the proliferation of defensive structures. This volume shows the abundance of defensive settlement forms in individual regions and determines their basic technical, cultural, socio-political, and economic characteristics.