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Full text of "The Dawn Of European Civilization"

58-08572 

Childe 

The dawn of European civilization 




The History of Civilization 
Edited ty C. K. OGDBN, M.A. 



The Dawn of 
European Civilization 



The Dawn of 
European Civilization 



By 

V. GORDON CHILDE 

D.Litt., D.Sc. 
Profettor of Prehistoric European Archaology, University of London 



Sixth Edition, Revised 



NEW YORK ALFRED A KNOPF 

1958 



L C. Catalog card number: 58-5914 
V. Gordon Childe, 1957 

THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK, 
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC. 

Copyright 1957 by V. Gordon Childe, All rights reserved. 
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form with- 
out permission in writing from the publisher, except by 
a reviewer who may quote brief passages and reproduce 
not more than three illustrations in a review to be printed 
in a magazine or newspaper. Manufactured in the United 
States of America. 

FIRST EDITION 1925; revised 1927, 1939, 1948, 1950. 
SIXTH EDITION, revised, reset, and printed from new plates, 1958 



PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION 

WHEN the First Edition was written as a pioneer attempt at a com- 
prehensive survey of European prehistory, the archaeological record 
was so fragmentary that a pattern could only be extracted by filling 
up the gaps with undemonstrable guesses. A spate of excavations, 
investigations and publications in the next twenty years rendered 
obsolete some of those speculations, enriched the record with a wealth 
of often quite unexpected facts, but actually complicated the picture. 
Since 1945 still more intense activity has doubled the available data, 
but in some points has simplified the scene; several formerly discrete 
assemblages now appear as aspects of a very few widespread cultures. 
Moreover, the new technique of radio-carbon dating, though still very 
much in the experimental stage, offers at least the hope of an inde- 
pendent time-scale against which archaeological events in several 
regions can be compared chronologically. These advances allow and 
demand drastic revision and re-arrangement of my text. At the same 
time the fresh data, as much as Mongait's pertinent criticisms in his 
Introduction to the Russian translation, have induced a less dog- 
matically "Orientalist" attitude than I adopted in 1925. In particular 
the discovery that not all farmers were potters has entailed a complete 
revaluation of the ceramic evidence! Radio-carbon dating has indeed 
vindicated the Orient's priority over Europe in farming and metallurgy. 
But the speed and originality of Europe's adaptation of Oriental 
traditions can now be better appreciated; it should be dear why, as 
well as that, a distinctively European culture had dawned by our 
Bronze Agel Two more points should be noted. The radio-carbon dates 
here given, many of them unofficial, are all subject to a margin of error 
of several centuries and must be regarded as tentative and provisional! 
Secondly, to me the Near East still means what it meant in English 
before 1940 and still means in American, Dutch, French and Russian. 

For opportunities of studying at first hand the latest finds from 
Eastern Europe I wish to thank the Academies of Sciences of Bulgaria, 
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Roumania, the ILS.S.R. and Yugoslavia, 
and to colleagues in those countries as well as in Austria, Belgium, the 
British Isles, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Holland, Italy, Poland, 
Sweden, Turkey and the U.S.A. I am grateful for information on un- 
published finds, for reprints, drawings and photographs. Dr. Isabel 
Smith has very kindly read the proofs. 

MARCH 1957. V.G.C 



CONTENTS 



Chapter 

I. SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS ...... i 

II. THE ORIENT AND CRETE 15 

III. ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE AEGEAN 35 

IV. MARITIME CIVILIZATION IN THE CYCLADES .... 48 
V. FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE ..... 57 

VI. FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 84 

VII. DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION ....... 105 

VIII. THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH .... 136 

IX. CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER THE EURASIAN PLAIN? . . 148 

X. THE NORTHERN CULTURES 175 

XI. SURVIVALS OF THE FOREST CULTURE 203 

XII. MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK .... 213 

XIII. FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY .* . . 229 

XIV. ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS IN THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN . 252 
XV. THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 265 

XVI. WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE .... 287 

XVII. MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE . \ . . . 303 

XVIII. THE BRITISH ISLES 322 

XIX. RETROSPECT: THE PREHISTORY OF EUROPEAN SOCIETY . 341 

NOTES ON TERMINOLOGY 353 

ABBREVIATIONS ......... 354 

BOOKS 358 

INDEX 361 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

FIG. PAGE 

1. SWIDERIAN FLINT IMPLEMENTS, POLAND (after KotloWSki) . . 3 

2. MAGDALENIAN HARPOON FROM CANTABRIA AND AZILIAN HARPOONS 

AND PAINTED PEBBLES FROM ARlftGE 4 

3. GEOMETRIC MICROLITHS AND MICROGRAVERS FROM FRANCONIA 

(after Gwnpert) 6 

4. MICROLITHS FROM MUGE, PORTUGAL, AND TRANSVERSE ARROW- 

HEAD SHAFTED FROM DENMARK 7 

5. "LYNGBY AXE" OF REINDEER ANTLER, HOLSTEIN ... 8 

6. MAGLEMOSIAN TYPES FROM ZEALAND to 

7. ERTEBOLLE POT, ANTLER AXES AND BONE COMBS, DENMARK . . 12 

8. NEOLITHIC FIGURINES FROM CRETE AND THEIR RELATIVES (after 

Evans) 18 

9. EARLY MINOAN III "TEAPOTS" AND BUTTON SEAL (after Evans) , 20 

10. THE MINOAN "MOTHER GODDESS" AND (left) HORNS OF CONSECRA- 

TION, FROM A SEALING (after Evans) 25 

11. MINOAN AXES, AXE-ADZES AND DOUBLE AXE, AND SEAL IMPRESSIONS 

(after Evans and Mon. Ant.) 28 

12. (i) EARLY MINOAN DAGGERS, (2) STONE BEADS (after Evans) . . 29 

13. MIDDLE MINOAN I-II DAGGERS (after Evans) .... 30 

14. M.M.III RAPIERS (MYCEN^B) AND L.M.I. HORNED HILT (CRETE) 

(after Evans) 31 

15. (i) LATE MYCEN^AN SHORT SWORD, (2) MIDDLE MINOAN SPEAR- 

HEAD 32 

16. EGYPTIAN REPRESENTATIONS OF VAPHEIO CUPS .... 33 

17. POTTERY FROM THERMI I-II (A) AND III-IV(B) (after Lamb, BSA., 

XXX) 39 

18. "MEGARON" PALACE, TROY II 40 

19. POTTERY FROM TROY II 42 

20. KNIFE AND DAGGERS AND GOLD VESSELS, TROY II (Museum f. 

Vorgeschichte, Berlin) 42 

21. BATTLB-AXB, GOLD-CAPPED BEAD, AND CRYSTAL POMMEL FROM 

TREASURE L, AND STRAY AXE-ADZE (Museum f. VorgeschicUe, 
Berlin) 43 

22. GOLD EARRING AND PENDANT FROM TREASURE A, PIN FROM 

TREASURE D, BRACELET FROM TREASURE F, AND KNOT-HBADBD 

PINS (Museum /. VorgeschicUe, Berlin) 45 

23. TOMB-GROUP. AMORGOS 49 

24. CYCLADIC "FRYING-PAN" AND SHBRD SHOWING BOAT . . . 50 

25. TOMBS ON SYROS AND EUBCBA 52 

vfi 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

JIG. 

26. SLOTTED SPEAR-HEAD (SHOWING METHOD OF MOUNTING), HALBERD 

AND TWEEZERS. AMORGOS 53 

27. EARLY CYCLADIC ORNAMENTS: PAROS; SYROS .... 54 

28. CYCLADIC POTTERY: (i) PELOS; (2) PHYLAKOPI I; (3) PHYLAKOPI 

II (Z..C.) 55 

29. THESSALIAN STONE AXES AND ADZES (after Tsountas) ... 59 

30. POTTERY OF SESKLO STYLE, WHITE ON RED AND RED ON WHITE 

(after Wace and Thompson) 59 

31. NEOLITHIC FIGURINES, THESSALY (after Wace and Thompson) . 61 

32. MINIATURE ALTAR OR THRONE (after Wace and Thompson) . . 62 

33. PLAN OF FORTIFIED VILLAGE OF DIMINI (after Tsountas) . . 63 

34. DIMINI BOWL AND GOLD-RING PENDANT (after Tsountas) . . 64 

35. AXE AND BATTLE-AXES FROM H. MAMAS (after Heurtley, BSA., 

XXIX) * ... 68 

36. EARLY HELLADIC SAUCE-BOAT, ASKOS, TANKARD, AND JAR . . 70 

37. EARLY MACEDNIC POT-FORMS (after Heurtley, B.S.A., XXVIII) . 71 

38. ANCHOR ORNAMENT, KRITSANA . . . . . . 71 

39. SPEAR-HEAD, KNIVES, AND DAGGER FROM M.H. GRAVES IN 

THESSALY (after Tsountas) . . . . . . 73 

40. MlNYAN POTTERY FROM THESSALY, AND IMITATIONS FROM THERMON, 

JEIOLIA .......... 74 

41. MATT-PAINTED BOWL AND PITHOS FROM ^EGINA; AND M.C. JUGS 

FROM MARSEILLES HARBOUR AND PHYLAKOPI .... 75 

42. MATT-PAINTED JAR, LIANOKLADHI III (after Wace and Thompson) . 76 

43. TERMINAL AND PATTERN-BORED SPACER-BEAD FROM AMBER NECK- 

LACE: SHAFT GRAVE AT MYCEN^ ...... 79 

44. MYCENJEAN THOLOS TOMB ON EUBOSA (after Papavasileiou) . . 81 

45. CLAY LOOM-WEIGHTS AND BONE SPATULA OF K6R6s CULTURE . 86 

46. CRUCIFORM-FOOTED BOWL IN FINE STAREVO WARE, AND JAR OF 

RUSTICATED K6R6S STYLE 87 

47. BONE COMBS AND RING-PENDANT, TORDOS, AND "HARPOON", VIN^A 89 

48. "FACE URN" LID FROM VINA (after Vassits) .... 90 

49. MUG, TRIPOD BOWL, AND "ALTAR" DECORATED BY EXCISION, 

BANYATA II 95 

50. PEG-FOOTED VASE FROM DENEV . . . . . .97 

51. COPPER AXE AND ADZE FROM GABOREVO gg 

52. GUMELNITA POTTERY: (i) CZERNAVODA; (2) TEL METCHKUR; 

(3-4) TEL RATCHEV; (5-6) KODJA DERMAN .... 100 

53. PAINTED CLAY HEAD, VINCA IOI 

54. SQUATTING FIGURE, BONE FIGURINES AND CLAY PHALLUS, BUL- 

GARIA 102 

55. MODELS OF HOUSES, DENEV 102 

36. SMALL DANUBIAN I HOUSE FROM SAXONY; THE WALLS ARE MARKED 

BY A DOUBLE ROW OF POSTS (after Sangmeister) ... 107 
viii 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

WIG. **** 

57. "SHOE-LAST CELTS" (after Seger) *<7 

58. DANUBIAN I POTTERY * *<*8 

59. CLAY BLOCK VASE, MORAVIA **4 

60. COPPER TRINKETS AND TRIANGULAR AXE, JORDANOVA (after Seger) ZZ4 

61. DANUBIAN II POTTERY, LENGYEL . . . * .115 

62. STROKE-ORNAMENTED VASES, BOHEMIA; RdssEN VASES, CENTRAL 

GERMANY **7 

63. COPPER BATTLE-AXES, HUNGARY *3O 

64. COPPER AXE-ADZES AND AXES, HUNGARY 121 

65. KNOBBED MACE-HEAD, MAROS DECSE 122 

66. BODROGKERESZTUR PYXIS AND MILK-JUG (after Tompa) . . 122 

67. PINS AND EARRINGS FROM UNETiciAN GRAVES (after Schrdnil) . 129 

68. DAGGERS FROM UNETICIAN GRAVES (after Schrdnil) ... 131 

69. HOARD OF SOBOCHLEBY (after Schrdnil) *3* 

70. BRONZE-HILTED DAGGER (after Schrdnil) *3 r 

71. BULB, DISC, TRILOBATE, AND CRUTCH-HEADED PINS FROM LATER 

UNETICIAN GRAVES (after Schrdnil) 133 

72 . MARSCH WITZ AND EARLY UNETICIAN POTTERY, SILESIA AND BOHEMIA 

(after Stock}) X 34 

73. MODEL HUT FROM POPUDNIA *38 

74. POTTERS' OVEN AND MODEL, ARIU^D (after Laszld) ... 140 

75. TRIPOLYE TYPES (after Passek) J 4* 

76. STONE SCEPTRE-HEAD, FEDELE^BNI, AND CLAY STAMP, ARIU^D . 143 

77. USATOVA TYPES (after Passek) M 6 

78. COPPER BATTLE-AXE, VOZDVIZHENSKAYA, COPPER BEADS, COPPER 

SPEAR-HEAD, COPPER AND BONE HAMMER-PINS .... 15! 

79. VASES: (i) FROM CATACOMB GRAVE, DONETZ; (2-3) FROM PIT-GRAVES, 

YATSKOVICE, NEAR KIEV; (4) FROM YAMNO GRAVE, DONETZ; 

(5) B FUNNEL BEAKER, DENMARK I5 2 

80. TRANSVERSE AXE, AXE-ADZE, KNIFE, AND GOLD AND SILVER VASES, 

CARNELIAN BEAD AND FLINT ARROW-HEADS, FROM MAIKOP 

BARROW * 53 

81. (i) MEGALITHIC CIST, NOVOSVOBODNAYA; (2) CATACOMB GRAVE, 

DONETZ l & 

82. POTTERY, WEAPONS, TOOLS, AND PINS FROM TOMB AT NOVOSVO- 

BODNAYA ...' *55 

83. POTTERY AND BATTLE-AXES FROM THE SINGLE GRAVES or JUTLAND 

AND SWEDEN (after Fv t 1922) l61 

84. SAXO-THURINGIAN CORDED WARE l6 3 

85. THURINGIAN FACETED BATTLE-AXE AND SILESIAN BATTLE-AXE . 164 

86. ZLOTA POTTERY (after Koxlowski) l66 

87. FATYANOVO BATTLE-AXE AND FINNISH BOAT-AXE ... 169 

88. FATYANOVOPOTTERYOFTHE Moscow. YAROSLAV, AND CUVA GROUPS^ 170 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

o. 

89, THE GALI HOARD . I ? 1 

QQ. NORTHERN FLINT AXES ARRANGED ACCORDING TO MONTBLIUS' 

TYPOLOGY (by permission of Trustees of British Museum) . . i?5 

91. A-TYPB FUNNEL-BEAKERS, AMPHORA, "BAKING PLATE" (after Becker) 178 

92. TONGUED CLUB-HEAD, DENMARK; POLYGONAL BATTLE-AXE, JORDAN- 

OVA; AND FLINT AXE OF EASTERN TYPE *79 

93. POTTERY FROM DANISH DYSSER lfil 

94. GRAVE 28 AT JORDANOVA (after Seger) l82 

95. DANISH PASSAGE GRAVE POTTERY OF PHASES B AND C; BATTLE-AXE 

AND ARROW-HEAD ^4 

96. FURNITURE OF A GRAVE AT ZASTOW; AND COLLARED FLASK FROM 

GRAVE AT NALENCZOW l88 

97. KUYAVISH GRAVE, SwiERCZYN (after Kozlowski) . . .189 

98. WALTERNIENBURG VASES, LATDORF DRUM, AND I?AALBURG JUG . 193 

99. GLOBULAR AMPHORJE FROM SAXO-THURINGIA AND PODOLIA, AND 

BONE GIRDLE-CLASP FROM PODOLIA . . J 94 

zoo. FLINT DAGGERS AND SWEDISH CISTS OF MONTELIUS' IV . . 197 

1 01. SECTION OF THE LEUBINGEN BARROW ...... 200 

102. BRONZE-SHAFTED HALBERD AND HALBERD-BLADE FROM LEUBINGEN 

BARROW 201 

103. (i) PIT-COMB WARE FROM KARELIA; (2) VASE OF EAST SWEDISH 

STYLE FROM ALAND ISLANDS; (3) FLINT SCULPTURES FROM 

VOLOSOVO 204 

104. N0STVET AND SUOMUSJARVI CELTS, AND POLISHED CHISEL AND 

ADZE 205 

105. MAGLEMOSIAN TYPES WHICH SURVIVE: (1-4) ESTHONIA (after Clark)', 

(5) UKRAINE; (6) LEISTER FROM URAL PEAT BOG . . . 206 

106. SLATE KNIVES AND DART-HEAD, SWEDEN, STONE MACE-HEADS, 

FINLAND, AND SLATE PENDANT 207 

107. KNIVES AND AXE FROM SEIM A HOARD . . . . .211 

108. ROCK-CUT TOMB, CASTELLUCCIO, AND CORBELLED TOMB, Los 

MILLARES .......... 214 

109. ROCK-CUT TOMB AND NAVETA, BALEARIC ISLANDS . . .216 
no. SEGMENTED CIST, NORTH IRELAND, AND GIANTS' TOMB, SARDINIA 217 
in. BEAKERS: (1-2) PALMELLA, PORTUGAL; (3) LA HALLIADE, SOUTH 

FRANCE; (4) VILLAFRATI, SICILY . . . . . .222 

112. BEAKER, WRIST-GUARD, AND ASSOCIATED VASES, SILESIA (after 

Seger) 225 

113. WEST EUROPEAN DAGGER (BOHEMIA) AND FLINT COPY (SILESIA); 

ARROW-STRAIGHTENER (WILTSHIRE); GOLD-LEAF FROM WRIST- 
GUARD AND COPPER AWL, BOHEMIA 225 

114. SOUTH ITALIAN PAINTED POTTERY: (i) AND (2) BLACK ON BUFF, 

SERRA D'ALTO WARE; (3) RED AND BLACK ON BUFF, MIDDLE 
NEOLITHIC I, MEGARA HYBL*A ...... 232 

x 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

FIG. 

115. BOSSED BONE PLAQUE, CASTELLUCCIO (after Evans) . . . 335 

1 16. COPPER AND EARLY BRONZE AGE POTTERY: (1-2) PIT-CAVB, OTRANTO; 

(3) KEELED VASE WITH AXE HANDLE, "DOLMEN" OF BlSCEGLIE; 

(4-5) CASTELLUCCIO WARE . 236 

117. VIEW INTO CHAMBER TOMB, CASTELLUCCIO 237 

1 1 8. KNIFE AND RAZOR, PANTALICA 240 

119. APENNINE VASE-HANDLES AND WINGED AXE, RAZOR, PESCHIERA 

DAGGER, ANGLED SICKLE FROM PUNTO DEL TONNO . . .243 

120. (i) VASE OF NORTH ITALIAN POLADA TYPE; (2) SQUARB-MOUTHED 

NEOLITHIC POT FROM ARENE CANDIDE 245 

121. COPPER DAGGERS AND FLINT COPIES, RfiMEDELLO . . . 246 

122. PESCHIERA SAFETY-PIN (FIBULA) 250 

123. PLAN OF "TEMPLES" AT MNAIDRA, MALTA 253 

124. TRIPOD BOWL, SAN BARTOLOMEO, AND VASE-HANDLE OF NOSE- 

BRIDGE TYPE, ANGHELU Ruju 258 

125. PLAN AND ELEVATION OF TOMB XXsis AT ANGHELU Ruju . . 259 

126. NECKLACE FROM ANGHELU Ruju 261 

127. (i) GOUGE, EL GARCEL; (2) SCHIST ADZE, PORTUGAL; (3) JAR, EL 

GARCEL .......... 268 

128. STAGES IN CONVENTIONALIZATION OF PARIETAL ART IN SPAIN (after 

Obermaier); A, MAIMON; B, FIGURAS; C, LA PILETA ... 269 

129. FLINT ARROW-HEADS: (i) ALCAL^; (5) Los MILLARES. HALBERD 

BLADES; (3) CASA DA MOURA; (4) Los MILLARES; (2) PALMELLA 
POINTS 271 

130. "LATE NEOLITHIC" VASE FROM TRES CABEZOS, AND SYMBOL VASES 

FROM Los MILLARES 272 

131. RITUAL OBJECTS: (i) ALMERIA; (2 AND 4) PORTUGAL; (3) GRANADA 273 

132. COPPER DAGGERS AND ADZE, ALCAL^, AND BONE PIN, CABEO DA 

MlNISTRA 275 

133. PLAN OF "NEOLITHIC" PASSAGE GRAVE AND PART OF THE FURNITURE, 

S.E. PORTUGAL (after Leisner) 277 

134. ARGARIC BURIAL-JAR SHOWING DIADEM, FUNERARY VASES, HALBERD, 

DAGGER-BLADES, AND SWORD (by permission of Trustees of British 

Museum) .......... 283 

135. ANTLER HARPOON AND BONE ARROW-HEAD, SWITZERLAND . . 289 

136. CORTAILLOD POTTERY (after 'Antiquity') 290 

137. PLAN OF A HOUSE AT AICHB^HL 292 

138. MlCHELSBERG POTTERY 294 

139. TYPES OF ANTLER SLEEVES FOR AXES: A-B, LOWER,' C, FIRST IN 

MIDDLE; D, FIRST IN UPPER NEOLITHIC; LAKE NSUCHATEL . 296 

140. BONE COPIES OF UN&TICIAN PINS 297 

I4Z. MONDSEE POTTERY 300 

142. VASE-SUPPORTS IN CHASSEY STYLE: (i) LE MOUSTOIR, CARNAC; 

(2) MOTTE DE LA GARDE, CHARENTE ..... 304 

xi 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

*IG. PAGE 

143. LATE CHALCOLITHIC TYPES FROM CEVENNIAN CISTS: (a-e) LIQUISSE; 

(f-i) GROTTE D'EN QUISSE, CARD; (j-o) "DOLMENS" OF AVEYRON 308 

144. POLYPOD BOWL, LA HALLIADE 3 IQ 

145. STATUE-MENHIRS FROM CARD AND SCULPTURED TOMB, PETIT 

MORIN (MARNE) 312 

146. HORGEN POT FROM PARIS CIST, AND CHANNELLED POT FROM 

CONGUBL, MORBIHAN . . . . 3*3 

147. ARC-PENDANT OF STONE 3*3 

148. PASSAGE GRAVE, KERCADO, MORBIHAN 3*<> 

149. BRETON BRONZE AGE VASE 3* 

150. LOP-SIDED, TANGED-AND-BARBED AND LEAF-SHAPED ARROW-HEADS 323 

151. WINDMILL HILL POT-FORMS (after Piggott) 324 

152. PASSAGE GRAVE IN HORNED CAIRN, 240 FT. LC!NG, YARROWS, 

CAITHNESS 327 

153. LONG STALLED CAIRN, MlDHOWE, ROUSAY . . . . .327 

154. GOLD BARRING ......... 330 

155. PETERBOROUGH BOWL FROM THAMES, AND SHERDS FROM WEST 

KENNET LONG BARROW (by permission of Trustees of British 

Museum) .......... 333 

156. EVOLUTION OF A SOCKETED SPEAR-HEAD IN BRITAIN (after Green- 

well): (l) HlNTLESHAM, SUFFOLK; (2) SNOWSHILL, GLOS.,* (3) 

ARRETON DOWN, ISLE OF WIGHT ...... 335 

157. SEGMENTED FAYENCE BEADS, WILTS (by permission of Trustees of 

British Museum) ......... 336 

158. FOOD VESSELS FROM ARGYLL AND EAST LOTHIAN . . . 337 
GOLD LUNULA, IRELAND (by permission of Trustees of British Museum) 338 

MAP I EUROPE IN PERIOD I 348 

MAP II EUROPE IN PERIOD II ...... 349 

MAP IIIo PERIOD III : MEGALITHIC TOMBS .... 350 

MAP III6 PERIOD III : BEAKERS AND BATTLE-AXES . . 351 

MAP IV PERIOD IV : EARLY BRONZE AGE CULTURES AND TRADE 

ROUTES 352 



xii 



The Dawn of 
European Civilization 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Stages in the gradual amelioration of climate can also be distinguished, 
largely on the basis of the same botanical evidence. In North Europe 
the long late glacial phase passed over eventually into a cold conti- 
nental "Pre-Boreal phase" when birches and a few pines began to 
colonize the tundra. This in turn gave place to a Boreal period, still 
continental but characterized by summers longer and warmer than 
to-day, but severe snowy winters. Next a relatively abrupt increase 
of rainfall and westerly winds affected North- Western Europe without 
reducing the average annual temperature, so that the climate of 
Denmark was really Atlantic, and mixed oak woods attained a maxi- 
mum extension at the cost of pine woods. In Britain, on the contrary, 
excessive rain and wind caused deforestation in exposed areas. Gradu- 
ally the course of the Atlantic storms shifted again, allowing a second 
period of forest growth in England but inducing some contraction on 
the Continent. This phase, still warmer than to-day, is termed the 
Sub-Boreal. It ultimately ended with the onset of modern cold wet 
weather in an exaggerated form in the so-called Sub- Atlantic phase. 
Of course, the terms Boreal, Atlantic and so on are not strictly applic- 
able to Switzerland or South Germany and are meaningless in Mediter- 
ranean lands: they were devised in Denmark and Sweden, where alone 
they are accurately descriptive. 

In the meanwhile the distribution of land and water was also 
changing. The release of the vast volumes of water locked up in glaciers 
during the Ice Age produced a general, if gradual, rise in sea-level or 
marine transgression, but this was offset in the north, where the 
accumulations of ice had been deepest and heaviest, by an "isostatic" 
re-elevation of the earth's crust that had been depressed by their 
weight. While much of the North Sea basin was still dry land, or at 
least fen (Northsealand!), uniting England to the Continent, Scotland 
and Scandinavia were thus depressed by the weight of the Ice masses. 
The Baltic depression was occupied by a frozen sea, communicating 
with the Arctic Ocean and termed the Yoldia Sea. The rebound of the 
earth's crust on the melting of the superincumbent ice raised strips 
of the Scottish coast above their present relative level and isolated 
the Baltic depression; it was occupied by the Ancylus Lake, rendered 
slightly brackish by a small inflow of salt water across Central Sweden. 
At the end of Boreal times the continued rise of sea-level flooded the 
North Sea basin and salt water poured into the Baltic depression, 
forming the Litorina Sea, larger and salter than the modern Baltic. 
England was completely separated from the Continent, while in Scot- 
land whales could swim up the enlarged Forth estuary to above 
Stirling. The resultant extension of the area occupied by warm salt 

2 



SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS 

water was perhaps the cause of the shift in storm tracks that brought 
about the Atlantic phase of climate in the North. But north of a line 
that runs through Southern Zealand and County Durham the isostatic 
re-elevation of the land has continued so that the shore line of Atlantic 
times is now represented by the "25 ft. raised beach" in North Britain 
and corresponding raised strands round the Baltic. Nevertheless some 
time elapsed before this local re-elevation of the land overtook the 
general rise in sea-level, so that in marginal areas like Denmark and 
East Anglia several local transgressions can be distinguished. In 
Denmark and Southern Sweden, in fact, four have to be admitted 
the first at the beginning of the Atlantic phase, the last, and sometimes 
the greatest, during early Sub-Boreal times, 1 coinciding with Northern 
Neolithic III a and b (p. 176). 

This changing environment constitutes for the archaeologist a pro- 
visional chronological framework, but contemporary men had to 
adjust their cultures to it. To small groups of food-gatherers the 
temperate forests offered greater facilities for picking up a bare liveli- 
hood without intensive social co-operation or a highly specialized 
kit-bag than had the bleak hunting-grounds of the Ice Age. Mesolithic 
groups appear in general isolated and poorly equipped in contrast to 
Magdalenians or Pfedmostians. But all had acquired, or themselves 
domesticated, dogs whose co-operation would be of greatest assistance 
to man precisely in the pursuit of the smaller, less gregarious game of 
the new woodland. Everywhere the collection of nuts, snails, and 
shell-fish played a conspicuous part in the new economy. Several of 
the mesolithic cultures are clearly just the responses of palaeolithic 
survivors to the new environment. 

The Swiderian culture, 2 represented by assemblages of small flint 
tools collected from sand-dunes in Russia and Poland, sometimes under 
fossil turf-lines of Atlantic age, is characterized by small asymmetrically 




FIG. i. Swiderian flint implements, Poland. After Kozlowski (f). 

i "Aamosen" (1943), 162; ArsberMtelse (i937~38), 36-96; cf. New Phytohgist, XL1V 

Confined effectively to the woodland zone; KS., XXXI (1950). 96-110; LJX, 7-9; 
cf. Clark (1936), 62. 

3 



D'AWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

tanged-points (Fig. i) used presumably as arrow-heads, but morpho- 
logically descended from the large dart-heads used by the South 
Russian mammoth-hunters. Such was their ultimate response to the 
extinction of the mammoth. 

Descendants of the Franco-Cantabrian Magdalenians, who combined 
with hunting and collecting fishing with the harpoon in the ancestral 
manner, created the Azilian culture. 1 The Azilians, like their ancestors, 
lived by preference in caves where they buried their dead too. 2 The 
famous cave of Ofnet in Bavaria contained a nest of twenty-one skulls, 
buried without the trunks, but not belonging certainly to Azilians. 
Because eight of the skulls were brachycrariial, anthropologists used 
to think that the burial indicated the immigration of a new race into 
Europe, but now admit that at least a tendency to round-htadedness 
existed among Upper Palaeolithic Europeans. 8 The Azilians' equipment 
seems poor. The type fossil is the harpoon of red-deer's antler (Fig. 2), 
flat and clumsy in comparison with the ancestral Magdalenian instru- 
ment of reindeer antler. Flint blades and gravers persist, but tend to 
be diminutive. The cores could be used for wood- working, but were not 
specialized into axes. However, some heavy wedge-like tools from the 




FIG. 2. Magdalenian harpoon from Cantabria and Azilian harpoons and 
painted pebbles from Ariege (f). 

cave of Bize (Aude) may denote responses to the needs of primitive 
carpentry. And in the Falkenstein cave, Hohenzollern, a ground stone 
celt was found mounted in an antler sleeve with seemingly typical 
Azilian harpoons. 4 But now similar harpoons 5 have turned up with 
geometric microliths in a Tardenoisian layer in the Birsmatten cave 
in the Swiss Jura so that all the Alpine- Jura ''Azilian" may really be 
Tardenoisian and so at best "late mesolithic". The only reminiscences 

* Obennaier, Fossil Man in Spain (1925), 340 f.; PPS., XX (1954), 193-210 
E.g. in Ariege, L'Anth*., XXXVIII (1928); 235. * 

* See C. S. Coon, Races of Europe (1939), 35-6, 67-8. 

* Germania, XVIII (1934), 81-8. 

* Jb. Bernischen Hist. Mus., XXXIV (1954), 197-8. 



SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS 

of Magdalenian art are highly conventionalized figures painted on 
pebbles. 

The cave deposits suggest that the Azilians lived in very small and 
generally isolated communities; their isolation was not/ however, 
complete, since shells of Columbetta rusticana, imported from the Medi- 
terranean, reached the Falkenstein cave. Some sort of boat must have 
been available, since Azilians encamped on small islands. Azilian 
encampments are found on the slopes of the Cantabrian mountains 
and the Pyrenees, of the Massif Central, the Jura, Vosges, Black 
Forest, and Alpine foothills, and finally on the south-west coast of 
Scotland. But the industry here is distinctive enough to be regarded 
as a new culture, "the Obanian", 1 not certainly descended from the 
French Azilian. In South France the Azilian succeeds the Magdalenian 
almost immediately, presumably in Boreal times; the Scottish sites are 
situated above the 25-ft. beach and must be Atlantic in age. The 
discrepancy might indicate the slow rate of migration by short stages 
presumably along tracts of coast now submerged. 

Descendants of the local Aurignacians created a very similar culture 
in early post-glacial times in the Crimea 8 and Transcaucasia. They too 
lived in caves and buried the dead therein either in the contracted 
position or extended. They had tamed a local wolf or jackal to help 
them in the chase. In the Crimea harpoons of bone, but of Azilian form, 
and slotted points armed with flints as in the Forest cultures, appear 
late. Geometric microliths, at first triangles and lunates, later also 
trapezes, were made and that even in layers that contain pottery and 
polished celts and so look formally neolithic. 8 

The Tardenoisian cidture survives in the archaeological record almost 
entirely in the form of pigmy flints or microliths, ingeniously worked 
into regular geometrical shapes triangles, rhombs, trapezes, and 
crescents or into microgravers (Fig. 3) that may be a by-product in 
their manufacture. 4 These do not really define a single culture, but 
represent several disparate industries. 6 As the latter can only be dis- 
tinguished statistically, all will here be grouped together under the rather 
misleading term Tardenoisian. All microliths were presumably parts 
of composite tools of wood or bone, but no one knows why the little 
blades should be so carefully trimmed. Their makers camped exclusively 
on sandy soils 6 that would be lightly wooded, and sheltered at first 

Movius, H., The Irish Stone Age (Cambridge, 1942), 180 ff. 

HanSar, Kaukasiens, 116-26, 148-50, 194-206; SA. t I, 195-212; V. 160-75, 299; lor 
th fauna MIA., XXXIX (1953). 4&>-2. 
SA., V, 97-100; KS. t IV (1940), 29. 
Clark, Meso. Britain, 97-103. 
PPS. t XXI (1955). H-I9. ' Clark (1936), 190-4- 

5 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

often in caves, but also in flimsy huts 1 partly sunk into the sandy soil. 
At Muge 2 on the Tagus and on Teviec and Hoedic, two tiny islets off 
the coast of Morbihan, 8 Tardenoisians settled on the open shore, 
hunting and collecting shell-fish and leaving mounds composed of the 




FIG. 3. Geometric microliths (2-5) and microgravers (i) from Franconia. 
After Gumpert (|). 

debris of their repasts. Skeletons, some brachycranial, were buried 
in these midden heaps in the contracted attitude. On Teviec and 
Hodic a little cairn was heaped over each of the corpses, which were 
sprinkled with ochre; some were covered with a sort of crown of stags 1 
antlers. In the Ligurian cave of Arene Candide, 4 too, was a mesolithic 
perhaps more Azilian than Tardenoisian cemetery of ten graves, 
each containing an extended adult, twice accompanied by an infant, 
lying on a bed of ochre. 

A tendency to reduce the size of flint blades was common to most 
Upper Palaeolithic industries. It led to the production of geometric 
forms already in the Gravettian of France and Italy, 6 while at Parpall6 
in Eastern Spain 6 even microburins occur from the Solutrian layers 
upward. This tendency was perhaps more marked in the Mediterranean 
environment than on the steppes and tundras of periglacial Europe 
and strongest in North Africa. There a profusion of geometric micro- 

1 Clark (1936), 198; Antiquity, XI (1937), 477J Gumpert, Fr&nk. Mesolithikum 
(Mannus Bibliothek, 40), 14-27. 

* Obennaier, op. cit., p. 324; Breuil and Zbyszewski, "Revision des industries de 
Muge", Communicates dos Servicios geologicos, XXVIII (Lisbon, 1947); Roche, J., 
L' Industrie du Cabefo d'Amoreira (Muge) (Porto, 1951). 

* Pequart, Boule and Vallois, Teviec, /PH., Mem. 18 (1937), with important section 
on mesolithic races; Pequart, M. and St. J., Hoedic (Anvers, 1954). 

* Riv. St. Lig. f XII (1946), 36-7. 

* L'Anthr., XLIX (i939"4<>), 702; Riv. St. Lig. XIV (1948), 16-19. 
4 Pericot, La Cueva del Parpalld (Madrid, 1942), 67, 92. 

6 



SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS 

liths characterizes the middens and other deposits of the later Capstan 
culture. Moreover, these Capsians buried their dead in the middens. 
Some Tardenoisians may then be immigrants, driven north by the 
incipient desiccation of the Sahara at the close of the European Ice 






FIG. 4. Microliths from Muge, Portugal, and transverse arrow-head shafted 
from Denmark (|). 

Age. The flints from such sites as the cave of La Cocina in Eastern 
Spain are indeed virtually identical with the late Capsian. 1 The top- 
most layers of this cave yielded "Almerian" pottery which we shall 
see (p. 268) represents a neolithic of Capsian tradition. It does not 
follow that all makers of "Tardenoisian microliths" were recent 
immigrants from Africa. Such microliths are found in most parts of 
France, Britain, Belgium, South Germany, Poland, and the Pontic 
Steppes; most are derivatives of local Upper Palaeolithic industries, 
and had emerged in Britain, France, Belgium, and Germany by Boreal 
times. 2 But in both Britain 8 and France, 4 and probably too in south- 
west Germany 6 and Portugal, 6 Tardenoisians still survived, retaining 
their primitive economy and microlithic traditions in industry, when 
a neolithic or even a Bronze Age economy had already been established 
among neighbouring groups. And certain Tardenoisian types trapezes 
and lunates used by later communities in the Peninsula, France, 
and South Russia, may denote the absorption of Tardenoisian hunters 
by food-producing peoples. Microlithic must not be mistaken for 
mesolithic. On the other hand, isolated bones of sheep, reported 
exceptionally from pure Tardenoisian layers, otherwise pre-neolithic, 7 
suggest the possibility that the term Tardenoisian may include some 

Vaufrey, L'Afrique, 413. 

Clark (1936), 211-13. 

Ibid., 217; 1932, 51. 

E.g. at Sauveterre (Lot-et-Garonne) Tardenoisian microliths were associated with 
finger-tipped cordoned pottery and tanged and barbed arrowheads, Coulanges, IPH. 
M m. 14 (i935) 26. 

Chile, Danube, 18. 

Sherds of decorated "cave" pottery were found at least in the upper levels of the 
midden. 

7 Lacam, et a/., Le Gisement mtsolithique du Cuzoul, IPH.Mem. 21 (1944), xx; Pequart, 
et a/., Teviec, IPH.Mem. 18 (i937) xoi. At Mas d'Azil even un tas de bU was once 
mentioned. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

early immigrant sheep-breeders who made no pots nor ground stone 
celts. 

Asturian 1 is the term applied to the culture of strandloopers who 
succeeded the Azttians on the coasts of North Spain and appear in 
Portugal too. They lived very largely on shell-fish during a period of 
greater rainfall than the present and are characterized in the archaeo- 
logical record by a pick-like tool formed by chipping a beach pebble 
to a rough point. 

Though inhabiting wooded countries, none of the communities so 
far described give any sign of a sustained effort to master this element 
in their environment by the elaboration of specialized carpenter's tools. 
Peoples occupying the forested plain of North Europe, on the contrary, 
did develop adzes and axes for dealing with timber. To emphasize this 
adaptation to their environment they may be grouped together as the 
Forest folk. Their ancestors had advanced as far north as Jutland 
before the end of Pre-Boreal times. The pioneers in the colonization 
were known down till 1936 only by stray discoveries of " Lyngby 
axes" reindeer antlers on which the brow tine has been trimmed to 
form an adze or an axe edge, or the socket for a flint blade (Fig. 5), 




FIG. 5. "Lyngby axe" of reindeer antler, Holstein (J). 

which, however, are ill-adapted for chopping and were doubtless used 
as clubs. In 1936 a camp of reindeer-hunters who used them was 
located on the banks of a shallow mere at Stellmoor near Hamburg 
and revealed the content of the Ahrensburg culture. 2 The reindeer 
were killed with wooden arrows smoothed on grooved stone straighteners 
(like Fig. 113) and tipped with asymmetrically tanged flint points; 
game or fish were speared with barbed harpoons made on strips roughly 
wrenched from reindeers' antlers. 

A reindeer's skull, mounted on a post, was planted on the shore like 
a totem pole. 

1 Obermaier, op. cit., 349-58; Perfect, Hist. Espafta' 

* Rust, A., Die alt- und mitttlsteinzeitliche Funde von Stellmoor (Neumiinster, 1943). 

8 



SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS 

Stellmoor was just a temporary camp where the Ahrensburg hunters 
spent summer and autumn, retreating presumably farther south to 
winter. Their ancestors should doubtless be sought among the Eastern 
Gravettians; "Lyngby axes 1 ' had in fact been used in late pleistocene 
times in Moravia, 1 Hungary, and Romania. 2 At the same time flint 
axes were already being used in South Russia. 8 

The Ahrensburg folk were, however, not the direct or sole ancestors 
of the Forest tribes who did develop an effective wood-working equip- 
ment. These can most clearly be recognized at Star Carr in Yorkshire 
near Scarborough. 4 There in Pre-Boreal times about 7500 B.C. (accord- 
ing to a radio-carbon estimate) used to winter a band of four "house- 
holds" of hunter-fishers on the banks of an extinct lake. They fished 
from a rough platform of birch trunks sloping down into the mere. 
They had felled the trees with chipped flint celts, edged by a tranchet 
blow i.e. a blow at right angles to the main axis of the flint; both the 
celts and the flakes detached in resharpening them were found lying 
between the logs. 

Game elk, red deer, and wild ox and the birds were slain with 
arrows or darts tipped with geometric microliths; fish speared with 
leisters. The barbed prongs of the latter, usually called harpoons, were 
fashioned on strips neatly carved from stags' antlers by the groove- 
and-splinter technique inherited from the Aurignacian, 6 but in form 
foreshadow the classical Maglemosian bone points of the Boreal period. 
To aid them in the chase as disguises or to ensure an ampler supply of 
game in magic ceremonies the hunters wore frontlets carrying the 
antlers cut from stags' skulls. Similar Forest folk must have been 
spread all over Northsealand and perhaps farther east, but are directly 
attested only in Denmark by distinctive flints. 

Certainly by Boreal times the Forest folk had spread all over the 
still unbroken North European plain from Southern England to Fin- 
land, and had achieved a very nice adjustment to their environment 
of pine woods, interrupted only by lakes and rivers. While hunting 
expeditions brought the widely scattered groups into contact from 
time to time, fishing beside streams and meres encouraged more per- 
manent encampment so that equipment was already being differen- 
tiated locally to meet divergent conditions. Within the larger con- 
tinuum local facies or cultures can be distinguished in England, 

1 In the Magdalenian levels of the Pekarna cave and in the contemporary camp of 
Pavlovce near Dolni VSstonice. 

Dacia, V-VI (1934-35), 12, pi. Ill; cf., Antiquity, XVI (1942), 259. 
8 At Kostienki I; KS. t XXXI (1950)* i 68 - 

4 Clark, G., Star Carr (Cambridge, 1954)- 

APL. t IV (1955), 195 * 

9 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Denmark, North Germany, 1 the East Baltic 2 (Kunda), and perhaps 
the Norwegian coast. But the Maglemose near Mullerup and other 
classic sites in Zealand supply material for an adequate picture, applic- 
able with modifications to the rest. 

These were summer-camps, submerged each winter, whither men 
repaired for hunting, fowling, fishing, and nut-gathering. To secure 




FIG. 6. Maglemosian types from Zealand. 1-3, 7-8 (i); 4 (f); 5-6 (f). 



food they had devised or perfected a highly efficient equipment 
for hunting, bows 8 of elm wood reinforced with sinews from which 
were shot wooden arrows armed with geometric microliths inserted 
into grooves on the shaft or merely gummed on with birch-pitch, 4 
slotted bone points, also armed with small flints (Fig. 6, 3), and clubs 
with spheroid or spiked stone heads perforated by percussion. Their 
still more specialized fishing tackle 6 : leisters with several kinds of 
barbed bone prongs (Fig. 6, 1-2; cf. Fig. 105, 6), bone fish-hooks, nets 

* Clark, Northern Europe (1936); cf. Childe, PCJ3/., 26-8. 

1 Indreko, "Die mittiere Steinzeit in Estland", K. V. H. A. Akademiens, Handlingar, 
LXVIfStockholm, 1948); SMYA., LVII (1956) (the Askola culture). 

* Arsbertotelse (1951), 123-36. * Clark Preh - Eu '- 



, 42-8. 



10 



SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS 

of lime bast with pine bark floats and ingenious wicker weds (traps). 
For killing fur-bearing animals with minimum damage to the pelts 
they employed conical wooden arrow-heads which east of the Baltic 
were translated into bone (Fig. 105); there an antler pick had been 
specialized for breaking the ice. Bone needles were made for netting, 
flint gravers for cutting bone, small disc scrapers (Fig. 6, 4) for dressing 
skins, and split boars' tusks for knives. The wood-worker was now 
provided with chisels of antler, socketed chisels made from marrow 
bones of large game (Fig. 6, 8), perforated antler adzes, and flint core- 
axes (Fig. 6, 5) or exceptionally flake-axes (Fig. 6, 6) mounted as 
adze-blades in perforated antler sleeves (Fig. 6, 7). East of the Baltic, 
where flint was scarce, the adze-blades were pebbles sharpened, like 
the antler tools, by grinding. In England the flake-axe was still un- 
known. 

Communications were maintained most easily by water in boats, 
presumably of skins, which have not survived, though the paddles that 
propelled them are extant. For land transport over the winter snows 
sledges were available east of the Baltic. 1 Dogs of a wolfish type were 
everywhere domesticated and may be the ancestors of modern sledge- 
dog breeds. The electrical properties of amber had already been recog- 
nized as a magic virtue so that the substance was collected in Den- 
mark. ^Esthetic satisfaction was obtained by decorating bone imple- 
ments with geometric patterns, generally outlined by a series of points 
in the so-called drill-technique. 

Remarkably exact replicas of the Maglemosian bone equipment 
have been recovered from undated levels of peat bogs in the Urals, 
but these can hardly be used to document an eastern origin for the 
Maglemosians; Briusov 2 suggests that a common southern origin for 
both the Baltic and Uralian groups would adequately explain the 
agreements. An eastward spread would seem more likely; for the Magle- 
mosian is a natural development of the Pre-Boreal cultures of North- 
sealand. So too the Komsa and Fosna cultures, represented by assem- 
blages of stone tools (including tranchet celts) from high strands on 
the Norwegian coasts, 8 must be due to a simultaneous coastwise 
spread from the same region. 4 

The marine transgression that ushered in the Atlantic phase broke 
up the unity of the Forest cultures and offered new opportunities to 

1 A runner was recovered from a Boreal peat in Finland, SM., XXXVIII-XXXIX 
(1931-2), 60; XLI, 121; XLII, 22. 

1 OUrki, 146-8, 168-9; he would derive the Kunda culture from the east but not the 
west Baltic Maglemosian. 

1 B0e and Nummedal, Le Finnmarkien (Oslo, I93&)- 

4 Freundt, "Komsa, Fosna, Sandama", Acta Arch., XIX (1948). 4'55. *>t cf. SM YA., 
LVII. 

II 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

certain groups. Rich oyster banks combined with sealing and sea- 
fishing allowed communities to settle down at sheltered spots along 
the Danish and South Swedish coasts. The Erteb0lle culture represents 
an appropriate adjustment. 1 The sites are marked by huge shell-heaps 
(that may be 100 yards long and 30 yards wide), the refuse of a more 
sedentary population. The exposure of new deposits of superior flint 
resulted in an increasing substitution of flint for bone in making heavy 
tools. Flake-axes were preferred to picks, plump green-stone axes were 
sometimes made by grinding, as earlier in the East Baltic, but perfor- 
ated antler axes 2 no longer adzes and sleeves for axes were still 




FIG. 7. Ertebolle pot, antler axes and bone combs, Denmark 



made. The only microliths manufactured were transverse arrow-heads. 
Fish were not speared with harpoons but caught with hook and line. 
The sedentary life permitted the manufacture of pottery in the form 
of large jars with pointed bases and troughs that may have been used 
as blubber lamps. A taste for personal adornment is indicated by bone 
combs and armlets. The dead were buried extended in the middens, 8 
generally without grave goods, occasionally wrapped in a birch-bark 
shroud 4 and laid upon a bier, or once apparently cremated. 6 On the 
other hand, human bones, broken up just like those of game, afford 
good evidence for cannibalism. 6 

1 Clark, Northern Europe, 138-56, but cf. now Ada Arch., VIII (1937). 278-94; 
Mathiassen, "Bopladsen Dyrholmen", K. Dansk. Videns. Selskabs, Ark.-Kunsthist. 
Skrifter, I. i (1942); Bagge and Kjellmark, Siretorp.: "Aamose", 136-44; and Althin, 

* These "axes" and the earlier "adzes" would not be much good for chopping, since 
the shafts actually preserved are hazel stems not over 2 cm. thick though as much as 
50 cm. long; Mathiassen, "Dyrholmen", 24. . 

* Brandsted, Danmarks, i, 115; round heads exceeded long heads in the ratio of 3 to 2, 
ibid., 123- 

* Stlkrtd Bogen (1946), 33. Degerbol, in Mathiassen, "Dyrholmen", 118-20. 

12 



SURVIVALS OF FOOD-GATHERERS 

Now a local invention of pottery cannot be a priori ruled out and 
ground stone adzes had been made in Boreal times (p. n). So the 
Erteb011e culture as just described could be regarded as an auto- 
chthonous adjustment of the native culture of the Boreal phase if 
not of the classical Maglemosian as illustrated in the lakeside camps, 
at least of its hypothetical counterpart as developed on the now sub- 
merged coasts of Northsealand. However, in 1953 Troels-Smith 1 showed 
that bones of domestic cattle and sheep or goats, and sherds bearing 
imprints of naked barley and of emmer and hexaploid wheats, do occur 
in several Erteb011e middens in Denmark that are dated by pollen- 
analysis to the Atlantic phase, while weeds of cultivation were already 
growing in their vicinity. Accordingly some Erteb011e folk were not 
mere food-gatherers, but farmers cultivating the soil and keeping 
domestic animals, tethered and stalled and not allowed to graze freely. 
Moreover, the earliest "neolithic" pots Becker's A funnel-beakers 
were made by the same technique and found on the same sites as the 
coarse "mesolithic" jars and troughs. 

As there were no wild sheep or goats to tame in Denmark nor wild 
cereals to cultivate, an actual infiltration of neolithic farmers must be 
admitted in Denmark already. Their stock and grains point unam- 
biguously to the south-east, their diffusion forms a major theme in 
subsequent chapters. Meanwhile a pure continuation of the old gather- 
ing economy can be traced round the North Sea and the Baltic. 

While the coastal populations thus took advantage of a new environ- 
ment, the communities inhabiting Norway, Central Sweden, the East 
Baltic lands and even the interior of Jutland and Schleswig-Holstein 
remained true to the Boreal way of life and preserved much of the old 
equipment particularly harpoons or, as in the Gudenaa culture of 
Jutland, 2 geometric microliths throughout the greater part of the 
Atlantic phase. Similar survivals to the south and east may be inferred 
from geometric microliths collected in Southern Sweden 8 and Poland. 4 
To the West the culture of Lower Halstow on the Thames estuary, 5 
dated botanically to Atlantic times, with its flake-axes provides a 
good parallel to Danish Erteb011e in its mesolithic aspect. The Horsham 
culture of Southern England 6 characterized by core-axes and many 
microliths should be partly contemporary though the absence of flake- 
axes and the archaism of the microliths might suggest an earlier date. 

1 Aarb0ger (i953) 5*62. 
1 Mathiassen, Aarb0ger (1937)- 

8 Althin, Scania, 159; Fv. (i944)> 257-79. . . 

WA. t XX (1954), 23-S 6 ; at Janislavice (Skiermewice Dist.) a sitting skeleton showing 
Lapponoid features is assigned to this phase. 

'Clark, Northern Europe, 158. Cfailde. PCBI., 28. 

13 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

In Scotland an antler axe found with a stranded whale in the Atlantic 
estuary of the Forth above Stirling 1 and similar implements from 
Obanian sites farther west are in good Erteb011e traditions. How far 
to the south-west the Forest culture had spread in Atlantic times before 
it was overlaid or transformed by immigrant neolithic farmers cannot 
yet be determined. The famous site of Le Campigny, Seine Inferieure, 
once the patent station for a mesolithic culture, now proves to be the 
hilltop settlement of fully neolithic Western farmers (p. 305) . 

The mesolithic cultures just described prove the continued occupation 
of large tracts of Europe from the glorious days of mammoth-hunting 
and the existence there of sparse but vigorous populations that could 
expand when the introduction of cereals and domestic stock offered 
an enlarged food supply. They may, moreover, be credited with positive 
contributions to later cultures that must be adapted to a like environ- 
ment. Most conspicuously had the Forest folk perfected an apparatus 
for exploiting the natural resources of their habitat, items of which 
survive to the present day where the environment has persisted. 
Fish-traps and leisters, structurally identical with those devised in 
Boreal times, are still used by fishermen round the Baltic a striking 
example of a craft tradition persisting locally for some eight thousand 
years. So they had discovered the process of making birch-pitch, an 
artificial material still used by the peasants of the region. 8 Forest folk 
had perfected an efficient kit of wood- working tools and in particular 
the ingenious tranchet technique for edging flint chopping-tools. That 
is not to say that this technique was diffused from Northern Europe 
to Italy, Egypt, Palestine, and the Solomon Islands, where it was 
certainly applied. It had in fact been anticipated in the late Acheulian 
cleavers of the Lower Palaeolithic and in the rare Moustierian coupoirs 
of the last Ice Age. 4 The positive contributions made by Swiderians, 
Azilians, Asturians, and the diverse groups here termed Tardenoisian 
are less well documented, but surely not altogether negligible. But by 
themselves none of the food-gatherers of temperate Europe could turn 
into food-producers. Is it not significant that mesolithic cultures are 
most richly represented in regions remote from the oldest historical 
centres of civilization and the native habitat of wild cereals and wild 
sheep? Whatever part mesolithic folk may have formed in neolithic 
populations, the flocks of sheep and the seeds of grain on which the 
new economy was based were not carried by wind or intertribal barter, 
but brought by actual immigrant shepherds and cultivators. 

1 Clark, Preh. Eur. t 65. . 

But cf. Nougier, Les Civilisations campigniennes (Pans, 1950)- 
Clark, Preh. Eur.. 208-9. * Peyrony, Prikist., Ill, 17. 

14 



CHAPTER II 
THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

THE now desiccated zone of North Africa and Hither Asia had been 
grassy prairie when Northern Europe was tundra or ice-sheet. On the 
upland steppes of South- West Asia grew wild grasses which under 
cultivation became barleys and wheats the ancestor of one-corn 
wheat (Triticum monococcum) from the southern Balkans to Armenia 
and wild emmer (Triticum dicoccoides) from Palestine to Iran. 1 Sheep 
and cattle fit for domestication were roving there too. In such an 
environment human societies could successfully adopt an aggressive 
attitude to surrounding nature and proceed to the active exploitation 
of the organic world. 

At Jarmo in Kurdistan 2 the inhabitants of a little hilltop village 
were cultivating emmer and barley that already exhibit some effects 
of domestication as early as 4750 B.C. In Palestine where the meso- 
lithic Natufians had been reaping annual grasses, 8 farming may have 
started before 6000 B.C. at Jericho. 4 But neither at Jarmo nor at 
Jericho did the first farmers make pottery. 

Stock-breeding and the cultivation of cereals were revolutionary 
steps in man's emancipation from dependence on the external environ- 
ment. They put man in control of his own food-supply so far that 
population could and did expand beyond the narrow limits imposed 
by the naturally available supply of wild fruits and game. But the 
expansion of population led by its very conditions to the expansion 
of the revolutionaries themselves the primitive half-sedentary farmers 
or their transmutation by a second revolution into a settled peasantry 
producing surplus food-stuffs for its own surplus offspring who had 
become artisans and traders, priests and kings, officials and soldiers in 
an urban population. 

The second revolution was accomplished first in the valleys of the 
Nile, the Euphrates, and the Indus. There irrigation cultivation had 
produced a surplus vast enough to support the whole superstructure 
of literate civilization. By 3000 B.C. archaeology and written history 
reveal Mesopotamians and Egyptians already grouped in vast cities 

1 On the cereals see Helbaek, Inst. Arch. AR., IX (1953). 44-5*- 
1 Braidwood, R. Antiquity, XXIV (1950), 190-6. 
8 Childe, NLMAE., 28-30. 
4 Antiquity, XXX (1956), 196. 

15 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

any one of which might, like Erech, measure two square miles in area, 
and in which secondary industry and trade offered an outlet for the 
surplus rural population. 

In New Light on the Most Ancient East I have tried to sketch in some 
details in that prehistoric background of Oriental history. And I have 
tried to show too how the first revolution that precedes it had to spread, 
and how the growing demands of the new urban centres of population 
and wealth must involve the propagation both of the arts and crafts 
on which the second revolution rested and of the economy that sus- 
tained it. To find food for rising generations, the simplest step was to 
bring fresh land under cultivation and annex new pastures. That 
meant a continuous expansion of colonization and the progressive 
multiplication of farming villages. But the surplus accumijlated in 
Egyptian and Mesopotamian cities could serve as capital for the 
promotion of trading expeditions through which the villages thus 
founded could share in the surplus and use it in their turn for the 
development of secondary industries. To obtain this share by supplying 
the effective demands of civilized societies, the Anatolian or Syrian 
villages must turn themselves into towns producing a surplus of farm- 
produce to support industrial workers and traders. And villages, thus 
urbanized, must become secondary centres of demand and for diffusion; 
they must in turn repeat the process of propagation, generating thereby 
tertiary centres to cany on the work. We should thus expect a hier- 
archy of urban or semi-urban communities, zoned, not only in space 
but also in time and in cultural level around the metropoles of Egypt, 
Mesopotamia, and India. How far does prehistcSif Europe confirm such 
anticipation? 

Farming must of course have started in South- West Asia. But in 
tracing its primary expansion thence, it must now be remembered 
that the first farmers were not necessarily also potters; the first peasant 
colonists to reach Europe may not have left a trail of potsherds to mark 
their tracksl And those tracks were not necessarily on land. Fishing 
communities along the Levant coasts could perfectly well have learned 
to supplement the produce of food-gathering by cultivating cereals 
and breeding stock. Such incipient food-producers, forced to colonize 
fresh territories, might perfectly well have taken to their boats and 
paddled or sailed on the alluring waters of the Mediterranean to the 
next landfall and then the next. 

By its spatial position and by special favours of the winds and 
currents the great island of Crete is easily accessible from the Nile, 
from Syria, from Anatolia, and from peninsular Greece. Its fertile 

16 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

lowlands guarantee a living to farmers and orchardists; its resources 
in timber, copper, and other raw materials can supply the needs of 
secondary industry; its natural harbours are not only bases for fisher- 
men but havens for merchants who can transport Cretan produce to 
urban centres and bring back in return the manufactures and also the 
science of older cities. 

The ruins of neolithic villages have formed a tell, 6*5 m. high, 
beneath the oldest Minoan levels at Knossos in Central Crete, where 
the Minoan civilization was first identified. But trial pits have revealed 
but little of the neolithic culture. 1 It was formally neolithic in that 
pebbles were ground and polished to make plump celts (axes and chisels) . 
But obsidian was imported from Melos and from Yali so that the 
farmers were hardly self-sufficing. For the later levels indeed the term 
neolithic is not even formally correct, since a copper flat axe was found 
on a house floor with stone celts. Stone was also drilled to make spheroid 
and pear-shaped mace-heads and worked into studs and even vases. 
The latest houses consisted of agglomerations of small chambers with 
fixed hearths and stone foundations for their walls. 

Pottery, 2 though hand made, was of fine quality, self-coloured grey- 
black or red-brown according as to whether it were fired in a reducing 
or an oxidizing atmosphere; the surface was often burnished, sometimes 
so as to produce a decorative rippled effect. The forms cannot be 
called primitive: the vases may be provided with genuine handles 
(including wish-bone, nose-bridge, and flanged ribbon handles) as well 
as simple and trumpet lugs; some vases have short spouts, most flat 
bases. Goblets on tall lialf-hollow pedestals and fruit-stands with 
hollow feet appear before the period ends. Ladles axe common, as in 
neolithic Egypt and Western Europe. Some middle neolithic vessels 
have club rims, as in Portugal and Britain. The potter decorated her 
products with incised patterns, including triangles and ribbons filled 
with punctuations. In the transitional pottery of the Trapeza cave 8 in 
the mountainous interior a schematized human face was modelled on 
the vase rim. 

For their fertility rituals the farmers modelled in day or carved in 
soft stone highly conventionalized figurines of the "Mother Goddess", 
seated or squatting (Fig. 8). As amulets they wore miniature stone 
axes pierced for suspension (axe-amulets). Caves were used for burials 
but for individual interments, not as ossuaries. 4 

Since palaeolithic food-gatherers have left no relics on the island, we 

1 Pendlebury, Archaology of Cr*U (London, 1939). 35-4 1 * 

1 BSA. t XLVIII (1953). 94-134. 

BSA., XXXVI, 30. *SA. t XXXVIII, 13. 

B 17 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

many Asiatic tells. 1 The mace-heads too belong to an Asiatic family 
but recur, like the axe-amulet, in the neolithic village of Merimde* in 
Lower Egypt, which also yielded plump axes and clay ladles. But 
punctured ribbon decoration and pedestalled goblets have analogies 
also in the Balkans .(p. 91), and the wish-bone handle is typical of the 
Macedonian Bronze Age, while Trapeza ware is still more reminiscent 
of Balkan and Apennine fabrics. 

The "neolithic" phase was ended by a "quickening impulse from the 
Nile, which permeated the rude island culture and transformed it" 
into the Minoan civilization. Evans suspects an actual immigration 
of predynastic Egyptians, perhaps refugees from the Delta fleeing 
from Menes' conquest. At least on the Mesari, the great plain of 
Southern Crete facing Africa, Minoan Crete's indebtedness to the Nile 
is disclosed in the most intimate aspects of its culture. Not only do the 
forms of Early Minoan stone vases, the precision of the lapidaries' 
technique and the aesthetic selection of variegated stones as his materials 
carry on the predynastic tradition: but also Nilotic religious customs 
such as the use of the sistrum, the wearing of amulets in the forms of legs, 
mummies and monkeys, and statuettes plainly derived from Gerzean 
"block figures", 8 and personal habits revealed by clepilatory tweezers 
of Egyptian shape, and stone unguent palettes from the early tombs 
and, later, details of costume such as the penis-sheath and the loin- 
cloth betoken something deeper than the external relations of 
commerce. 

At the same time even more explicitly Asiatic traits can be detected 
among the innovations distinguishing the "Metal Age" from the 
"Neolithic" civilization. Some might indeed have been transmitted 
via Egypt: block-vases paint-pots consisting of two or more com- 
partments hollowed out of a stone parallelepiped with perforated 
corners which were especially favoured in the Mesar, are common 
to Sumer and Egypt in Early Dynastic times. 4 But Minoan metallurgy 
is based entirely on Asiatic traditions; the coppersmith cast axe-heads 
with a hole through the head for shafting in the Mesopotamian manner, 
the artists treated rosettes and similar figures in the Asiatic, not the 
Egyptian style. 6 The most striking Minoan pot-forms the pyxis with 
cylindrical neck and string-hole lid, the jug with cut-away neck and 
the side-spouted jar have parallels on the Anatolian, not on the African 
side; the so-called teapot with curious spout (Fig. 9) recurs without 

Childe, NLMAE., 218. 

Childe, NLMAE., 39. 

Childe, NLMAE., fig. 36. 

Evans, P. ofM., II, fig. 20; cf. Childe, NLMAE., 94, 142, 163. 

Matz, FrUhkretische Sicgel, 88. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

the handle as far away as Tepe Hissar near Damghan 1 and even 
Anau in Turkestan. The technique of glaze paint that distinguishes 
Minoan pottery had been earlier employed by the Tel Halaf potters 
of North Syria. So in religion the cult of the Double- Axe is foreshadowed 
by Tel Halaf amulets. 2 The use of engraved bead and button seals as 
contrasted with carved amulets is a very ancient North Syrian-Iranian 
practice later adopted in Egypt as in Crete. 





FIG. 9. Early Minoan III "teapots " and button seal. After Evans. 



How far fresh Anatolian or Syrian colonists merchants or artisans 
joined with Egyptian refugees in founding the Minoan cities is for 
us a secondary question. Minoan civilization was not brought ready 
made from Asia nor from Africa, but was an original native creation 
wherein Sumerian and Egyptian techniques and ideas were blended 
to form a novel and essentially European whole. The admittedly Nilotic 
and Oriental elements that we see superadded to the Cretan neolithic 
culture may be treated as concrete expressions of the transformation 
of the island's economy with the support of capital accumulated in the 
great consuming centres that arose, round about 3000 B.C., on the Nile 

1 Schmidt, Excavations at Ttyi Hissar (1931-3), and MusJ. t XXIII, p. CXVI; cf. 
Frankfort, "Archaeology and the Sumerian Problem" (O.I.C. Studies, 4), 57-64. In 
Anatolia kindred forms were popular under the Hittite Empires (1950-1200 B.C.)* 
MDOG., 75 (1937). 3& Cf. Gordon, Iraq, XIII (1951), 40-46. 

* Chflde, NLMAE., fig. 105, 3. 

2O 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

and the Euphrates. In supplying their needs the Cretan farmer's sons 
might find a livelihood in trade and industry; their self-sufficing villages 
would become commercial cities. 

On the basis of the stratigraphical sequence, best preserved at 
Knossos, Sir Arthur Evans divided the Cretan Bronze Age into the 
famous "nine Minoan periods" to which he attributed absolute dates 
on the strength of contacts with the literate centres of civilization. 
His scheme, columns I and II below, needs some revision after fifty- 
five years. Firstly, the chronologies of Egypt and Mesopotamia 1 have 
been deflated since then. Secondly, Evans' division was based mainly 
on the sequence of ceramic styles observed at Knossos. This turns out 
to be applicable to other parts of the island only with drastic modi- 
fications. The ceramic art, defining Evans* L.M.II, was a " palace style", 
in vogue only at Knossos. The same thing had happened before. Once 
it looked as if East Crete had been deserted in M.M.II, since the eggshell- 
fine polychrone pottery defining that phase was lacking. In reality this 
style too was confined to the palaces of Knossos and Phaestos in Central 
Crete. 2 Even in the Mesard, a fortiori in East Crete, the M.M.I style 
was still in fashion as late as 1790 B.C. 8 Moreover, at Knossos the Early 
Minoan period is poorly represented owing to the levelling carried out 
by later builders; Evans' account had to be filled out by large drafts 
on material from East Crete and the Mesard. But during E.M. Minoan 
culture was by no means uniform so that there is a real danger of inflat- 
ing the sequence by using local styles to represent chronological periods. 
Thirdly, the first reliable synchronisms based on an actual and dated 
interchange of products are afforded by M.M.II vases in Middle King- 
dom Egypt securely dated about 1850 B.C. We have no Early Minoan 
imports in dated contexts in Egypt or Hither Asia, and, though actual 
Egyptian manufactures of Old Kingdom and even predynastic type 
were imported into the island, hardly any come from closed finds. 
One Egyptian jar from a Late Neolithic deposit is considered by 
Reisner to be no earlier than Dynasty I. If he be right, E.M.I must 
begin after 2830 or 3188 B.C. whichever date for that dynasty's begin- 
ning be accepted. Another imported vase from an E.M.I context, 
however, cannot be later than Dynasty III, some four centuries later. 
Further Egyptian imports imply an overlap between E.M.III in the 
Mesari and East Crete and the rise of Dynasty XII about 2000 B.C. 4 
We thus have the following scheme: 

1 E.g. by Sidney Smith, Alalakh and Chronology (London, 1940). 
1 Aberg, Chron., IV, aoi ff.; Pendlebury, Crete, XXXI, 300-2; Demargne, Fouilles a 
Mallia: Ntcropoles (Etudes Crttoises, VII, Paris, 1945), 65-9. 
Smith, AJA. t XLIX (1945). 23-4. 
Hutchinaon, Antiquity, XXII (1948), 61-3. 

21 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



Period 


Abbreviation and Subdivision 
Knossos East Crete 


Absolute Date 

B.C. 


Early Minoan 


E.M.I 
E.M.II 
E.M.III 


E.M.III ? 


? 2000 


Middle Minoan 


M.M.I 
M.M.II 

M.M.III 


M.M.I 


1850 
I7OO 


M.M.III 


Late Minoan 


L.M.I 
L.M.II 1 

L.M.III(A) 
L.H.III(B) 
L.H.III(C) 


L.M.I. 
L.M.III(A) 


1550 
1450 
1400 

i^bo 
1 200 



No attempt can be made here to evoke in a few pages an adequate 
picture of Minoan civilization. We must content ourselves with a brief 
outline of the economic development and some reference to the indus- 
trial products that are relevant for comparative purposes. 

As in neolithic times the foundations of Minoan economy were 
fishing, the breeding of cattle, goats, and pigs (sheep are not osteologic- 
ally attested till Late Minoan times) 2 and the cultivation of unidentified 
cereals together with olives and other fruits. But now specialized 
craftsmen jewellers, coppersmiths, lapidaries must have been sup- 
ported by the surplus produce of the peasantry. And so in addition 
to rural hamlets, larger agglomerations of population must be assumed 
though no Early Minoan township has been fully excavated. Soundings 
at Vasiliki 8 in East Crete and beneath the palace of Knossos give hints 
of the existence of complexes of rectangular houses of brick and timber 
on stone foundations, like the contemporary towns of Anatolia and 
Mainland Greece. But even as late as M.M.I we find the rural population 
living in isolated house-complexes more reminiscent of a big farm than 
even a village. A dwelling of that period at Chamaizi 4 was an oval 
walled enclosure, measuring 20 m. by 12 m. and divided by radial 
walls into eleven compartments exactly like the Iron Age courtyard 
houses and wheel dwellings of Western Britain! 

Similar conclusions might be drawn from the graves. The standard 

1 A diorite amphora, bearing the cartouche of Thothmes III (1500-1447) from a 
L.M.II tomb near Herakleion, gives new precision to this dating; Kretika Chronika, 

VI (1953). " 

* Hazzadakis, Tylissos a I'e'poque minoenne (1921)1 77* 
1 Described in Boyd Hawes, Gournia. 
4 Evans, P. ofM. t I, 147. 

22 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

Minoan burial practice at all periods was collective interment in a 
family or communal ossuary used for many generations. This practice, 
foreign to Egypt, Sumer, and the Anatolian plateau, was current all 
round the Mediterranean, going back to "Mesolithic" times among 
the troglodyte Natufians of Palestine. 1 In the Minoan ossuaries the 
bones are generally lying in the utmost disorder. The dislocated con- 
dition of the skeletons, which has been observed in collective tombs 
farther west too, has been taken as evidence of secondary burial; the 
remains would have been deposited in a temporary resting-place until 
the flesh had decayed. Xanthudides' 8 careful studies of the Mesara 
burials have, however, shown that the disordered condition of the 
bones was due in the main to disturbances by those undertaking later 
interments who showed little respect to the former occupants of the 
tomb in making room for a fresh interment. The bodies had generally 
been placed on the floor of the tomb in the contracted attitude. Simi- 
larly traces of fire, sometimes noted on the bones, are due to ritual or 
purificatory fires kindled within the ossuary rather than to cremation. 

The ossuaries themselves may be natural caves (E.M.I to M.M.I), 
rectangular stone chambers, imitating two-roomed houses, or circular 
enclosures commonly termed tholoi. In the Mesari the tholoi vary 
in internal diameter from 4-10 to 13 m., and are entered through a low 
doorway, formed of two megalithic uprights supporting a massive 
lintel and often entered from a small walled enclosure. The walls are 
from 1-8 to 2-5 m. thick and the inner courses oversail one another as if 
the whole had been roofed with a corbelled vault on the principle 
employed in the Cycladic tomb illustrated in Fig. 25, I. While it is 
hard to believe that a space 30 or 40 feet across could really have been 
spanned by a false dome, the smaller chambers certainly do deserve 
the name of tholoi, or "vaulted tombs". In an early example at Krazi 8 
in East Crete, 4-2 m. in diameter, the corpses must, as in the Cyclades 
and Attica (pp. 51, 72), have been introduced through the roof, since 
the door, only 0-5 m. high, was completely blocked by an accumulation 
of bones and offerings; the "door" would in fact be purely symbolic 
as in Egyptian mastabas and some British long barrows. 

Evans has compared the Cretan tholoi to Libyan and Nubian closed 
tombs of later date, but Mallowan, followed by Peake, would find the 
prototypes of the Minoan tholoi in circular brick constructions of 
unknown, but certainly non-sepulchral, use which he had discovered 
in the chalcolithic Tel Halaf township at Arpachiya in Assyria that 

1 Garrod, The Stone Age of Mount Carmel, I, 14. 

Xanthudides and Droop, Vaulted Tombs of the Mesard. 

1 -4A (1929). 103. 

23 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

goes back at least far into the fourth millennium B.C. 1 By that date the 
device of corbelling was certainly well understood in Hither Asia, but 
it is not attested in Egypt before the Second or Third Dynasty. In fact, 
the Minoan tholoi, like the contemporary rectangular ossuaries, may 
be just imitations in permanent material of dwellings for the living, 
since round houses are attested by a model from Phsestos. As the tholos 
tomb was current also in the Cyclades, pottery and ornaments of 
Cycladic character were abundant in the early tholos at Krazi, and 
Cycladic idols occur even in the Mesari tombs, Marinates seems 
inclined to think that the type of sepulchre may have been introduced 
by families from the small islands. 

In East Crete (for instance at Mochlos) the house-tombs may be 
grouped to form small cemeteries such as should correspond to a 
township where several lineages lived together. Tholoi are more often 
isolated as if the territorial unit corresponded to a single clan or lineage. 
But in the Mesari small cemeteries are known three tholoi and a 
rectangular ossuary at Koumisa, three tholoi at Platanos, etc. Such 
aggregations imply the association of several kinship groups in a single 
village, but no actual settlements anterior to Middle Minoan have been 
yet identified in the vicinity. Both in the Mesard and at Krasi, when 
the tholoi had become congested, accessory chambers were built on 
to the original mausoleum to receive subsequent interments, mostly 
of Middle Minoan date. And by M.M.II there developed the practice 
of excavating in the soft rock sepulchres designed for a single small 
family irregular chambers entered by a short passage or antechamber 
as attested by the Mavro Speleo cemetery near Knossos. 2 Cases of 
cremation occur among the latest interments in an adjacent cemetery. 8 
A small tholos seems to have been built in an excavation in a hillside 
in the same period. Subterranean chambers became the standard form 
of tomb in Late Minoan times in Crete as in Mycenaean Greece. But 
even before the end of Early Minoan, individual burial in small stone 
cists, in clay coffins (larnakes), and in jars (pithoi) grouped in cemeteries 
as contrasted with ossuaries was beginning to compete with ossuary 
practice, and steadily increased in popularity during later periods. 
The clay coffins 4 have early parallels both in Mesopotamia and Egypt, 
whereas jar burial is a specifically Anatolian-Syrian rite. 

The variety of burial practices coexistent in Early Minoan times, 
like the variety of ceramic traditions, suggests that the island had been 
colonized by distinct communities which had not yet fused to form a 

1 Iraq, II, 20. figs. 13-14. 

* BSA. t XXVIII (1926-27), 263-96. 

"Archaeology in Greece", Supplement to JHS. (i955) 
Man, XXIX (1929), 18- 

24 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

single people with an homogeneous culture. But they seem to have 
lived together peaceably, as no fortifications have been found, and as 
members of a single economic system in view of the uniformities in 
types of metal tools, stone vases, jewellery, and seals. This system 
secured and distributed foreign materials, gold, silver, lead, obsidian, 
marble, and perhaps amber (from the tholos of Porti), Egyptian and 
Asiatic manufactures such as fayence beads and stone vases that were 
copied locally, and perhaps Cycladic figurines. Individual artisans 
needed seals (buttons, beads, and prisms) that might bear scenes 
symbolic of their craft; merchants stamped therewith bales of goods 
exported to Asine and other mainland ports. But no regular system 
of writing and ciphering was yet needed nor publicly sanctioned for 
correspondence or accounts. Though sepulchral furniture discloses 
considerable personal wealth, neither monumental private tombs, 
palaces, nor temples indicate concentration of wealth in the hands of 
capitalists human or divine. Cult was conducted in rustic sanctuaries 
and grottoes. Its symbols stone figurines imported from the Cyclades 
or imitating predynastic Egyptian block figures, phalli 1 and model 




FIG. 10. The Minoan "Mother Goddess" and (left) Horns of Consecration, 
from a sealing. After Evans. 

horns of consecration 2 as in Anatolia, dove-pendants 8 as in the Cyclades 
and Assyria, and votive double-axes 4 of copper and lead while fore- 
shadowing the distinctive apparatus of later Minoan ritual, still appear 
in forms appropriate to domestic worship. 



1 Koumasa, tholos X. 

Mochlos, E.M.I. (P. ofM., I, 57). 

* Mochlos (ibid., 102); cf. Iraq, II, fig. 51, 7. 

25 



Mochlos (P. of AT., I, 101). 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

In Middle Minoan times power and wealth began to be concentrated 
in the hands of dynasts residing in Central Crete and combining political 
and religious authority. Palaces that were also temples, factories, and 
warehouses were erected at Mallia, Knossos, and other sites. Special- 
ization invades the domain of domestic industry. The potters' wheel, 
symbolizing the industrialization of the ceramic art, is attested from 
M.M.I. The wheel itself was a large clay disc which itinerant potters 
could carry about with them as they do to-day. 1 Wheeled vehicles 
are first represented at the same period by a model four-wheeled cart 
from Palaikastro. 2 They could hardly be serviceable without roads 
maintained by some authority with more than local jurisdiction. And 
in fact during Middle Minoan times the divergent local traditions 
that had persisted throughout the preceding period wer* gradually 
fused until Crete came to enjoy a single civilization. But the dis- 
tinction between province and metropolis becomes prominent. The 
provincial potters of Eastern Crete could not compete with the experts 
employed in the palaces of Knossos or Phaestos in turning out poly- 
chrome ware of eggshell thinness. 

The priest-kings organized more effectively trade with Egypt, Melos, 
peninsular Greece, and other foreign lands where even the eggshell 
pottery has been discovered in Egypt in a Twelfth Dynasty tomb 
sealed some time after 1850 B.C. And this commerce must have sub- 
stantially augmented their real wealth. For its administration a civil 
service would be required. And the perpetual corporation thus insti- 
tuted needed a socially sanctioned system of keeping records and 
accounts. In fact a conventional script of an ideographic type was 
developed during M.M.I and used for accountancy. The idea was 
presumably borrowed from the Minoans' correspondents in Egypt or 
Syria, where writing had been in use for a thousand years. The actual 
conventions were local, though several signs have Egyptian analogues 
and the numeral forms are reminiscent of early Sumerian, while the 
use of a clay tablet as a vehicle of writing is an Asiatic habit. 

Increase of wealth is usually accompanied by increase of population. 
The palace of Knossos was surrounded with an extensive town of two- 
storeyed houses, known not from actual excavation so much as from 
a mosaic attributed to M.M.IIb. The native population would be 
swelled by the immigration of craftsmen attracted by the wealth of 
Minoan courts and towns. So professional potters from Asia may have 
introduced the potters' wheel and trained native apprentices in its 
use. And other specialists such as fresco-painters may have arrived to 

1 Essays in JEgean Archeology, presented to Sir Arthur Evans (Oxford, 1927), 111-28. 
BSA. t Supplementary Volume, Palaikastro (1923), 17. 

26 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

minister to courtly desires for refinement. But if new arts were intro- 
duced by immigrants, the Minoan schools these founded were original 
and creative both in devising fresh techniques and in creating a new 
naturalistic style that owed little to Oriental models. In beholding the 
charming scenes of games and processions, animals and fishes, flowers, 
and trees that adorned the Middle Minoan II and III palaces and 
houses we breathe already a European atmosphere. 

The development of Minoan civilization was interrupted by catas- 
trophes which may be taken to mark the end of the phases termed 
M.M.II, M.M.III, and L.M.I. The disasters are usually attributed to 
earthquakes and were followed by reconstructions of the ruined palaces 
without any break in the continuity of architectural, artistic, and 
technical traditions. But after the last a new and simplified script 
Linear B was introduced at Knossos, and with it apparently a new 
language; for while the older, Linear A writings still defy decipherment 
in 1956, Ventris and Chadwick have read the L.M.II tablets as docu- 
ments in an early Greek dialect identical with that current in Mycen- 
aean Greece. Thus it looks as if Knossos had become the capital of a 
conquering dynast from the Mainland who established over the whole 
island a regular empire of the Oriental pattern. His empire did not last. 
About 1400 B.C. hostile forces razed the palace of Minos to the ground. 
The hegemony in the ^Egean had passed to Mycenae on the Mainland 
(p. 81). But urban civilization still flourished in Crete for two centuries. 
Gournia, for instance, in East Crete, now covered six acres and com- 
prised some sixty houses. And the richly furnished Late Minoan 
cemeteries comprising corbelled tombs (partially subterranean), rock- 
hewn chamber tombs, pit-caves, and shaft graves as well as larnax 
burials, remained in use in places even into the Iron Age. 1 

This inadequate sketch must be supplemented by a brief reference 
to certain industrial products that will be cited in later chapters dealing 
with less progressive parts of Europe. Tools and weapons are particu- 
larly relevant in this context. Obsidian was used for knives, sickle- 
teeth, and arrow-heads (including the transverse type). Fine hollow- 
based specimens are found even in Late Minoan tombs. At least in 
Early Minoan times stone was used even for axe-heads; notable is a 
"jadeite" celt from the tholos of Kalathiana in the Mesard. But copper 
was being used for celts even in the latest ''neolithic" phase 2 and soon 
ousted stone. Copper ore exists in East Crete 8 and may have been 
exploited in Early Minoan times. The addition of tin to copper to 

1 Arch., LIX, and LXV, 1-94; Pendlebury, Crete. 195, *4*. 306. 
1 P. ofM., II. 14. 

9, Dawn of MtdiUrranea* Civilitatio* (1910)* 290. 

27 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

facilitate casting is attested as early as M.M.I, though the standard 
alloy containing 10 per cent of tin was not firmly established till 
M.M.III. Bronze was known to the Sumerians before 2500 B.C. and 
knowledge of its qualities was probably transmitted thence to the 
JJgean via Anatolia (p. 38). But the Minoans' demand for tin may 
ultimately have been supplied from lodes in Etruria, Cornwall, or 
Bohemia, since in each country we shall encounter ambiguous hints 
of contact with the ^Egean world (pp. 128, 241, 336). Iron is represented 
by a ring from a Middle Minoan tomb in the Mavro Speleo cemetery, 
but was not used industrially before 1200 B.C. 




Fio. ii. Minoan axes, axe-adzes and double axe (J), and seal impressions (f). 
After Evans and M. A. 

For axes the flat celt of the copper age did not lead, as in Cis-alpine 
Europe, to flanged and socketed forms, but was superseded by the 
shaft-hole axe (Fig. u, i) that had been current from prehistoric times 
in Mesopotamia. After Middle Minoan III the single-bladed axe was 
ousted in Crete by the two-edged variety the Double Axe known 
also to the Sumerians and elevated to become a fetish or symbol of 
divine power by E.M.II. Double adzes too were used by the Knossian 
workmen by the beginning of L.M.I. 1 Finally, the axe-adze that may 
be regarded as a combination of two types of axe used by the Sumerians 
is represented by a gold model attributed to E.M.II 8 and actual 
specimens from the farmhouse at Chamaizi (Fig. n, 3) attributed to 
M.M.I and then the standard Minoan form (Fig. n, 4) from M.M.II on. 



p. ofM., n, 619, fig. 392- 



28 



P. o/Af., I, 193.^.3. 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

Heavy perforated hammers of metal rectangular in cross-section are 
reported as early as M.M.II 1 and carpenters' saws are attested as early 
as wheeled vehicles, by M.MJ. 2 But elongated flat celts served as 
chisels and no sickles older than LJOIP survive. 

Early Minoan daggers are triangular or provided with a very short 
wide tang (Fig. 12, i), and sometimes given longitudinal rigidity by 
means of a midrib cast on both faces. They were attached with small 
rivets, sometimes of silver, to their bone or wooden hilts that were 
surmounted by globular or hemispherical pommels 4 of stone or ivory, 




FIG. 12. x t Early Minoan daggers (J); 2, Stone beads (f). After Evans. 

laterally perforated for transverse rivets to hold them in position. 
During Middle Minoan times the blades, still either flat or strengthened 
with a midrib, were elongated and assume an ogival form (Fig. 13), 
Some have a flat tang, like Asiatic daggers, and the rivets are large. 
But the palace of Mallia has yielded a genuine rapier, attributed to 
M.M.I, 6 which is shown by its elongated pommel and its attachment 
to the hilt to be a development of the Sumerian series illustrated in 
the Royal Tombs of Ur. And in M.M.III the great rapiers from the 
Shaft Graves of Mycenae (Fig. 14, 1-3) *** clearly elongations, to the 

From Hagia Triada and Prisos. 



. XXV; JRAL ^XXIV, I7 . 
Xanthudides and Droop, pis. XXIII, LIV. 
Pi of M., II, 272; cf , C&lde, NLMAE. t pi. XXVIa. 
29 




L 



\ 




FIG. 14. M.M.III rapiers (Mycen*) (*) and L.M.I homed hflt (Crete). After Evans. 

31 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

For removing facial hair Minoans used, in addition to tweezers, 
razors, generally leaf-shaped in Late Minoan times. 1 

Minoan pottery is too rich and varied to be described here in detail. 
During Early Minoan times self-coloured burnished wares like the 
local neolithic and Early Anatolian and Cycladic fabrics were current. 
They might be decorated by stroke-burnishing 2 or with channelled 
lines that may compose concentric semicircles. 8 In E.M.II the potters 
of Vasiliki in East Crete covered their vessels with a red ferruginous 
wash which they relieved with dark blotches deliberately produced 
by the reducing agency of a glowing piece of charcoal. 4 But from the 
first the Minoan potter could produce a clear buff ware, probably 




FIG. 15. Late Mycenaean short sword (Mycenae) and Middle Minoan spear-head (i). 

fired in a kiln. By coating the vessel with a lustrous glaze paint he 
obtained a surface resembling that of the self-coloured burnished 
fabrics upon which patterns were drawn in white paint. Alternatively 
the paint was used as medium for producing dark patterns on a light 
ground. During Middle Minoan times red and yellow were combined 
with white, but the light on dark system was predominant. In Late 
Minoan on the contrary this style was abandoned altogether in favour 
of dark on light. Spiral patterns appear first in E.M.III under Cycladic 
influence (cf. p. 54). Some main forms of Early Minoan pottery have 
already been mentioned on p. 19. 

Throughout the Minoan epoch vessels of stone, metal, and wood 
competed with the potters' products and reacted upon their forms 
and decorations. Indeed, from its inception a wealth of stone vases 
distinguishes the Minoan civilization from contemporary Helladic and 
Anatolian cultures. Though the Egyptians excelled in transforming 
hard stones into vessels, stone vases had been used in Mesopotamia 
and Syria too since the fourth millennium and were made in Cyprus 



1 Evans, Arch., LIX, 117; Hood, loc. <*/., 262. 
* Eva**. P. of M., I, 59- 



Ibid., fig. 22. 



4 Frankfort, Studies, II, 90. 



THE ORIENT AND CRETE 

before the oldest pots. 1 Oi importance for comparison are the block- 
vases already mentioned that may have been copied in day in the 
Danube valley and the birds'-nest vases that might be the prototypes 
for certain Almerian pots; both forms are Early Minoan. 

Metal vessels may. have been in use even in Early Minoan times and 
were undoubtedly quite common in later periods. But the competition 
of plate on the tables of the rich did not involve any degradation of 
the ceramic art in Crete as it did in Mesopotamia and Egypt. Two 
shapes are noteworthy a two-handled tankard or cantharos with 
quatrefoil lip (represented by a silver specimen from Mochlos allegedly 
M.M.I) 2 which is known in pottery from Hittite times in Anatolia 




FIG. 1 6. Egyptian representations of Vapheio cups. 

and the Middle Bronze Age of Hungary and in alabaster from Shaft 
Grave IV at Mycenae, and the so-called Vapheio cup of M.M.III to 
L.M.II (Fig. 16),* the curious handle of which may after all be inspired 
by a wooden model; a clay cup with a rather similar handle turned up 
at Nienhagen in Saxo-Thuringia apparently in an Early Bronze Age 
cemetery. 

Minoan costume, like the Egyptian, did not require fastening with 
pins, so that, apart from a few hairpins, these toilet accessories, so 
common in Mesopotamian, Anatolian, and Central European graves, 
are missing in Bronze Age Crete. On the other hand, the Minoans, like 
the Egyptians, Sumerians, and Indians, were skilled at shaping and 
perforating hard stones for beads. Rock crystal and carndian were 
used from Early Minoan times as well as ivory and fayence. Two 
amorphous lumps from the tholos of Porti have been identified as 
amber, but Evans has questioned this diagnosis. 4 By L.M.I amber 
was certainly reaching Crete regularly from the Baltic, and a gold* 
bound amber disc from the cemetery of Knossos (L.M.II) 5 is almost 

1 Dikaios, Khirokitia (London, 1953); so also at Janno, Kurdistan. 
P. of M. t I, fig. i39a; cf. van dcr Osten, The Alishar HUyVk (1928-29), Chicago 
O.I.C. Publication XIX), pi. XI. 

* Xanthudides and Droop, 69. Arch., LXV, 42. 

c 33 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

identical with six found in Early Bronze Age II graves in Wiltshire, 
Segmented beads of fayence, copying stone beads that go back to 
E.M.II 1 (Fig. 12, 2 (top)), were being manufactured in Crete from 
M.M.IIL Similar beads have turned up as imports in the Danube valley, 
Spain, Poland, and England (p. 336, below). Stone hammer-beads occur 
even in the E.M. ossuaries of the Mesard.* 

1 U. ofPenns., Anthrop. Publs., Ill, 3, 184. 
1 Xanthudides and Droop, pi. XXXII, 548. 



34 



CHAPTER III 
ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE AEGEAN 

IN the fifth century the Royal Road from Mesopotamia to the , 
led not to the Levantine coasts alone but on across the plateau of 
Anatolia a promontory of Asia thrust out towards Europe. Here ran 
the route along which Persian armies marched to impose Oriental 
culture ori Greece, along which diplomatists, scientists, and merchants 
travelled to transmit more peacefully and successfully Babylonian 
ideas to the young Ionian states. More than a millennium earlier the 
plateau was a bridge along which merchant caravans could travel to 
transport westward a share of Mesopotamian capital. Between 2000 
and 1800 B.C. the region's wealth in ores had induced a colony 1 of 
Assyrian merchants to settle at Kanes (Kiiltepe) in Cappadocia; they 
maintained continuous intercourse with the cities on the Tigris and 
Euphrates, illustrated by their business archives, the so-called Cappa- 
docian tablets. They may have had earlier precursors. In any case they 
found, if not a literate civilization, at least some degree of urbanization 
and an incipient state organization. Rich "royal tombs" at Alaca 
Huyiik 2 illustrate the wealth amassed by local princes, several special- 
ized crafts, and trade that secured a variety of raw materials. Un- 
fortunately these tombs contain no undoubted imports nor even types 
that can be dated by reference to Mesopotamian literature. The culture 
of the princes' subjects is reduplicated in many little hiiyuks (tells), 
too small to represent anything but modest villages. In them, copper 
was already competing with stone and bone as an industrial material 
but without in the least replacing them. This "Copper Age" culture, 
as Turkish archaeologists label it, is fairly uniform all over the plateau; 
judged by its pottery self-coloured dark-faced wares, jugs and cups 
with true handles and side spouts, corrugated ornament its prefer- 
ence for the sling, the multiplicity of female figurines it is allied to 
the Early Troadic to be described below. It differs sharply from the 
latter in burial practice; the dead were regularly interred under the 
house floors as in Syria, Assyria, and Iran, and not in distinct cemeteries. 
Many of these peculiarities seem to have been inherited from a 

1 Tahsim Ozgtt9> KittUpe Hafriyati (Ankara), 19; 

1 RemziOgiz Arik, Lj 

bungen von A. H. (Ankara, 



Remzi Ogiz Arik, Lesfouilles d* Alaca HdyUk (Istanbul, 1937); H. Z. Kosay, 
kara, 1944); id. Alaca HdyUk Kazisi (Ankara, 1951). 



35 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

previous phase, termed by Turkish archaeologists Chalcolithic because 
copper was already in use if mainly for ornaments. It is very imper- 
fectly known from the deeper levels of Alijar in the Halys 1 basin, and 
perhaps from Buyiik Giilliicek 1 and Maltepe near Sivas 8 farther north. 

As compared to the Early ^gean Bronze Age, the Anatolian Copper 
Age does not seem early, though the discrepancy may be due to the 
more modest guesses of its investigators. 4 A seal of Jemdet Nasr type 
from the Copper Age strata and a radio carbon date of 25oo25o B.C. 5 
for layer 14 at Alijar might justify more generous estimates. It does not 
seem an apt vehicle for the transmission westward of the cultural 
achievements of the Tigris-Euphrates at an early date. Nor does the 
so-called Chalcolithic disclose earlier Oriental advances on their way 
westward. There are indeed stamp seals and figurines, bitf painted 
sherds are exceptional, the pottery being mostly self-coloured though 
comprising fruitstands. Nothing approaching the precocious neolithic 
of Kurdistan and Palestine nor yet mesolithic remains have been 
found on the plateau so far, but though unrepresented in the tells, 
they may still come to light on other sites. Until they do, no recogniz- 
able archaeological milestones mark an ancient route across Anatolia 
from the Orient to Europe. Nor do the available data disclose there 
an ancient cultural centre nor yet a human reservoir from which the 
JJgean coastlands could have been populated. 

On the other hand, at least in the north-western extremity of Asia 
Minor, a vigorous and original culture is documented quite early. The 
first settlement in the area is represented by pottery found in the 
lowest levels of Kum Tepe, a tell in the Troad. 6 Notable are fruitstands 
with profiled pedestals, as in Fig. 86, and stroke-burnished ware 
which recurs on Samos as well as in Europe. 

In the sequel develops a culture which may conveniently be called 
Early Troadic, though it is not strictly confined to the Troad. The same 
culture is represented at Poliochni on Lemnos, 7 Thermi on Lesbos, 8 at 
Yortan in Mysia and elsewhere. But the classic site remains Hissarlik, 
the ancient Troy, a key position on the Hellespont commanding at 
once sea-traffic up the straits and a land route's crossing to Europe. 
There Heinrich Schliemann last century distinguished seven super- 
van der Osten, Alishar HUyttk (1930-3), OIP, XXIX. Chicago. 

Belleton, XII (1948), 475-6. 

BelUten, XI (1947). 659 

Gdtxe, Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc. f X.CVII (1953)* 215-20. 

Libby, Radio Carbon Dating (Chicago, 195) 71- 

AJA., XXXIX, 33- 

Jahrb. d. Inst., LU; Arch. Am. (193?)* 167-70; Beraabo Brea, PPS. XXI (1955). 

144*55- 
* Lamb, W., Excavations at Thermi (Cambridge, 1936). 

36 



ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE AEGEAN 



imposed prehistoric cities, but left a multitude of crucial issues. Re- 
excavation of the site by an expedition under C. W. Blegen, 1 supple- 
mented by the stratigraphy of Thermi and Poliochni, has yielded the 
following scheme as the standard for the culture sequence in North- 
Western Anatolia: 



Absolute Dates 

1275-1200 

1400-1300 

/ 1550-1400 

I ? -I550 



Troad 


Greece 


Lesbos 




Lemnos 


Troy Vila 


L.H.IIIb 


Thermi 




Poliochni 


(Late 


L.H.IIIa and b 










Troy VI \ Middle 
1 Early 


L.H.I and II 
M.M.III, M.H. 


- 


I 


VII 


TroyV 










VI 


Troy IV 


E.H.III 





) 




Troy III 


E.H. 





[ 


V 


Troy Ilg to 


E.H. 





J 




a 




Thermi 


VI 


TV 


(Late 
Troy I {Middle 
(Early 


E.HO 

E.H.I 


{Thermi 
I to 
IV 


/ 


JL V 

II-III 



All "cities" can be dated in terms of ^Egean chronology by sherds 
of actually imported 5gean vases found in the several levels at Troy. 

Troy I and the contemporary settlements on Lesbos and Lemnos 
consisted of clusters of two-roomed houses (often of the long rectangular 
plan), closely juxtaposed along well-defined but crooked and narrow 
streets. The mud-brick walls rested on foundations of stones, some- 
times (in Thermi I and IV and Troy I) laid not horizontally but 
obliquely in herring-bone formation, an arrangement often employed 
in the brick architecture of Early Dynastic Sumer. And as in Meso- 
potamia the doors were pivoted on stone sockets. Some houses in 
Thermi were provided with low domed ovens of clay only 3 ft, high. 
Especially in Thermi III pits (bothroi) were often dug in the house 
floors and carefully lined with clay. 2 

But Troy I comprised also a "palace" a rectangular hall 12-8 m. 
long by 5*4 m. wide, entered through a porch at the west end. So Troy 
was already ruled by a chief, an institution not yet attested in other 
Early Troadic settlements. Moreover, Troy I, at least by the Middle 
phase, was girt with a massive stone rampart enclosing some i\ acres; 
Poliochni was probably fortified at the same time. 

Anatolian economy rested on the cultivation of wheats, 8 barley, 
millet, and presumably vegetables, perhaps also of vines and fruit-trees, 
the breeding of cattle, sheep, goats, and pigs, and fishing with hook 
and line or with nets. Axes and rare adzes were made from pebbles 

1 Blegen, Caskey, etc., Troy, I (1950): H (1931); HI (i953). Princeton. 

On bothroi in general, see JHS., LV (1935). x-9. 

One-corn is attested, though perhaps later at Troy and Kusura (Arch., LXXXVI, 
10), emmer only at Thermi, where there are some traces of vines. 

37 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

ground and polished and also from stags' antlers pierced for a shaft- 
hole, knives, and sickle-teeth from flint blades simply trimmed. But 
stone battle-axes with drooping blade, precursors of ceremonial 
weapons like Fig. 21, i, must immediately be copies of metal weapons. 
In fact, copper battle-axes of the same pattern have been found at 
Yortan as at Polatli on the plateau and in the Royal Tombs of Alaca. 1 
Bone splinters, pointed at both ends, served as arrow-heads, while the 
armoury comprised also sling-stones and maces with spheroid stone 
heads. 

But trade already brought metal even to Lesbos, and at Thermi I 
and Troy I there were specialized smiths available to work it. A 
crucible was found on virgin soil at Thermi, and small metal pins and 
trinkets were comparatively common at all levels. Most were made 
from unalloyed copper, but a pin from Thermi II contained as much 
as 13 per cent of tin, and a bracelet of this rare metal was found in 
town IV. Indeed, by the time of Thermi II and III metal was common 
enough for large implements to be left lying about for modern ex- 
vators to find, while at Troy lead rivets were employed for repairing 
pots. The smiths produced flat chisels with rounded butts, as in Egypt 
and protoliterate Sumer, flat axes and axes with the sides hammered 
up to produce low flanges 2 implying that celts were mounted as axes 
in knee-shafts as in Central Europe and as weapons flat-tanged 
daggers like Fig. 20, 2-4, cast in two-piece valve moulds of stone. 

The types of metal daggers and pins suffice to show that Troadic 
metal-workers followed Asiatic rather than Egyptian traditions. 
Though shaft-hole axes of the normal Mesopotamian pattern were not 
manufactured, the earliest dated battle-axes are represented by clay 
models from al'Ubaid levels in Babylonia. 8 

But the most distinctive types and actual imports point explicitly 
to intercourse with Greece, the Cyclades, and the Levant coasts. 
Emery and marble vases were imported from the Cyclades; bird-headed 
pins are common to Thermi I and Syros; polished bone tubes like Fig. 
27, I, from Thermi III-IV and Troy I recur not only on the ^Egean 
islands but also in Syria and Palestine in the last-named area in an 
E.B.III context (after 2500 B.C.). 4 

Despite the specialization of the metallurgical industry and the 
ramifications of commerce, pot-making was not sufficiently industrial- 
ized for the use of the wheel. The self-coloured, burnished vases, vary- 

1 Prausnitz, Inst. Arch. AR. t XI (i955)> 20 ff. 

1 The same device is seen in the Copper Age township of Ahlatlibel near Ankara, 
Turk Tarih Arkeologya ve Etnografya Dergisi, II (Ankara), 1934. 
Childe, NLMAE., fig. 60. 
Prausnitz, Inst. Arch. AR., XI (1955), 23 and 28; cf. Childe, NLMAE., 231-7. 

38 



ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE AEGEAN 

ing in hue from deep black to brick red and often copying gourd or 
leather vessels, are representative of a tradition common to the whole 
of Anatolia. A conspicuous peculiarity throughout the province is the 
popularity of genuine handles in addition to simple lugs. The handles 
are often of the "thrust 11 type the lower ends being inserted into a hole 
at the side of the vessels 1 a trick popular in later periods too and in 
other parts of Anatolia. Forms distinctive of West Anatolia are bowls with 
lugs growing from the inverted rims (Fig. 17, column i), jugs with cut- 




FIG. 17. Pottery from Thermi I-II (A) and III-IV (B). After W. Lamb, BSA., XXX. 

away necks (Fig. 17, columns 2-3), tripod vessels, and collared pyxides 
with string-hole lugs and lids (Fig. 17, column 4). Significant changes in 
form, documented by the stratigraphy of Thermi, are the expansion of 
the ends of the tubular lugs on the bowls to "trumpet lugs" in town III 
and the contemporary transformation of tripod legs into model human 
feet. At Troy the trumpet lugs grew into regular handles, flanged and 
angled, quite reminiscent of Cretan neolithic types. Decoration was 
effected by bosses, ribs, corrugations, and incisions forming rectilinear 
patterns. White paint on the dark ground, quite exceptional at Thermi 
and Troy, was very popular at Yortan. The patterns were always recti- 
linear. 

Spinning and weaving would be domestic arts too. Their importance 
is attested by the numbers of spindle-whorls, and day spools. The 

1 Blegen, Troy, I, 65; cf. Frankfort, Studies, ii. 86, n. i. 

39 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

weaver may have used perforated arcs of clay up to 9 cm. in length, 
represented in Thermi III, that seem to be forerunners of the narrower 
crescentic loom-weights so common in the Hittite levels of Kusura and 
Ali^ar, 1 

The domestic fertility cults of a superstitious peasantry may be 
illustrated by numerous female figurines of stone and clay, the former 




FIG. 18. "Megaron" palace, Troy II. 

always highly conventionalized in the manner of Fig. 8, i3-i6 2 ; clay 
figurines begin later at Thermi and sometimes indicate the division 
between the legs. But at Troy itself the "Mother Goddess" (if such she 
be) was represented on a more monumental scale: an owl-like visage 
had been carved in low relief on a stone slab, 1-27 m. high, that was 
found standing just outside the city gate. But to domestic cult again 

> Arch., LXXXVI, 55, fig. 15; Alishar, fig. 30. 

1 Very similar figurines tarn up sporadically as if imported in Mesopotamia about 
2750 B.C.; Speiser, Ttpe Gawra, pi LIII, b. Frankfort, "Iraq Excavations", QIC. 
Communication, 19, fig. 24. 

40 



ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE 

belong clay phalli from Thermi and perhaps a horned clay spit-support 
(? altar) rather like Cretan horns of consecration. The dead were 
apparently buried, if adults, outside the town in regular cemeteries 
enclosed in jars, judging by the case of Yortan. 

After the long period of relatively peaceful development repre- 
sented by the 4 metres of 'Troy I" and the four successive townships 
at Thermi, unrest led to a concentration of power and wealth. Though 
its population was already dwindling, Thermi V was fortified with a 
stout stone wall supplemented by complicated outworks. Even so, the 
site was soon deserted; it has yielded vases imported from Trpy Ha, 
but nonfe of those proper to the later phases of that city. Poliochni in 
Lemnos likewise declined. But at Troy potent chieftains had arisen 
who exploited to the full the strategic advantages of their site and 
concentrated in the city West Anatolian trade to the ruin of their rivals. 
Troy II was now encircled with a new stone wall, surmounted with a 
parapet of mud-brick. But, though larger than Troy I, the circuit of 
Troy II still enclosed only some 7850 sq. metres, or less than two 
acres. Its ruler built himself a palace of the " megaron" plan a hall 
with central hearth, 66 feet long by 33 feet, preceded by a porch 33 feet 
long and wide (Fig. 18). The citadel had reached the apex of its glory 
in phase He, but underwent four further reconstructions before it was 
taken by hostile assault and burnt. But before the final catastrophe 
the defenders had hidden many of their valuables. Our knowledge of 
Trojan metal-work and jewellery is mainly derived from these hoards 
that the plunderers had missed. 

Ere its destruction Troy II had become economically, if not physic- 
ally, a city. Through its monopoly of Hellespontine trade, its citizens 
amassed wealth to support an industrial population and pay for 
imported goods. Tin was obtainable in such abundance that bronze 
containing the standard proportion of 10 per cent tin and 90 per cent 
copper was in general use. Gold, silver, lead, obsidian were also im- 
ported; lapis lazuli from Iran and amber from the Baltic are also 
represented in hoard L, the date of which is not, however, quite certain. 
Specialist jewellers, potters, and other craftsmen, trained in Asiatic 
schools, settled in the rich city. The jewellers introduced solder, filagree 
work, and the trick of making beads from two discs of gold 
soldered together or from two folded tubes each ending in spirals 
all devices employed by Mesopotamian goldsmiths in the third 
millennium. 1 

The potters' wheel, indicating a further advance in urbanization, 

was introduced in the time of Troy He, but the products, turned out 

1 Childe, NLMAE., 162; cf. Iraq, IX (194?)* 

4* 




FIG. 19. Pottery from Troy II (J). 








34 * 

Flo. ao. Knife (*) and daggers (*) and gold veaseto (i). Troy II. 2-6 from 

Treasure A. Museum f. Vorgeachichte. Berlin. 

42 



ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE JEGEAN 

en masse by the new specialist craftsmen, carry on the native traditions 
in form and surface treatment and did not replace hand-made vessels. 
Shapes easily recognized as emerging during the lifetime of Tit>y II 
are anthropomorphic lids and jars ("face-urns", Fig. 19, 2 and 6), 
jugs with flaring mouths (Fig. 19, 4), and curious two-handled depas 
(Fig. 19, 5). But these appear already hand-made in phase He and are 
merely exaggerated expressions of tendencies inherent in the earlier 






FIG. 21. Battle-axe (J), gold-capped bead (J), and crystal pommel (JJ from 
Treasure L, and stray axe-adze (J). Museum f. Vorgeschichte, Berlin. 

and more generalized Anatolian tradition. The representation of the 
"Mother Goddess" on the face-urns is significantly like that on the 
handles of early Sumerian funerary jars 1 ; but the convention is already 
foreshadowed in the stele from Troy I. Side-spouted jugs, multiple 
vessels, jugs with double necks, zoomorphic vases are essentially 
Anatolian and not confined to Troy II. Improvements in the prepara- 
tion of the clay and firing, probably introduced at the same time as 
the yrtieel, allowed the potter to produce harder, paler, and less porous 
vessels. But to preserve the effect of the old-self-coloured vases, their 

* ChUde, NLMAE., fig. 98. 

43 



DAWK OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

surfaces were normally covered with a ferruginous wash that turns 
red on firing (red wash ware) a device popular at Aliar and farther 
east, and employed even in the Middle Danube basin. 

Despite the abundance of metal, stone, flint, obsidian, bone, and 
antler were still freely and almost predominantly employed for axes, 
battle-axes, agricultural implements, knives, awls, pins, and combs. 
The battle-axes carry on the tradition of Troy I, but include some 
superbly polished weapons of semi-precious stones (Fig. 21, i) (from 
Treasure L) that must be ceremonial. 

The jewellery from the hoards not only demonstrates the wealth of 
Troy but the divergent ramifications of its commerce. Many items are 
specifically Eastern; the earrings and lock-rings with flattened ends, 
the spiral filagree work (Fig. 22, 3), the gold disc beads, etc., may be 
regarded as Sumerian and the technique of the knot-headed pin 1 was 
known there as in predynastic Egypt. Pins with double spiral heads 
(of which Fig. 22, 3, is a glorified version) are found all across Anatolia 
and Iran to India and Anau.* A "spear-head" identical with the 
Cycladic specimen of Fig. 23, i, from Treasure A, belongs to a family 
represented also in Central Anatolia, Cyprus, and Iran. 8 Earrings like 
Fig. 22, i, are worn by foreign dancing girls depicted in an Eighteenth 
Dynasty tomb-painting. 4 A gold hammer pin from 2g 6 is ultimately 
a South Russian type, but was familiar also at Alaca. At the same time, 
so many types common at Troy recur in Central Europe as to prompt 
the suspicion that Trojan tin came from Bohemia, copper from Tran- 
sylvania or the Balkans. On the other hand, bdssed bone plaques, 
like Fig. 115, indicate connections westward as far as Sicily and Malta, 
but their stratigraphical position at Hissarlik is a little doubtful and 
they have gold analogues to the east at Alaca. 6 Ring pendants of stone, 
paralleled in gold in Wallachia and Transylvania, might disclose one 
source of Trojan gold while copies in Sweden and Sammland may be 
counterparts of the amber beads from Treasure L. If Troadic trade 
were founded on Oriental demand for metal, Troy II was itself a centre 
of accumulated wealth, providing capital for development of industry 
and trade in our Continent. 

Yet Trojan merchants seem to have managed without writing. They 
did not even, like the Minoans, engrave stone seals. Two cylinders were 
found at Troy, 7 but their attribution is uncertain. But the Trojans did 

Childe, NLMAE., 63, 196. 

Ibid., 196; LAAA., XXIII, 119; Alaca (1951), pi. CXII. 

Alaca (1937), pi. CCLXXV; Schaeffer, Straiigraphie, 38. 

Aberg, Ckron., IV, n. 

Blegen, Troy, I, 376, and fig. 357, 37.5*8. 

Antiquity, XXX, 80-93. 

Sch&mann, lUon, figs. 500-3; cf. PPS.. XXI, pi. XVII. 

44 







FIG. 22. 1-2, Gold earring and pendant from Treasure A, 3, pin from Treasure D, 
4 bracelet from Treasure F, and 5, knot-headed pins (f). Museum f. Verge- 

schichte, Berlin. 



45 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

copy Asiatic seals in clay while an imported sherd from lib bears the 
imprint of an Early Minoan seal 

The old native fertility cult continued without any notable changes, 
but the figurines, now predominantly of stone, are all highly conven- 
tionalized (Fig. 8, 15), and the phalli are made of stone. 

After the sack of Troy II a reoccupation of Hissarlik on a smaller 
scale is represented by the ruins of towns III, IV, and V, 1 each fortified 
and each reconstructed several times. All were urban in the sense that 
they comprised specialized potters and smiths and relied upon trade, 
though a marked increase in the proportion of game bones in the food 
refuse from town III may denote a temporary decline in farming. 
Throughout the pottery attests unbroken continuity of tradition. 
But face-urns are commoner in Troy III than in II. Pots found on 
Euboea and at Orchomenos look like exports from Troy HI, while a 
copper pin from that town is taken for a Cycladic manufacture. 2 
Domed ovens, 8 taller than those from Thermi, appear at Troy for the 
first time in IV, In town V -dEgean imports are rare. But bowls adorned 
with a red cross in the interior that are characteristic of Troy V have 
dose parallels on E.H.III sites in Greece, while analogous vessels are 
found at GSzlu Kale, Tarsus, together with Cappadocian tablets. 4 

With the sixth settlement 6 Troy approximates more closely than 
ever before to the dignity of a city. It was girt with a new and more 
formidable stone rampart enclosing an area of over five acres. But 
revival seems due to the advent of a new people who introduced pottery 
foreign to the native tradition, novel domestic architecture, the practice 
of cremation and probably the horse, whose presence is osteologicaUy 
attested first in Troy VI. The new pottery is termed Minyan ware 
a fine grey ware, owing its colour to the reduction of the iron oxides 
in well-selected day by controlled firing in a kiln and accompanied 
by a red oxidized variant. These are the characteristic native wares 
of Troy VII too. The houses no longer conform to the megaron plan, 
but are entered through doors in their long sides. No cemeteries of 
Troy I to V, nor even of Early and Middle VI, have been located, but 
that of Late VI was an urnfield in which the cremated bones were 
enclosed in cinerary urns. The first Indo-European Hittites at Bogaz 
Kdy had likewise laid out an urnfield and deposited remains of horses 
with the urns, while burial in urnfields was characteristic of Period VI 
in Central Europe and began in Hungary even in Period IV. 

Under the new rulers trade and industry flourished luxuriantly once 
more. Middle III, Late Helladic I, II, and Ilia but hardly any Illb 

1 Htegen ct d.> Troy, II. * Ibid., g. Ibid., 107. 

4 Ibid., 229. * Blegen et al, Troy, III. 

46 



ANATOLIA THE ROYAL ROAD TO THE 

vases were imported from the ^Egean, white-slipped ware from 
Cyprus, ivory from Syria or Egypt through the ^Egean, but not a 
single Hittite manufacture. Bronze sickles, of Asiatic looped type, 1 
show that metal was -now cheap enough for use in rough agricultural 
work. Smiths produced a chisel provided with a socket formed not 
by casting but by hammering a projecting tang of metal round a 
mandril as in Hittite cities. 2 

Judged by the imported ^Egean vases, Troy VI should have lasted 
from about 1700 to 1300 B.C. Then it fell, overthrown perhaps by an 
earthquake, perhaps by the Homeric Achaeans under Agamemnon. 
In any case the site was reoccupied and Troy Vila a rather poorer 
city survived for another century, only to be destroyed with obvious 
violence. For the last twenty years it has been held that Troy Vila 
was Homer's Ilion, but that view was plausibly challenged in 1955. 
In any case, after its destruction barbarians settled at Hissarlik and 
introduced a coarse wart-ornamented pottery without, however, 
exterminating the older population or suppressing the old ceramic 
tradition; for grey wares, like Minyan, were still manufactured in 
Troy Vllb. On the other hand, socketed bronze celts cast on the spot 
by the usual Central European method leave no doubt as to the origin 
of these invaders. 

1 Childe, "The Balanced Sickle", in Aspects of Archeology (ed. Grimes; London, 1951). 

1 O/P., XXIX, fig. 289; this was, of course, the method used for providing spear-heads 
with sockets in Crete earlier (p. 30) and in Sumer in the third millennium. 



47 



CHAPTER IV 
MARITIME CIVILIZATION IN THE CYCLADES 

THE Cydades are scattered across the ^Egean, remnants of a land-bridge 
between Anatolia and Greece affording a passage for cultural ideas 
from Asia to Europe. To mere food-gatherers or self-sufficing peasants, 
the islands, often small and barren, offered no attractions. But to 
mariners crossing from Asia to Europe they offer convenient halting 
places and lairs to any pirates who might wish to prey on more peaceful 
voyagers. Moreover, they contain raw materials of the sort needed by 
urban civilizations copper (Paros and Siphnos), obsidian (Melos), 
marble (Paros and others), emery (Naxos). Accordingly, while larger 
islands like Chios and Samos seem to have been settled by neolithic 
peasants, the little Cyclades were at first passed by, but early colonized 
by communities that could find a livelihood in commerce and perhaps 
in piracy too. Such communities must have lived near the shore and 
presumably in townships. But only at Phylakopi in Melos 1 has a 
Cydadic settlement been fully explored. There, three consecutive town- 
ships could be distinguished, preceded by some earlier occupation 
represented by sherds collected beneath the oldest house-floors. The 
city has been partially engulfed by the sea, but must have extended 
well over four acres. The first town was apparently unfortified, the 
second and third girt with strong stone walls, 20 feet thick in the 
latest phase. Fortified settlements are also known at Chalandriani 2 
on Syros, on Paros, 8 and elsewhere. But these fortifications seem 
relatively late. Soon after the foundation of Phylakopi II, M.M.Ib 
polychrome vases were imported from Crete; the city is accordingly 
hardly older than the twentieth century B.C.; it is frankly Middle Cydadic. 
For the remaining islands and for earlier periods we are reduced 
to estimating the size and stability of the settlements from the ceme- 
teries. Few have been fully explored, but they were admittedly 
extensive. Three on Despotikon comprised 50 to 60 graves each; on 
Syros one cemetery at Chalandriani was composed of nearly 500 graves, 
a second of more than 50; on Paros, Tsountas mentions nine cemeteries 

For Phylakopi see Excavations at Phylakopi in Melos (Society for Promotion of 
Hellenic Studies, Supplementary Volume, IV, 1904). w . , , A 

* For tombs on Amorgos and Faros, see Tsountas, Kv*Aaa<*a, in 'E. Apx*, 1898; 
for Syros and Siphnoe, ibid., 1809. 

AM., XUlf (1917). i & 

48 



MARITIME CIVILIZATION IN THE CYCLADES 



of from 10 to 60 graves. Of course, all these burials are not contempor- 
ary. While it has been customary to assign most cemeteries to the 
Early Cydadic period (before 2000 B.C.), Aberg 1 has shown that some 
graves must be Middle or even Late Cydadic. Fortunatdy Cydadic 




FIG. 23rTomb-group. Amorgos (J). 

imports in Egypt, in Crete, at Thermi and Troy, and on Mainland 
Greece suffice to show that the islands' culture reached its zenith in 
the third millennium. Marble idbis like Fig. 23, 2, were imported into 
Crete diiefly during E.M.III, a blade like 23, i, from the same tomb 
on Amoigos, was induded in Treasure A of Troy II; Cydadic iiaarble 

i Cktonologie, IV, 71, 84. 

49 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



vases were used in Thermi I-III, and the bird pins of Thermi I recur 
on Syros; a pin with double spiral wire head like Fig. 27, 9, was found 
in an Early Helladic tomb at Zygouries; "frying-pans" with spiral 
decoration like Fig. 24 were found in the oldest Early Helladic town- 
ship at H. Kosmas in Attica, and in the E.H.III level at Asine; duck 




FIG. 24. Cycladic "frying-pan" and sherd showing boat. 

vases (like Fig. 28, 2) were imported into ^Egina in Early Helladic 
times though they continued to reach Eutresis in Bceotia during Middle 

Helladic I (pp. 70 #.) 

Finally, a zoomorphic vase of Parian marble was recovered from a 
predynastic grave in Egypt 1 while a cylinder seal of Jemdet Nasr 
style 2 had been buried in a tomb of the Pelos group on Amorgos. 

The inference that the density of population on the islands was 



* Frankfort, Studies, II, 103. 

Frankfort, Cylinder Seals (London, 
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. 



1939), 232, 301; the tomb group is in the 
50 



MARITIME CIVILIZATION IN THE CYCLADES 

made possible by trade and manufacture is confirmed by the list of 
exports just given. And of course that list is by no means exhaustive. 
Obsidian was quarried on Melos and exported as nuclei or blades to 
Crete, Mainland Greece, and the other islands. The Cycladic grave 
goods comprise the products of specialized craftsmen smiths, jewellers, 
lapidaries and prove the use of copper, tin, 1 lead, silver, and other 
materials which in some cases must have been imported. The rdle of 
maritime intercourse is further emphasized by the frequent repre- 
sentation of boats on the vases (Fig. 24) . 2 But the islanders do not seem 
to have needed writing for their business transactions and did not even 
make regular use of seals like the Minoans. The prominence of weapons 
in the tombs (especially of Amorgos) and the fortification of the settle- 
ments may indicate that piracy was already combined with legitimate 
trade. In any case, being dependent on overseas trade, the prosperity 
of the islands might be expected to decline when that trade was 
"cornered" by monopolistic princes in Crete and the Troad. A real 
contraction of population during Middle Minoan II-III and Late 
Minoan I-II would be perfectly comprehensible. In that case the bulk 
of our material would really be Early Cycladic. 

But this Early Cycladic culture was by no means homogeneous. 
Culturally the islands fall into a southern and a northern group over- 
lapping only on Naxos. 8 To the former belong Melos, Amorgos, Des- 
potikon, Paros, and Antiparos; to the northern Syros, Siphnos, Andros, 
and also Euboea. The contrast is revealed in burial practices as well as 
in grave goods. In the southern group, though shaft graves and chamber 
tombs of uncertain age are plentiful near Phylakopi, 4 the early graves 
were normally trapezoid cists. In the oldest cemeteries 6 (the Pelos 
group), definitely antedating Phylakopi I, the cists served as ossuaries 
and contain several skeletons together with vases like Fig. 28, i, and 
"fiddle idols" like Fig. 8, 10-12. The later tombs were individual 
graves; they contain idols like Fig. 23, 2, marble vases and weapons. 
On Syros 6 in the northern group rectangular or oval tombs were built 
in excavations in the hillside and roofed by corbelling (Fig. 25). But 
these too served as individual graves, and the single body was intro- 
duced through the roof. As at Krazi in Crete, the door (only -50 m. 
square) was merely a ritual element. In Eubcea 7 the tomb was a pit- 

1 One dagger from Amorgos was of unalloyed copper, but a ring contained 13-5 
per cent tin. 

On ^Egean ships see Marinatos in BCH., LVII (1933). *7 &- 

Aberg, Chronologic, IV, 59 f. 

Phylakopi, 234-8. 

Pelos in Melos, BSA., Ill, 40; Antiparos, JHS. t V, 48. 

'E#. 'Apx. (1899); cf. p. 23, above. 

Papavasileiou, IIcpl M i* Etfpol* dpX<""" T ^" (Athens, 1910). 

51 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

cave, excavated in the ground and containing only a single corpse 
(Fig. 25). The earliest vases of the Pelos group are mud-coloured, imitat- 
ing the shape of marble vessels and are decorated with simple basketry 
patterns (Fig. 28, i). Late pottery from the northern isles includes 
dark-faced fabrics often decorated with running spirals and excised 
triangles (Fig. 24). Technically it corresponds to the Early Helladic I 
of the Mainland, though Cycladic imports at Eutresis 1 prove that on 




I 2 

FIG. 25. Tombs on Syros and Euboea. 

the islands this fabric remained current in Middle Helladic times. 
Favourite forms are the so-called frying-pans and globular or cylindrical 
pyxides with lids. In some graves on Syros pottery of- this class is 
associated with marble idols like Fig. 23, 2, which are common to both 
groups of islands. 2 Other graves on Syros and Naxos 8 contain sauce- 
boats, jugs with cut-away necks and other vessels decorated in lustrous 
glaze paint in the style of Early Helladic HI (p. 69). Finally, Anatolian 
forms are common in the northern isles, and one tomb group on Euboea 
contained exclusively Troadic vases (like Fig. 19, 3-4) and daggers 
(like Fig. 20, 2). 

The fish emblem carried by (Northern) Cycladic boats had been the 
standard of a predynastic parish in the Delta that did not survive into 
historic times in Egypt. 4 So Fish-folk from the Nile may have fled to 

1 Goldman, Eutresis, 182. ,, . . , , 

1 Aberg, Chron., IV, 102, nos. 13, 15; in both graves the frying-pans were decorated 
with concentric circles so that those with running spirals may be earlier. 
Aberg, Ckron., IV, 86; Congres Int. Arch. Athens (1905). 2- 
4 Evans, P. of M. t II, 26. 

52 



MARITIME CIVILIZATION IN THE CYCLADES 

the Cyclades when Menes conquered the Delta. Other Cydadic traits 
the tweezers (Fig. 26, 2), the popularity of stone amulets and par- 
ticularly the type represented in Fig. 27, 4; the use of palettes (though 
the Cycladic specimens are generally more trough-like than the 
Egyptian and Minoan 1 ) and the preference for stone vases may also 
be Nilotic traits. 
Metal-work, pottery, and dress, on the contrary, are rather Asiatic 






FIG. 26. Slotted spear-head (showing method of mounting), halberd and 
tweezers. Amorgos (J). 

than African. Broad flat celts were used as axe-heads. Shaft-hole axes 
are represented only by an axe-hammer and an axe-adze from a hoard 
on Cythnos. 2 Daggers with a stout midrib and rivets, sometimes of 
silver as in Crete, are common chiefly on Amorgos. Spear-heads were 
slotted for mounting as shown in Fig. 26; the type with hooked-tang, 
shown in Fig. 23, i, has already been connected with Asiatic models 
on p. 44. 

At least in the northern islands clothing had to be fastened with pins, 
as in Anatolia, and the types with double-spiral and bird heads have 
already been encountered in that area. Rings, bracelets, and diadems 
of copper or silver were also worn as in Asia. The silver diadems 
resemble gold ornaments from an E.M.II tomb at Mochlos in Crete 

1 These palettes, perforated at the four corners, resemble, but only superficially, the 
wrist-guards of the Beaker complex; cf. BSA., III, 67. 
1 B.M., Bronte, fig. 174. 

53 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



and from the Royal Tombs of Ur. 1 Some of the beads and amulets 
may be Asiatic, notably the dove-pendants that are found even in 
the early tombs of the Pelos class. 2 The so-called phallic (or winged) 
beads (Fig. 27, 3) might be compared with the fly-amulets of Egypt 
and Mesopotamia, 8 but probably derive from a form fashioned of 
deers' teeth by the mesolithic Natufians of Palestine. 4 A speciality 
of the northern isles was the decorated bone tube designed to contain 
pigments (Fig. 27, i). But similar tubes have been found in Troy IV 
and Va, and at Byblos in Syria 6 as well as on Levkas in Western Greece. 




a 3 

FIG. 27. Early Cycladic ornaments: 2-8 Pares; i, 9, Syros (f). 

The self-coloured sepulchral pottery belongs in a general way to 
the same Anatolian tradition as the early Cretan, and some vase forms 
such as the pyxides are in the same vague way Anatolian. Even the 
curious frying-pan form so common in the northern graves recurs, in 
copper, in a "royal tomb" at Alaca Hoyiik in Central Anatolia. 6 (The 
excised decoration and the form of the handles show that these odd 
utensils are copied from wooden originals.) On the other hand, the 
running spiral design on North Cycladic pottery has generally been 
considered a Danubian motive. Weinberg, 7 however, suspects inspira- 

Evans, P. o/M., I, 97; Woolley, Ur Excavations: The Royal Tombs, p. 139. 
Aberg, Chron., IV, 62-3. 
Cf. Chiide, NLMAE., fig. 36 (Gerzean). 
Garrod, Stone Age of Mt. Carmel, I, p. XV, 2. 
Aberg, Chron.. IV, 13, 87; ATA., XXXVIII (1934), 229, 231. 
Hamit Ztibeyr Kosay, Ausgrabungen von Alaca Hdyttk (Ankara, 1944)* pi* LXXXIII, 
60. 

7 In Ehrich, Relative Chronologies in Old World Archeology (1954), 95- 

54 



MARITIME CIVILIZATION IN THE CYCLADES 

tion from the disconnected impressions of spiral shells such as appear 
on the early Ghassulian pottery of the Jordan valley while Kaschnitz- 




FIG. 28. Cycladic pottery: i, Pelos; 2, Phylakopi I; 3, Phylakopi II (L.C.). 

Weinberg 1 considers that the incised spirals on the pots copy the wire 
spirals of early Sumerian and Anatolian gold-work. 

As already indicated, Cycladic culture declined when Minoan palaces 
indicate a Cretan grip on maritime trade and the warlike "Minyans" 

* pz. t xxxiv (1950), 196. 
55 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

occupied the Helkdic townships. On most islands only a few graves 
are dated by long rapiers or imported Minyan vases to Middle or Late 
Cyeiadic I-II. The "halberd" of Fig. 26, 3, comes from a M.C. shaft 
grave at Akesine on Amorgos. 1 Its interpretation as a halberd, imported 
or copied from the West, is indeed uncertain, but M.C. pottery like 
that from the tomb, turning up in the Western Mediterranean (Fig. 41), 
does at least suggest Cyeiadic enterprise in that direction. But her 
resources in obsidian secured to Melos a share in Minoan commerce, 
and Thera 1 too benefited from her neighbours' wealth until a volcanic 
convulsion overwhelmed her inhabitants. Phylakopi II was a fenced 
city with regular streets. Imported M.M.I-II polychrome pottery and 
Minyan vases from Greece found together on the earliest house floors 
show how dose was the island's connection both with Crete and with 
the Mainland. Conversely, the matt-painted Middle Cyeiadic I pottery 
of Melos is significantly like the Early Bronze Age or Cappadocian 
ware of Ali$ar, in Central Anatolia, as if the island had also connections 
with the East. At a later stage in Phylakopi II a large building equipped 
with pillar-rooms like a Cretan palace and decorated with a frescoe of 
flying fishes in M.M.III technique might be the residence of a Minoan 
governor or consul. The potters' craft was industrialized, but the wheel- 
made vases were decorated with lovely naturalistic patterns in matt 
paint imitating the Minoan style of M.M.III-L.M.I (Fig. 28, 3). But 
though ceramic technique and style changed, there is no break in the 
tradition; matt paint had replaced the glaze medium at the beginning 
of Phylakopi II or even earlier though the patterns at first were 
geometric, as in Early Cyeiadic. In Late Mycenaean-L.M.III times 
the fortifications of Phylakopi were strengthened; the walls were now 
20 feet thick, and near the gate a staircase led up to a tower or rampart- 
walk. Most of the other islands have yielded traces of occupation at 
this time, but their culture now was just a variant of the Mycenaean 
"koine" described on p. 81. 

1 Festschrift P. Goessler (Stuttgart, 1954). 26-34. 
1 See Aberg, Ckr<m., IV, 127-37. 



CHAPTER V 
FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

THE southern extremity of the Balkan peninsula, though intersected 
b y J a gged mountain ranges, chasms, and gulfs, yet displayed as much 
cultural unity during the prehistoric Bronze Age as it did during the 
historical Iron Age. In the Stone Age, though peninsular Greece fell 
for a time into two divisions, Macedonia and even Southern Thrace 
belonged to the same cultural province. Hence the stratigraphy, 
observed at citadels, continuously occupied, and in rural tells, provides 
a chronological frame applicable to the whole region with certain 
reservations. In Classical times Thessaly, Arcadia, and the mountainous 
country of North- West Greece and still more Macedonia were cultur- 
ally backward as compared with Bceotia, Attica, and Laconia, while 
Thrace was frankly barbarian. A similar retardation can be observed 
in the Bronze Age. Then from the beginning of the Bronze Age Mace- 
donian culture diverged so far from that of peninsular Greece as to 
deserve a different name Macednic that may be applied to Thessaly 
too. 

Subject to these limitations, the Mainland Bronze Age has been 
divided into three main periods termed, on the analogy of the Cretan, 
"Early", "Middle", and "Late Helladic", and each subdivided. The 
preceding Neolithic is similarly subdivided; but Early Neolithic is still 
very shadowy, and Middle corresponds to the first or "A" phase in the 
old sequence. Absolute dates can confidently be assigned to the Late 
Helladic or Mycenaean period by interchanges of goods with Crete and 
the literate countries of the East Mediterranean: L.H.I began no later 
than 1500 B.C., L.H.IIIb ended just after 1200. The beginning of 
Middle Helladic about 1800 B.C. is deduced from the association of 
M.H. and M.M.II pottery at Phylakopi on Melos (p. 48). Finally, Minoan 
seals and sealings from E.H.III layers demonstrate a parallelism with 
E.M.III Crete and Egypt between Dynasties VI-XI. For estimating 
the antiquity of earlier periods the relative depths of deposits are at 
least suggestive: at Eutresis 4 m. out of 6-5 are composed of E.H. 
ruins, at Korakou 2 m. out of 4*5 m. But in the Thessalian tell at 
Tsangli, occupied in Early and perhaps Middle Jgean times, 5 m, out 
of a total height of 10 m. is attributable to Middle Neolithic debris. 
In conclusion, it must be recalled that the Helladic and Neolithic 

57 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

periods are generally defined by pottery styles and are in fact usually 
treated as the period when pottery of the distinctive style was being 
manufactured at a particular site. Now on Levkas, in the backward 
north-west, rapiers of L.H. or at least M.M.III type were apparently 
associated with good E.H. pottery, 1 Hence the absolute dates for Early 
and Middle Helladic given above are valid only for the ^Egean coasts 
and their immediate hinterland. In peripheral regions a retardation 
of several centuries must be allowed for! Moreover, the distinction 
between Late Neolithic and Early Helladic I is nowhere very sharp. 
In fact, a substantial overlap between some Late Neolithic and E.H J 
is generally admitted. Weinberg 2 equates Late Neolithic in Thessaly 
with E.H.I in the Peloponnese. 

EARLY AND MIDDLE NEOLITHIC 

While palaeolithic food-gatherers had reached peninsular Greece, no 
remains have yet been found of any mesolithic successors, perhaps 
merely because no systematic search for such remains has been made. 
In 1956 the archaeological record begins with mature neolithic cultures 
characterized by well-made pottery and little else. From Corinthia to 
Thessaly "variegated ware", part pink, part grey, 8 seems to character- 
ize the earliest levels. But from the next level at Otzaki magoula 4 
in Thessaly as from the cave of Khirospilia on Levkas 6 come sherds 
ornamented with the edge of a Cardium shell or by rustication that 
we shall find are the symbols of the earliest neolithic farmer-colonists 
throughout the Balkans and round the Western Mediterranean too. 
With them are associated distinctive female figurines. From the 
figurines and from the incipient tell formation it may be inferred that 
the rural economy and ideology of these early colonists coincided with 
those of still earlier cultivators in South- Western Asia, some of whom 
did decorate their pottery with Cardium impressions, 6 as of their 
better-known kinsmen farther north (p. 86) and of their successors 
in the Middle Neolithic phase. 7 

By the latter a rich culture already ruled throughout the mountain- 
ridged peninsula from Servia in Western Macedonia to Asea in Arcadia 
and from Levkas on the west to the coasts of Attica. It is best illus- 
trated in the fertile valleys of Thessaly and Central Greece and is 

i Dflrpfeld, AU-Ithaka, R. 7 and R. 24. 

AJA.. U (X947). *7*; MilojOc, Chron., 39. 

: JKA2 &tt<ZZ?W "-3. ^feld. 4WIM* 335. 

Childe, NLMAE.. 218; Godinan, Tarsus. II (1956), 66. ^ w . ^ AJA T T 
Mykmas, 'H reduce* *Bx* fr 'EXAddi (Athens, 1928). Cf. Weinberg, AJA ., LI 

(1947); 167-85, and Schachermeyr, Die HMesten Kultoren Gntchenlands (1955)- 

58 




FIG. 29. Thessalian stone axes (A-C) and adzes (B-D). After Tsountas 





FIG. 30. Pottery of Sesklo style, white on red and red on white. After Wace 

and Thompson (i). 



59 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

usually named after the Thessalian site of Sesklo on the Gulf of Volo. 
In Thessaly and Central Greece the peasants found an environment 
that they could exploit from self-sufficing hamlets, continuously 
occupied. They fived in modest round or rectangular huts of wattle 
and daub or of mud-brick on stone foundations. A model from Sesklo 
shows a house with gabled roof. The repeated reconstruction of such 
dwellings has converted the settlements into little tells (toumba or 
magoula). Such mounds are very numerous but generally small: 100 
by 75 m. is an average area for a Thessalian tell, but at Hagia Marina 
in Phocis the mound covered 300 by 200 m. 

Now tell formation implies a rural economy advanced enough to 
maintain the fertility of the fields, if not orchard husbandry that ties 
the farmer to his fruit-trees. In phase A the villagers lived by culti- 
vating cereals, probably also vegetables and fruit-trees 1 and breeding 
cattle, sheep, goats, and pigs. 2 

Unspecialized potters built up by hand delicate vessels, imitating 
baskets or perhaps even metal vessels 8 in an extremely fine burnished 
ware, generally red, in the Peloponnese sometimes black or mottled. 4 
The pots might be decorated with simple rectilinear patterns formed 
by wedge-shaped or round punctuations or by lines in white paint. 
In Northern Greece the vase surface was more often covered with a 
white slip on which designs were painted in red; in Central Greece and 
the Peloponnese the white slip is often omitted. The patterns, often 
very elaborate, are clearly derived from basketry originals, but each 
hamlet developed its own distinctive style of painting. Ring bases 
and genuine handles betoken an unusual degree of sophistication, 
while an imitation of a leather bottle from Nemea approximates to the 
Early Helladic askos (like Fig. 36, 2). 

Simple stone vases too were found at Sesklo, but a bone spatula like 
Fig. 45 must come from an unrecognized Early Neolithic settlement. 

Though self-sufficing communities, the neolithic hamlets were not 
mutually isolated; they exchanged pots 6 and doubtless other com- 
modities. War is not attested; the only definite weapons found were 
sling-stones, probably used by hunters. Peaceful commerce outside the 
province is disclosed by the general use of obsidian. At Tsani a stone 
button seal bearing a cruciform design was found, and clay models of 

1 Barley is attested for period A at Tsani, wheat, barley, figs, pears, and peas for 
period B at Sesklo and Dimini, vulgar* wheat from Rakhmani IV (D). Triticum durum 
from Servia I in Macedonia. 

* BRGK., 36 (1955), i-5o. 

* Forsdyke, British Museum, Catalogue of Greek and Etruscan Vase*, I, pp. xvi and 23. 
4 The surface colour is determined by the firing, an oxidizing atmosphere yielding 

red, a reducing Wack. See Blegen, Pro$ymna, 368-9; Htsperia, VI, 491-6. 

* Wace and Thompson, 241. 

60 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

seals are reported from Sesklo, Hagia Marina, and from Nemea in the 
Peloponnese. The type is certainly at home in Hither Asia 1 and there 
generally occurs in a "chalcolithic" milieu, and copper may wejl have 
been known to the "neolithic" Greeks. Some of their pots seem to 
imitate the shape and even the rivets of metal vases, and at Hagia 
Marina Soteriadhes 2 claims to have found riveted copper daggers on 
virgin soil in a Sesklo settlement. Still, no sustained effort was made 
to secure regular supplies of metal. 
Surplus energies were devoted rather to domestic fertility cults. 




FIG. 31. Neolithic figurines, Thessaly. After Wace and Thompson, (i, f; 

3-4. fc * I-) 

For these figurines (Fig. 31) were modelled in clay, depicting, often 
with considerable verisimilitude, a female personage, standing or 
seated, or, in one example from Chaeroneia, nursing an infant (the 
"kourotrophos"). Model thrones or altars (Fig. 32) were also manu- 
factured. As ornaments and charms the peasants wore bracelets of 
stone or Spondylus shells (as on the Danube), and stone nose-plugs as 
in the al'Ubaid culture of Sumer. 

In its rural economy and ideology and in more specific items of 
equipment mud-brick architecture, use of the sling instead of the 
bow as well as the shape of the clay missiles, familiarity with stamp 

* Childe, NLMAE., 112, 120, 139, *95* 9, but at Byblos clay stamp* are neolithk, 
1 Mylonas, op. cit. t fig. 64. 

OI 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

seals, the decoration of kiln-fired pots with basketry designs in dark 
paint the Sesklo culture reveals just the westernmost outpost of the 
South- West Asiatic province, extending from the Mediterranean coasts 
to Iran and Turkmenia. Peculiarities of the pottery alone connect it 




FIG. 32. Miniature altar or throne. After Wace and Thompson (J). 

more specifically with Syria than with the Anatolian plateau. Technic- 
ally the chalcolithic pottery of Cyprus 1 is very like the red-on-white 
ware described above and may constitute a link with the Hassuna- 
Halaf complex farther east. At the same time connections with the 
cultures of the Lower and Middle Danube valley are already discernible; 
significant common elements are shoe-last adzes, triangular altars, 
and shell bracelets. 2 

The Sesklo culture endured for a long time: at Tsangli five out of 
ten metres of settlement debris are attributed to it, and four out of 
eight occupational levels at Zerelia. But eventually the continuity 
of tradition was interrupted. Changes in ceramic technique, in art, 
in architecture, and even in economy not only define a new period, the 
Late Neolithic, but also may betoken an infiltration of new colonists. 
Among these two groups at least may be distinguished Dimini folk 
in Eastern Thessaly and Corinthia, and Larisa people in Western 
Macedonia and Thessaly, Central Greece, and Corinthia. But the break 
is nowhere complete. Thus female figurines were still modelled in clay; 
in Eastern Thessaly the kourotrophos survived, painted in Dimini 
style, and later a very schematized type emerged in which the head 
is a stumpy cylinder of stone or clay, fitted into a legless torso 

1 Dikaios, Khirokitia (London, 1953), 314-24; Schaeffer, Missions en Chypre, no. 
The chalcolithic and proto-chalcolithic of Herein in Cilicia provide even better analogies, 
Garstang, Prehistoric Mersin (Oxford, 1953), 54*124. 

* AM. t LVII (1932). 

62 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

Fig. 31, 4) a type that recurs beyond the Danube in the Gumelni^a 
culture. 1 Hence it may be assumed that the old population absorbed, 
or was subjugated by, the new settlers. The latter's cultural affinities 
seem to lie in the Balkans, but the manifestations of their advent 
differ in different regions. 

LATE NEOLITHIC 

At Dimini near the Gulf of Volo a completely new settlement was 
founded. In contrast to the earlier open hamlets it was defended by a 
complex of stone walls (Fig. 33). Sesklo was probably fortified at the 




FIG. 33. Plan of fortified village of Dimini. After Tsountas. 

same time. 2 In both citadels houses of the megaron type with porch 
and central hearth were erected. At Dimini and Sesklo the bevelled 

1 Dacia, VII-VIII (1940). 97- 

1 It is possible that the fortifications and megara at both sites are Middle Helladic 
and so unconnected with the Dimini culture. 

63 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

adze (D) went out of use, and axes (Fig. 29, C) were employed for the 
first time. Adzes were hafted at Dimini with the aid of perforated 
antler sleeves. Copper and gold were now imported; they are repre- 
sented respectively by two flat celts and a ring-pendant (Fig. 34, 2), 




I 2 

FIG. 34. Dimini bowl (J) and gold-ring pendant (f). After Tsountas. 

all from Dimini. In East Thessaly the vases were now decorated with 
spirals and maeanders normally combined with the older basketry 
patterns; the designs may be incised or painted in white or warm black 
on a buff, red, or brown ground, and may then be outlined with a 
second colour black or white; the fruitstand a dish on a high 
pedestal is an important innovation. Similar pottery turns up in 
Corinthia and the Argolid, again in a Late Neolithic context. 1 

Technically Dimini pottery is inferior to that of Sesklo; ring-bases 
were abandoned, true handles give place to pierced lugs, though some 
of these are horned or elaborated into animal heads. So Dimini ware 
cannot be treated as an autochthonous development of the native 
Middle Neolithic tradition. It was surely introduced by a new people, 
come most probably from the Danube valley; for there spiral and 
maeander patterns were always popular and antler was extensively 
used in industry. Technically Dimini ware is identical with the painted 
ware of the Balkan Stardevo culture, where, however, it is associated 
with rusticated ware such as we have already met in Early Neolithic 
Greece. The patterns, however, whether painted or incised, can best 
be matched in the Tisza-Maros region.* 

1 At Gonia and the Argive Heraeum. 

Cf. Schachermeyr, MAGW., LXXXI-LXXXIII (1953-4), *-39>* below, p. rrz. 

64 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

In Thessaly the Dimini culture is confined to the east. To the west 
its place is taken by the Larisa culture, found also in Central Greece 
and Western Macedonia. In the latter region the Late Neolithic phase 
began with the violent destruction of the Sesklo village of Servia. The 
site was reoccupied by a new people whose Larisa culture is as different 
from that of Sesklo as is Dimini, at least judged by its pottery. The 
commonest ware is self-coloured, generally black and highly burnished, 
but sometimes at least in Macedonia parti-coloured black inside and 
round the rim, elsewhere red like the grey and pink variegated pottery 
of the Early Neolithic. Vessels no longer stand on ring bases, handles 
are replaced by lugs that may be horned. 1 Decoration is effected by 
stroke-burnishing, shallow fluting or channelling, incisions, or rarely 
by thin lines of white paint. (Crusted ware occurs in Eastern Thessaly, 
but in a later horizon.) The patterns are generally rectilinear, but 
include occasional spirals. Besides self-coloured wares a light fabric 
was made and covered all over with shiny brown or black paint. This 
ware, termed " neolithic urfirnis", looks like an attempt to reproduce 
the appearance of black burnished ware in kiln-fired vases, but is said 
to begin in Middle Neolithic times in Corinthia. 2 

As at Dimini, adzes were mounted in perforated antler sleeves, the 
sling was still preferred to the bow, but an arrow-head was found at 
Servia. Personal ornaments include bracelets of Spondylus shell and 
of marble and bone combs rather like those of the Danubian Vinia 
culture (Fig. 47). 

Larisan ideology was still expressed in the production of female 
figurines, now very conventional, but one burial was found in the 
settlement at Servia. 

All the new ceramic fabrics and shapes found at Servia (except 
white painted ware) recur in the Vinfia culture on the Danube and Tisza, 
as do bone combs, shell bracelets, and other traits. Hence Frankfort, 1 
Grundmann, 4 and Heurtley 5 have deduced an invasion from beyond 
the Balkans. On the other hand, many of the ceramic innovations can 
be paralleled equally in Crete and in Hither Asia. Agreements between 
Cretan neolithic and Mainland Greek black-polished wares have already 
been noted. Stroke-burnishing decorated one E.M.I fabric (p. 32) but 
was also applied in the chalcolithic of Kum Tepe in the Troad (p. 36). 
White painting on polished black ware was also later popular at Yortan 

1 True handles are attached to jugs at Olynthus and a few other Macedonian sites, 
but Stk b^Tes they are nifluenced by Early JBgean models and not truly 
"neolithic". 

, VI. b, c.; AJA.. LI, 



, 102 ft, LXII. 56-69. 
65 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

and in South-Western Asia Minor, 1 while parti-coloured wares are 
characteristic of central Anatolia and Cyprus, but not before the time 
of Troy I. Finally, black polished wares, sometimes decorated by 
stroke-burnishing, in North Syria 2 precede the painted fabric with 
which Sesklo pottery has been compared. If the inference drawn from 
this comparison be correct, it would be chronologically impossible to 
attribute this Syrian neolithic to any Danubian inspiration. Hence, 
as Miloj&c has argued most cogently, the Larisa culture should mark 
not a transplantation of the Vinfta culture from north of the Balkans 
but a stage in the spread of an AsiatkxflEgean culture thither or at 
least a parallel emanation of the latter. That would further accord 
with Weinberg's 3 equation of the Late Neolithic of Thessaly and 
Macedonia with Troy I and E.H.I. Nevertheless, these archaeological 
arguments are not so conclusive as to exclude absolutely the idea of 
an invasion from the Danube valley, should other, e.g. philological, 
considerations make that imperative. 

THE EARLY AEGEAN BRONZE AGE 

The influx of new settlers in Late Neolithic times had not involved 
an immediate transformation of the economic structure of Hellas; 
despite its copper axes, the Dimini culture can be termed neolithic 
as legitimately as its Sesklo precursor. The succeeding period witnessed 
a real advance towards the Urban Revolution and the nuclei of the 
classical City States were founded in peninsular Greece. 

Not only there, but also in Macedonia and even in Thrace (at least 
at Mikhalic 4 on the Maritsa close to its junction with the Tundja), the 
Mainland Bronze Age is marked by innovations in domestic architec- 
ture and in pottery that find precise parallels on the eastern coast of 
the gean. Architectural tricks such as herring-bone masonry (in 
Boeotia and Attica, cf . p. 37) and bothroi in house floors (in Macedonia 
and, by E.H.III, in peninsular Greece) and ceramic novelties ' 'thrust 
handles", pyxides, jugs with cut-away necks, bowls with tubular or 
trumpet lugs growing from the inverted rims suggest a transfer of 
Anatolian culture across the JEgean and the Dardanelles. A closer 
study of the pottery, however, shows that no one known Anatolian 
culture was reproduced on the European shores. If a migration from 
Asia Minor be assumed, it will be necessary to postulate several streams 

1 Anatolian Studies, IV. (1954)* 202-5. 
Childe. BSA., XXXVII (1936-37), 31-5. 
AJA., LI (1947). I7<T4- 

4 Ratto&ki i Proulvaniy*, I, Narodcn Arkh. Muzei (Sofia, 1948), 8-ao; cf., Anatolian 
ti*die*, VI (195$)' 43-8- 

66 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

with different starting-points. Only the Early jEgean pottery from 
Thrace and Macedonia is explicitly Troadic, while the local post- 
neolithic Thessalian pottery seems derived from the Early Macednic. 
In Macedonia and Thrace stone battle-axes occur at the same time, 
but they are not distinctively Troadic. In the Peloponnese and Attica 
Cycladic features in pottery and burial rites are prominent, as if the 
islands had been at least stepping-stones on the way from Asia. At 
Asine the best analogy to one of the earliest E.H. pots is to be found 
in the Copper Age of Aliar in Central Anatolia. 1 On the West Coast 
Ithaka seems to have been colonized from Corinthia. 8 Even in Thrace 
and Macedonia horses' bones occur on Early ^Egean sites, while on the 
Troad that animal appears first in Troy VI. 

Perhaps, then, the striking agreements could be explained as parallel 
adjustments of related cultures when visiting merchants and prospectors 
from the Levant and the Nile introduced metallurgical and other 
techniques and opened up opportunities for securing a share in the 
surplus accumulated in Sumerian and Egyptian cities. 

All Early Helladic, Macednic, and Thracic societies of course still 
lived mainly by farming, though viticulture is now dedutible from 
grape seeds at H. Kosmas in Attica, while in Thrace and Macedonia 
horses' bones occur. The early ^Egean settlements in Thrace and 
Macedonia indeed remained simple villages, as did those at most inland 
sites in Central Greece and the Peloponnese (e.g. Asea in Arcadia). 
Many had already been occupied by neolithic peasants. Both in Mace- 
donia and peninsular Greece Late Neolithic sherds are found on the 
oldest Bronze Age floors. But at least in peninsular Greece new settle- 
ments were established on sites chosen with a view to trade or piracy 
rather than agriculture. These, though often of no larger size physically, 
approximate to fenced cities in their location on naturally defencible 
sites and their protection by ramparts of stones, combined on yEgina 
with timber beams as at Troy. 

The townsmen lived in long two-roomed houses, closely grouped 
along narrow lanes, as at Troy and Thermi. But in the more rustic 
villages houses were oval or apsidal and more scattered. At Tiryns 
and Orchomenos monumental circular structures were built, probably 
to serve as granaries. 8 By E.H.III tiles were already used for roofing. 
Finally, by that phase the town of Lerna 4 at least comprised a regular 
palace of several rooms grouped about a spacious court or hall and 
roofed with tiles and slates. So in at least one Mainland centre the 

1 FtOdin and Persson, Asine, 204. 

Hartley, BSA. t XXXV (1934-35). 39- . VVTTT 

1 Marinates, BCH., LXX (1946), 337 4 &*sp*r*a. XXIII (1954), 81-4. 

67 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

social surplus was being concentrated and communal activity directed 
by a chief as at Troy . 

Stone was still employed for axes, adzes, and knives even in the 
Peloponnese, and so extensively farther north that Thessalian and 
Thracian villages look positively neolithic. Obsidian was used for 
knives, sickle teeth, and hollow-based arrow-heads; for the bow is 
now attested for the first time, without, however, ousting* the sling. 
In Thrace and Macedonia, but not in pensinsular Greece, stone battle- 
axes were now being made as in the Troad; one from H. Mamas in 
Macedonia (Fig. 35), though in course of local manufacture, repro- 




FIG. 35. Axe and battle-axes from H. Mamas. After Heurtley, BSA:, XXIX (}). 

duces a South Russian type. At Mikhalic in Thrace miniature battle- 
axes were modelled in day as toys or votives. 

But copper, tin, lead, silver, and gold were everywhere imported 
or distributed and worked. Close to the shore at Rafina in Attica, 
a convenient port for Cycladic or Cypriote ores, were found two large 
furnaces for smelting copper surrounded by quantities of slag and 
broken moulds. At Cirrha on the Gulf of Corinth, Davies 1 reported a 
crucible with tin oxide adhering to it in an open working from which 
all ore had been extracted, but tin ore in this context is almost incon- 
ceivable. Even in Macedonia 2 gold slag and a crucible have been described. 

At least south of Thessaly the distribution of metal was so well 
organized that copper could be freely used for craftsmen's tools. 
Though most have been melted down in prehistoric times, an axe- 
adze and a flame-shaped knife like Fig. 20, i, survived in the E.H.II 
level at Eutresis. 8 

1 JHS., XLJX (1929). 93-4* * Vardaroftsa and Saratse, Heurtley, PM. 

* Two copper battle-axes found stray in peninsular Greece and now at the British 
School in Awns may weU be Early Helladic. 

68 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

Whether or no the techniques of metallurgy were implanted by 
immigrant prospectors or itinerant artificers from Asia, the capital 
for industrial development was secured in the last resort by supplying 
the demand of cities on the Nile and the Euphrates. As in Crete and 
the Cyclades, the coastal populations of peninsular Greece had now 
turned to trading. Perhaps they colonized the Ionian Islands and the 
west coasts to extend their commerce as the Dorians colonized Corfu 
in historical times. 

The importance and wide ramifications of Early Helladic commerce 
are illustrated not only by the materials used but by actual foreign 
manufactures imported or copied locally: leg amulets as in Crete and 
Egypt (Zygouries, 1 Hagios Kosmas 2 ), Cycladic bone tubes (Hagios 
Kosmas and Levkas), frying-pans (Hagios Kosmas, Eutresis, 8 Asine), 
marble idols and palettes (Hagios Kosmas), and a double-spiral pin 
like Fig. 27, 9 (Zygouries). From Asia came an arm-cylinder of twisted 
silver wire (like a gold one from Troy II) found in a grave on Levkas. 
In the E.H.III level at Asine lumps of clay stamped with E.M.III- 
M.M.I seal-impressions must have sealed bales of merchandise or jars 
of oil brought from Crete. And the Early Helladic merchants themselves 
felt the need of seals; seals, probably imported, have been found at 
Hagios Kosmas, Asine, and other sites. One from Asine is almost 
identical with a Sixth Dynasty Egyptian seal. The counterbalancing 
exports may possibly have included tin from Cirrha. Early Helladic 
vases were certainly exported to Troy from peninsular Greece (p. 37). 
A depas found near Mikhalic in Thrace, and another from Orchomenos 
as well as some other vases from that site and Eutresis may well be 
Troadic imports. 

The ceramic industry was not industrialized, since Early Helladic 
vases are all hand-made. The fabrics that appear first (from E.H.I 
onwards) are dark and self-coloured, burnished and decorated with 
incised and excised patterns. In a later phase (E.H.II) begins in penin- 
sular Greece a buff ware which is covered with a dark glaze paint to 
reproduce the effects of the old burnished fabric. It is generally known 
as Urfirnis and probably denotes Cretan influence 4 though red wares 
had been coated with a rather similar "glaze" in Late Neolithic times. 
In E.H.III the glaze paint is used as the medium for producing dark 
geometric patterns on a light ground chiefly in the Peloponneseor 
as a ground on which similar patterns are drawn in white in 
Central Greece. The rectilinear light-on-dark designs recall Cretan 

ries (Cambridge, Mass., 1928). 



;ai Ertrtsi* in Booto (1931). 

4 Fr&din and Pertson, Asine. 433. 
69 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

E.M.II-HI patterns, but are also foreshadowed on the black neolithic B 
vases of the Mainland. Distinctive Early Helladic II-III shapes are 
sauce-boats (also manufactured in gold 1 ), hour-glass tankards, askoi and 
globular water-jars, at first with ring-handles, 2 later with flat vertically 
pierced lugs, on the belly (Fig. 36). 
North of Othrys in Thessaly, Macedonia, and Thrace, Early ^Egean 




FIG. 36. Early Helladic sauce-boat (i), askos (2), tankard (3), and jar (4) (|). 

potters did not use a kiln that would produce clear ware and so did 
not manufacture Urfirnis ware. Its place was taken by self-coloured 
wares as in Early Helladic I and Early Troadic. Save for "sauce-boats", 
most of the forms popular in peninsular Greece were reproduced in 
local variations looking rather more Troadic than the latter (Fig. 37, 
i, 2, 6). Even horned handles had been current at Troy, but in Mace- 
donia a distinctive development was the wish-bone handle (Fig. 37, 
* /firs., XLIV (1924), 163. 

1 This form resembles the Corded Ware amphora, Fig. 84 (cf . Fuchs, Die griechische 
Fundgruppen det frilhen Bronzezeit, 1937), Du * a ^ 8 good Anatolian forms (Germania, 
XXIII. 62). 

70 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 



3, 5), analogies to which have met us in neolithic Crete. In Thrace the 
vases from Mikhalic, where askoi are missing, look more Troadic still. 
But here, as in Chalcidice, trumpet lugs grow out of the inverted rims of 
bowls. Now in Lesbos this type of lug appeared first in Thermi III, 
having grown up out of the simpler tubular lugs of Thermi I (Fig. 17). 
For once pottery discloses an irreversible relation. Finally, a few sherds 




* * 45 67 

FIG. 37. Early Macednic pot-forms. After Heurtiey, BSA., XXVIII. 

from Mikhalic in Thrace, from H. Mamas in Macedonia, and from 
E.H.III levels at Eutresis and H. Marina in Central Greece are decor- 
ated with cord imprints. This "corded ware" has usually been con- 
nected with the battle-axes and horses' bones from the Thracic and 
Macednic sites as evidence for an invasion from Saxo-Thuringia 1 or 
at least from somewhere north of the Balkans. The forms of most vases 
have however nothing in common with Saxo-Thuringian corded ware, 2 
while the similarities of the amphorae are due at most to a common 
pre-ceramic prototype (p. 173). 

Imported marble figurines of Cycladic type may have been used in 
domestic fertility rites, but clay figurines do not seem to have been 
manufactured unless the ''anchor ornaments" (Fig. 
38) be really ultra-conventionalized versions of such. 
They constitute one of the most distinctive type 
fossils of the Early ^Egean Bronze Age, being 
found in E.H.II-HI layers from Asea in Arcadia 
to Servia in Macedonia and Mikhalic in Thrace, 
and from Rafina and Asine on the east to Levkas 
and Ithaka on the west. 8 Really they are no more 
likely to be ritual than the clay hooks common to 
Early Thracic, Macednic, and Troadic. Clay horns 
of consecration from Asine on the other hand 
point to rites like the Minoan and Anatolian. But the principal super- 
stitious impulse to accumulation of wealth was supplied by the desire 
for a good burial. In the Peloponnese and Attica the dead were buried 

1 So Fuchs, Die griechische Fundgrupptndtr frUhen Bromezeit (i937) 

* Milojfitt, Germania, XXXIII (i955)> I5i'4- ^ J J m _ . f . 

* Listed by Weinberg, AJA., LI, p. 168, n. 26; add Mikhalic and Rafina. 

7* 




FIG. 38. E. H. An- 
chor Ornament, 
Kritsana (J). 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

in fanuly vaults outside the settlements. At Zygouries the tombs were 
pit-caves or shafts cut in the rock, one of which contained fourteen 
skeletons. At Hagios Kosmas in Attica, the earlier ossuaries were cists 
with a false door facing the township. The cists were later replaced 
by built ossuaries like Fig. 25, i, but still used as collective tombs; 
in each case the bodies, in the contracted attitude, had been introduced 
through the roof. Such cemeteries of family vaults show that in 
peninsular Greece quite a number of lineages or clans lived together 
in a single township. Out of six skulls measured from H. Kosmas three 
were long-headed, but two round-headed. 1 

In the north-west quite different burial practices prevailed. On 
Levkas DSrpfdd described a so-called royal cemetery of thirty-three 
round tombs. Each "tomb" was a circular platform of stones defined 
by a built wall and suggesting a denuded cairn, in or on which were 
burial pithoi, cists, or shaft-graves each containing a single corpse 
(allegedly roasted) and the ashes of a "pyre". Among these lay burnt 
human and animal bones and remains of metal ornaments and weapons. 
The pottery from the graves is typically Early Helladic, but the metal 
gear from the "pyres" includes besides good Early ^Egean types a 
couple of rapiers and gold hilt mounts 2 that elsewhere would be 
Mycenaean or at least M.M.III. The cemetery must be a whole period, 
perhaps four centuries, later than that of H. Kosmas in Attica. The 
burial rites are equally abnormal. Cremation in situ must have taken 
place on the pyres, a rite otherwise unknown in Bronze Age Greece. 
The platforms sound like cairns, and in 1955 a cairn with pithos burials 
very like our round tombs was found in Messenia, but was M.H. in 
date. So the warriors and rich women buried on Levkas did not possess 
the standard Early Helladic culture though they used Early Helladic 
pots and Early jEgean weapons and ornaments. 

The standard Early Helladic burial practices are in sharp contrast 
to the Troadic, but conform rather to Cydadic, Minoan, Cypriote and 
Levantine traditions. They cannot have been introduced from the 
Troad. But no Early 5gean burials have been recognized where 
Troadic parallels are clearest north of Attica and Eubcea or in Mace- 
donia and Thrace. 

In peninsular Greece, Early Helladic societies had created a polity 
and an economy under which some at least of the peasant's younger 
sons might find a livelihood in industry or commerce, but only in 
reliance on Oriental markets opened up by maritime transport. Remote 
from access thereto, the contemporary inhabitants of Macedonia had 



Coon, j 

DOrpfold, AuMak* t 229 (R- 7). 
72 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

no alternative but to occupy fresh land. So they filtered southward 
into Thessaly. The culture that used to be attributed to Neolithic III 
and IV there was in fact basically Early Macednic. 1 But local Late 
Neolithic traditions were blended with the Anatolian. So clay figurines 
were still manufactured, but now male as well as female. At Rakhmani 
in Eastern Thessaly spiral patterns were applied in crusted technique. 

MIDDLE HELLADIC 

The Middle Helladic period is ushered in by the violent destruction 
of Orchomfenos and other sites. Many were reoccupied. But abrupt 
changes in architecture, pottery, burial rites, and general economy 
indicate the dominance of new and warlike settlers. The latter can be 
most easily recognized by their pottery the reduced grey ware 




FIG. 30. Spear-head, knives, and dagger from M.H. graves in Thessaly. 
* After Tsountas (i). 

described on p. 46 and unhappily termed Minyan by archaeologists 
and by the practice of burying the dead contracted in small cists or in 
jars among the houses. The martial character of the invaders is dis- 
closed by the deposition in the graves of metal weapons (Fig. 39) 
knives, ogival daggers, and spear-heads with a socket, cast like a shoe 
on one or both faces of the blade (Sesklo, Levkas, Mycenae). Hoflow- 

* BSA. t XXVIII (19*6-37). 180-94. 

73 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

based obsidian arrow-heads were still used, but now the archer used 
also grooved stone arrow-straighteners like Fig. 113 (Asine, Levkas, 
Mycenae)* Perforated stone axes appear for the first time at Eutresis 
and Asine and antler axes and sleeves at Asine. On the other hand, such 
craft tools as saws and gouges are first found in a Middle Helladic 
grave (on Levkas). 
The Minyan invaders did not exterminate the older inhabitants or 




FIG. 40. Minyan pottery from Thessaly (|), and imitations from Thermon, 



destroy their economy, but added to the population and accelerated 
the accumulation of wealth. Malthi now attained its maximum popu- 
lation; the walls comprised, within an area of 3| acres, 305 rooms, while 
the citadel was supplied with spring water by an aqueduct. The houses 
are more often agglomerations of rooms than long rectangular halls. 1 
Tin-bronze was now worked by the smiths, and stone moulds for 
casting spear-heads like Fig. 39, 1, and Minoan double-axes were found 
even at Dimini in Thessaly. 

The potters' craft was soon industrialized. The grey-ware vases were 
fired in a closed kiln and either formed in a mould or thrown on the 

i AJA., XLVIII (1944). 342- 
74 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

wheel. A family of Minoan potters settled on JSgina, bringing with 
them their clay wheel as used in Crete. 1 Perhaps such immigrant 
craftsmen were responsible for introducing the wheel from Crete every- 
where, but there is nothing Minoan about their products. The favourite 
"Minyan" forms are ring-stemmed goblets, high-handled cups (Fig. 40), 
craters, and amphorae. Both in hue and form such Minyan vases imitate 
silver models. Indeed, in one Late Helladic grave the silver originals 




FIG. 41. Matt-painted bowl and pithos, ^gina (^); and Middle Cycladic jugs from 
Marseilles harbour and Phylakopi (|). 

were actually found together with the clay skeuomorphs. 2 On the other 
hand, the influence of woodwork is patent notably in the horned 
handles from ^Etolia (Fig. 40, 3), which are repeated in good Minyan 
ware at Troy but have a long Balkan ancestry. But grey Minyan 
vases had to compete with hand-made vessels of the same shapes in 
polished brown or black and vitreous red wares. 

Perhaps later, pithoi, bowls, and other shapes were built up by hand 
in clear wares and decorated with geometric patterns in matt paint (Fig. 
41); In form and decoration these matt-painted vessels agree precisely 

i Jhb. d. Inst., LII, AA. (1937). 2 -5- % o 

Persson, New Tombs a/ Dendra (Lund, 1942), 87. 

75 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

with Middle Cydadic pots from Melos and show the same Central 
Anatolian affinities (p. 56). A M.H.III beaked jug from Asine 1 looks like 
an imported "Early Hittite" manufacture. On the other hand, at Liano- 
kladhi in the Spercheios valley the Macedonians, who had occupied the 
site in Early ,<Egean times, now learned to make in matt-painted ware 
jars, tankards, and bowls with wish-bone handles of good Macednic or 
Early Helladic shape, and decorate them with Macednic patterns, 
including pot-hook spirals, in Middle Helladic technique (Fig. 42). A 




FIG. 42. Matt-painted jar, Lianokladhi III. After Wace and Thompson (J). 

similar fabric appears at Thermon in ^Etolia together with "imitation 
Minyan" vases, but not before L.H.II (fifteenth century) and also in 
Levkas. This Lianokladhi painted ware thus illustrates people of 
MacednioMiddle Helladic traditions surviving into Late Helladic times 
whom Heurtley plausibly identifies with the Dorians' ancestors. 2 

In peninsular Greece trade with Crete was at first interrupted by 
the invasion, but obsidian was still secured from Melos and the metal 
trade was unimpaired. Soon Middle Minoan II polychrome pottery 
was being imported into ^Egina and imitated at Eutresis. A bossed 

1 FrOdin and Persson, Asine, 286; cf. van der Oaten, AHshar, 1928-9, OIP. t XIX 
pi. IV, b 1671. 
BSA. t XXVIII (1926-27), 179 ff. 

76 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

bone plaque like Fig. 115 and a hammer pin, 1 from M.H. layers at 
Lerna, illustrate connections at once with Anatolia and with Sicily. 

The dead were generally interred in cists or jars under or between 
the houses within the settlements. But on Levkas ten or twelve such 
burials might be grouped together in rectangular or circular "platforms" 
(cf. p. 72). In MeSsenia 2 Middle Helladic pithos burials lay on the 
periphery of a regular cairn 14 m. in diameter. 

The intrusive culture typified by grey Minyan ware is found all over 
Greece to the Ionian Islands, Levkas, Thessaly, and even Chalcidice. 
Only in inland Macedonia did the native culture persist quite unaffected 
by it. Now most authorities agree that the Minyan invaders were the 
first Greek speakers in the peninsula. From them should have sprung 
the new dynasty that began to write Indo-European Greek at Knossos 
in L.M.II (p. 27). If so, the origin of the invaders becomes a major 
issue for European prehistory. In 1914 Forsdyke suggested a Troadic 
origin for the invaders. 8 But, though Minyan ware was the normal 
pottery of Troy VI, it did not begin demonstrably earlier there than 
in Greece. Burial among the houses contrasts as much with Troadic 
as with Minoan and Early Helladic practice, but was normal in Central 
Anatolia and farther east. Now grey vases, technically allied to 
Minyan and including pedestalled goblets, are characteristic of Hissar II 
in North-Eastern Iran and allied sites in Turkmenia, 4 where again 
the dead were buried among the houses. On the other hand, Persson 
insists on Northern features in the intrusive culture. 6 None is really 
convincing, and the most significant can already be found south of 
the Balkans in Thrace and Macedonia in Early ^Egean times. If fresh 
"Northern" elements entered peninsular Greece and the Troad at the 
beginning of Middle Helladic there is no evidence for bringing them 
from beyond the Balkans. 

MYCENJBAN CIVILIZATION 

The martial prowess of the Minyan invaders eventually allowed them 
to win by force of arms a share in the wealth accumulated in Minoan 
and Oriental cities while their war-chiefs, becoming kings, concen- 
trated some of it for use as capital in the development of a Mainland 
civilization. The kings attracted or compelled Minoan craftsmen to 
settle at their courts while merchants brought regular supplies of raw 
materials and luxury goods. By Late Helladic times the Middle Helladic 
townships had grown into little cities. 

* Htttorio, XXIII (*954), i; v, 160. JHS. (1955). SuppL. p. 11. 

JHS., XXXIV. ill * Arnc, Excwations at Skak-up*; cf. 
9 FrOdin and Persson, Asin* t 433, p. ao, n. i. 

77 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The urban revolution was apparently first consummated at Mycense, 
a citadel that commands a main artery of communications between 
the south-east and the north-west. The old settlement, founded in 
Early HeUadic times, became the capital of a potent dynasty. The 
kings with their families were buried with regal wealth in two Shaft 
Grave cemeteries, each enclosed by a circle of upright slabs. Schliemann 
discovered a circle of six tombs, numbered I to VI, that had subse- 
quently been incorporated in the walls of the Late Mycenaean citadel. 
A second circle comprising 14 shaft graves (designated by Greek 
letters) farther out and disturbed by the erection of the 'Treasury of 
Clytemnaestra", came to light in igsi. 1 In both, the shafts, cut 10 to 
15 feet into the rock and provided with a ledge 4 or 3 feet%bove the 
floor to support a wooden roof, normally contained several skeletons 
lying on their backs with the legs extended or drawn up; one skull 
had been trepanned. These may have been buried in wooden coffins, 
but at the bottom of the latest and largest shaft in the new circle 
had been built a stone mortuary house, divided into chamber and ante- 
chamber and roofed with a corbelled barrel vault. Stelae, carved in 
low relief with spiral patterns framing scenes of war and of the chase, 
once marked each grave. Now they provide the earliest evidence for 
the use of horse-drawn war-chariots in the ^gean. A little imported 
M.M.IIIb pottery together with native matt-painted and Minyan 
vases suggest that the earliest interments in some graves go back into 
the sixteenth century; the latest dateable sherds from any shaft grave 
are L.M.II. The Shaft Grave period covered roughly the century 1600 
to 1450 B.C. 

The equipment acquired by the Shaft Grave kings is largely of 
Minoan inspiration. Their palace was equipped with a light-well, like 
those of Knossos, and decorated with frescoes in Minoan technique. 
Most vessels and ornaments are evidently products of Minoan crafts- 
men. On figured documents men wear the Minoan drawers and women 
the flounced skirt of the island. Minoan signets were adopted for official 
business. The cult of the Mother Goddess, associated, as in Crete, with 
the symbols of the dove, the double-axe, the sacred pillar and horns 
of consecration, was practised with Minoan rites at Mycenae, and 
draughts were played as in Crete. No one denies that craftsmen trained 
in Cretan schools produced the objects in question though many must 
have been executed at Mycenae itself to the order of the local king. 
An immigration of Cretan potters seems to have initiated the local 
manufacture of Mycenaean vases, decorated with shiny paint in the 
best Minoan tradition. It no longer seems likely, as it did thirty years 

1 G. Mylonas, Ancient Mycenae, the Capital of Agamemnon (Princeton, 1956). 




FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

ago, that Mycenaean civilization was founded by Minoan princes 
carving out for themselves kingdoms on the Greek Mainland. The 
martial character of Early Mycenaean culture, as revealed in the forti- 
fication of the citadel, the abundance of weapons, and the popularity 
of battle scenes in art, is quite foreign to the Minoan spirit. The kings 
of Mycenae wore beards; the Minoans generally shaved their faces. 
In their tombs native Minyan and matt-painted vases are juxtaposed 
to vessels painted in Cretan style and technique. An arrow-shaft- 
straightener in Shaft Grave VI and a Mainland spear-head like Fig. 39, i 
(Grave IV), occur side by side with arms in Minoan tradition. Though 
the terrible rapiers, nearly a metre long, like Fig. 14, i, may be Middle 
Minoan types, the flange-hilted variant of Fig. 14, 2, is Mainland rather 
than Cretan. A round-heeled dagger from Shaft Grave VI would seem 
more at home in Central and Western Europe 1 than round the ^Egean. 
Mycenaean warriors wore helmets plated with boars' tusk laminae, but 
so did Minoans (p. 30). Amber for beads found in several shaft graves 
must have been imported from the Baltic, a newly 
found crescentic necklace with pattern-bored 
spacers 2 (Fig. 43) of that material is likely to be 
of English manufacture. 

Finally, the horse-drawn war-chariots, at once 
the symbols and the decisive instruments of 
Mycenaean kingship, are certainly not Minoan. 
The horses that drew them point north of the 
Jgean basin. That is not to say that Minyan 

invaders had brought chariots and horses with 
_ . . , . , FIG. 4.3, Terminal and 
them into Greece in the eighteenth century. A pattern-bored spacer- 
small group of charioteers could easily seize bead from amber neck- 
, r . , . ,, ., .,,_ .1. , lace. Shaft Grave at 

power and maintain authority with this new and Mycenae (i). 

potent weapon. Structurally the Mycenaean shaft 
graves agree closely with the ' ' y amno' ' graves of the Pontic steppes, which 
do contain wheeled ox-carts and hammer pins (p. 151). Whatever the 
ancestry of the Shaft Grave rulers, by concentrating wealth, won by 
pillage, mercenary service in Egypt 8 or more peaceful trade, and so 
attracting or compelling expert craftsmen to settle on the Mainland, 
they prepared the way for an urban civilization. 

Between 1500 and 1400 B.C. the same process of acculturation was 
accomplished at other sites which had remained rural townships during 

1 The identification of another blade from this grave as a halberd is incorrect, Blegen, 
in 'ETtTiJ^oy X. Trowrat (Athens, 1951), 423 ff; cf. PPS. t XIX, 231. 

Germanio, XXXIII (1955), 316-18. 

Schachermeyr, Arcktv Orientalni, XVII (Praha, 1949), 331-50, suggests that the 
Mycenaeans learned to build and use chariots while helping Ahmose to expel the HyksosI 

79 




DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

the Early Mycenaean Shaft Grave epoch. Here again the change coin- 
cided with the rise in the townships of chieftains, concentrating the 
local wealth for expenditure on the products of secondary industry and 
trade. These celebrated their elevation by erecting stately beehive 
tombs or tholoi. Such tombs are significantly located near the heads 
of southward-facing gulfs and along natural trade-routes by sea or land. 
On the east coast these Middle Mycenaean tholoi extend as far north as 
the Gulf of Volo, on the west to Cakovatos in Elis. At Mycenae itself, 
rulers, perhaps of a new dynasty, erected a series of tholoi in which 
Wace traced the typological development from earlier and ruder vaults 
to the celebrated 'Treasuries" of "Clytemnaestra" and "Atreus", 
built in ashlar masonry and provided with richly sculptured portals. 1 

The oldest dated tholos, one at Navarino, 2 contained only matt- 
painted and (a minority of) Cretanizing L.H.I vases, so should have been 
built in the sixteenth century. Kakovatos 8 and a few other tholoi 
yielded good L.H.I pottery pointing to a foundation before 1450 B.C., a 
larger number are L.H.II, the rest, including the finest ''treasuries*' at 
Mycenae, were Late Mycenaean. A very rich tholos, found intact at 
Dendra, 4 contained no pottery earlier than L.H.III, but the gold and 
silver vessels are L.M.I in style and illustrate a survival of heirlooms 
for half a century at least! 

Mycenaean tholoi are corbelled chambers entered by a long unroofed 
passage or dromos. Many were erected in an excavation in a natural 
hillside, but others stood on level ground or on a hilltop and were 
covered by an artificial mound or cairn 5 (Fig. 44). 

Much of the grave goods from the Middle Mycenaean tholoi are 
either imports from Crete or products of craftsmen trained in the 
Minoan schools. So too the contemporary palaces at Tiryns and 
Thebes, neither a megaron, were decorated with frescoes in Minoan 
technique. 

But the idea of the tholos tomb can hardly have been introduced 
from Crete; in that island no tholoi are known to bridge the five 
centuries between the building of the Early Minoan ossuaries and the 
erection of the Mainland vaults. On the other hand, the architectural 
similarities between the Mycenaean tholoi and the corbelled passage 
graves of Southern Spain and Portugal are familiar, and there typo- 
logical series can be produced to illustrate the development of the 

1 Wace, BSA. t XXV, 387; the contrary theory of Evans, making "Atreus" the oldest 
tholos (PM ., IV, 236 f.), has been refuted by the discovery of the new grave circle. 

Hesptna. XXIII (1954), 158-62- 

AM., XXXIV, 255; Ftiriimark, Chronology of the Mycenaan Pottery (1941), 4. 
4 Persaon, The Royal Tombs at Dendra (Lund. 1931)* 

So at Kakovatos, Bodia (Messenia), etc.; Corolla Archaologica Gustavo Adolpho 
dedicate (Lund, 1932), ax; ff. 

80 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 



tholos from simpler forms. 1 So if the idea of the tholos were introduced 
into Greece, it may have come from the Iberian Peninsula. 

In any case connections with the West are conspicuous in Mycenaean 
culture. L.M.I (or L.H.I) pots were exported to the ^Eolian islands, 
L.H.I metal-types were copied in Sicily (p. 238). The colonization of 
Kakovatos and the wealth of its ruler must be connected with the 
amber trade. His treasures included a crescentic amber necklace with 
pattern-bored spacer plates (Fig. 43), reputedly made in England. 

Burial in a tholos must have been the prerogative of kings and their 
families. But even in the fifteenth century some of their urban subjects 
began to prepare for themselves family vaults. Villagers, however, 






FIG. 44. Mycenaean tholos tomb on Euboea. After Papavasileiou. 

were still buried singly in cists or pithoi. Similarly throughout L.H.II 
native potters continued to turn out Minyan and hand-made matt- 
painted vases. 

But by 1400 B.C. the Mainland had thoroughly mastered Minoan 
techniques and assimilated the Cretan industrial system. Native 
workers, having been apprenticed to Minoan craftsmen, could turn 
out en masse rather shoddy articles that satisfied the less refined tastes 
of the Mainlanders and gradually ousted the products of household 
industry. Thus equipped, the Mainland took over from Crete the political 
and economic hegemony in the ^Egean. Knossos was sacked; the Conti- 
nental megaron replaced the ^Egean palaces at Phstos and Phylakopi. 
The Mycenaean cities were more numerous and perhaps more populous 
than the Cretan; the acropolis of Mycenae alone, not to mention un- 
walled suburbs, covered about n acres, that of Asine nearly 9, Gla 

1 Cf. Piggott in Antiquity. XXVII (1953). X4-3- 
8l 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

in L. Copals no less than 24 acres. The immense cemeteries of rock- 
cut chamber tombs adjacent to each city are even more convincing 
than the areas. Each tomb, an irregular chamber entered by a narrow 
passage or dromos, was a family vault. Some contain as many as twenty- 
seven corpses. Though carefully sealed up after each interment, such 
tombs were in fact reopened periodically and used over several genera- 
tions; vases of L.H.II, L.H.IIIa, and L.H.IIIb styles were found in 
one and the same tomb at Mycenae, showing its use for burial for at 
least two centuries (1450-1250 B.C.). 1 And a family likeness could be 
detected on the skeletons from the same tomb. This collective burial 
practice, though deeply rooted in the ^Egean and still current in Crete 
in Middle Minoan times, is in sharp contrast to the "Mifiyan" usage 
and looks like a reversion to Early Helladic customs or an imitation of 
the royal practice. 

The populous cities sought an outlet for their goods and overflowing 
population in trade and colonization. Mycenaean pottery and other 
products were exported in quantities to Troy, Palestine, Syria, Egypt, 
and Sicily, rapiers to Bulgaria and perhaps the Caucasus. The ^Egean 
and Ionian islands and even the coastal tracts of Macedonia received 
contingents of Mycenaean traders, potters, and metal-workers and were 
incorporated in the Mycenaean economic system. Mycenaean colonies 
denoted by tholos tombs were planted even on the coasts of Asia Minor 
and Syria. 2 In the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries a complete 
cultural uniformity prevailed over the whole ^Egean world a uni- 
formity that embraced the political diversity reflected in the Iliad. 

The zenith of Late Mycenaean civilization, as fixed by Mycenaean 
imports in Egypt and Syria and Egyptian imports in Greece, was 
reached in the fourteenth century. After 1300 B.C. trade with Egypt 
declined, wealth diminished, art decayed as piracy and militarism 
took the place of peaceful commerce. Only the armament industry 
expanded; commerce with the barbarous West alone was intensified. 

The fortifications of Mycenae, Tiryns, and Athens were extended. 8 
Greaves 4 and probably corselets were worn as well as helmets. A new 
type of flange-hilted sword was introduced in which the flange is 
carried right round the pommel 6 (Fig. 15). Swordsmen were mounted 
on horseback to become the first cavalrymen of antiquity. 6 The sup- 

i Arch., LXXXII (1932). 

AJA., LII (1948), 145 ff.; Schaeffer, Stratigraphie, 9-12; Stubbings, Mycenaan 
Pottery from the Levant (Cambridge, 195*)- 

AJA.. LII (1948)* 109-14. 

4 Found in a tomb near Patras, AJA., LVIII (1954), 235; c * Lorimer, Homer and 
the Monuments. 

Evans, Arch., LIX (1905), 501; cf. Benton, PPS., XVIII (1952), 237- 

Hood, BSA., XLVIII (1953). 85. 

82 



FROM VILLAGE TO CITY IN GREECE 

plies of amber, copper, and tin from the north and west were main- 
tained. As a consequence, a flange-hilted sword of the new type was 
exported to Cornwall, 1 there to be buried with the chief of a tribe that 
controlled access to the tin lodes (p. 336). Relations with the West were 
more intimate than a mere interchange of goods. An Italian smith 
came to the court of Mycenae and there cast in a stone mould 8 
Continental winged axes like Fig. 119, 2. Peschiera daggers (like Fig. 
119, 4), cut-and-thrust swords, 8 and fibulae (both like Fig. 122, and 
with flattened leaf-shaped bow) 4 appear in such numbers as to imply 
changes in ways of fighting and in fashions of dress, if not in population. 
They herald the cataclysm that submerged the Mycenaean civilization 
the "Dorian Invasion" dated by Classical tradition about noo B.C. 

1 Childe, PPS., XIV (1948), 185 f. 

* BSA., XLVIII, 15; the actual mould was found. 

Schaeffer, Enkomi-Alasia, I (Paris, 1952), 237-42. 

4 Blinkenberg, Fibules grecques et myctniennes (Lindiaha V), (Copenhagen, 1926). 



CHAPTER VI 
FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

THE rugged peninsula between the Black Sea and the Adriatic, despite 
the severity of the winters and the retardation of spring, enjoys, owing 
to its latitude and the prolongation of autumnal warmth, a climate 
intermediate between the Mediterranean and the Temperate. So the 
adaptation of an Asiatic rural economy would be less difficult there 
than in the rest of the European woodland zone. And incidentally the 
ancestors of one-corn wheat (Triticum monococcum) and several fruit- 
trees grew wild there. So the fertile valleys intersecting the Balkan 
ranges are, like Thessaly and South- West Asia, studded with tells 
representing the sites of permanent, though formally neolithic, villages. 
Their stratification should provide a reliable record of the process of 
adaptation. But in Bulgaria the latest accounts of the culture-sequence 
at Banyata 1 and Karanovo 2 are in flat contradiction with earlier 
accounts of the succession at Kyrollovo, 8 Veselinovo, 4 and Karanovo 
itself. 5 So too at Vinia on the Middle Danube the divisions of the 
material excavated by Vassits 6 from the 10 m. deep deposit proposed 
respectively by Holste, 7 Miloj6i<5, 8 and Garaanin 9 are equally discrepant. 
In the peninsula and along the Lower Danube a mesolithic popula- 
tion, allied to the Northern Forest-folk, might be postulated to explain 
peculiarities in the local neolithic culture, but is not documented by 
any certified finds. In the caves so far explored no occupation layers 
intervene between strata containing Upper Palaeolithic (Aurignacian) 
implements and a pleistocene fauna and those yielding remains of 
developed neolithic cultures. The continuous record recommences 
with farmers whose cultures in general for all their local divergences 
are not only based on the same cereals and domestic stock as those 
of peninsular Greece and Hither Asia, but also reproduce the latters' 
rural economy and ideology expressed in female figurines and even 
their preferences for adzes and slings. 

GodohUk Plovdiv, II (1950), 4-20. 

SA., XXTV. (1955). "Si cf. IxbBAI., XVII (1950), 210-12. 

Jtob. d. Inst., LVIII, A A. (1943). 74-92. 

IxbBAI., XIII (1939), 195-227- 

Antiquity, XIII (1939), 345-9; Gaul, BASPR., XVI (1948), 43-5. 

Preistonjskaya Vinca (Belgrad, 1930-36), 4 volumes, cited P.V. 

WPZ., XXVI (i939) * ft 

Chronologic, 71-81; BSA., XLIV (1949), 258-82. 

Hronologija Vintanske Gtuppe (Ljubljana, 1951). 

84 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 



THE STARCEVO-K6R6S CULTURE 1 

Throughout the Balkan peninsula and on both sides of the Carpathians, 
north of the Danube, the continuous record of food-production begins 
in settlements of the Starievo culture. This assemblage, only in the 
last ten years clearly distinguished from its successors, extends from 
the gean coasts in Thessaly and Gallipoli across the main Balkan 
range and the Danube to the K6ros and the headwaters of the Pruth 
(Map I, crosses). In such a vast and diversified region the material 
remains of the culture are surprisingly uniform, though local divergences 
are of course recognizable, especially in pottery; we could easily 
distinguish a Maritza or Thracian, a Drave-Morava, and a Maros-K6r6s 
aspect. 

Though occurring at the base of several tells both in Bulgaria and 
in Yugoslavia, the Starfievo layers seem to represent rather temporary 
settlements, and similar material has been collected from caves and 
from unstratified camp sites along streams and lake shores. On the 
Maros and K6ros the latter consisted of groups of trapeze-shaped huts 
of wattle-and-daub with lean-to walls that formed also the roof, 2 but 
on the Maritza more commodious houses were built in the later phase 
of the culture. In the economy, hunting played a prominent role; 
bones of game animals are common in all settlements. But the hunters 
did not use flint-tipped arrows, but relied on traps and slings. 8 Fishing 
may be deduced from the location of the encampments along the banks 
of streams and lakes and from clay net-sinkers which in the KSros 
aspect assume the ornate form of Fig. 45. But Starfievo folk were 
always farmers even though their rural economy may have been 
incompatible with durable settlement in one place. 

Actual cereals so far only one-corn wheat in Bulgaria; millet in 
Yugoslavia! have been identified; they were stored in clay-lined pits; 
sickle flints were found mounted in a curved horn-handle at Karanovo 4 ; 
saddle querns and rubbers are found everywhere. Beside the querns in 
Bulgaria are regularly found bone spatula (Fig. 45) that must have 
been used to scoop up the flour. Such spatulse recur on practically every 
StarCevo site throughout the province, but in no other context, so that 
they can be used as a diagnostic type of the culture as confidently as 
pots. Bread was probably already baked in low clay ovens. Finally, 
cattle, goats, sheep, and pigs were bred for food. But in general the 

1 Kutzian, I., The Kdrds Culture (Dissertations Pannonica, s. II, no. 23) (Buda-Pest, 
1944-47); GaraSanin, Arandeljovil-, Starbvalka Kultura (Univerz v. Ljubljani, 1954): 
Gaul, "West Bulgarian Painted", ASPRB., XVI (1948); "Banyata", God. Phv., II 
(1950), 4-12; St. s. Cere., II (1951), 57-64. Banner, TMK., 17; Dolg., IX-X. 75. 

Garafianin, Stattevat. KuU. t 134. * Antiquity, XIII, 345- 

85 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

rural economy must have been one of shifting agriculture and pastoral- 
ism combined with hunting and collecting. That will account for the 
relatively rapid spread of such a homogeneous culture over so vast a 
province. 

In industry carpenters used exclusively adzes (like Fig. 29, B and D) 
and chisels mounted in antler sleeves. In the Koros aspect at least 
celts were sometimes drilled with a hollow-borer and antler beams 
were perforated and sometimes armed with stone blades to serve 
as adzes or mattocks. Textiles may be inferred from spindle-whorls, 
spools, and loom- weights of baked clay. 




FIG. 45. Clayiloom-weights or net-sinkers (J) and bone spatula of Starve vo 
K6r5s culture, (J). 

The potters, though not full-time specialists, had complete mastery 
over their material. The universal and perhaps earliest Startevo ware 
is indeed coarse and chaff-tempered. But the shapes are highly sophisti- 
cated. The vases, some 21 inches high, are all provided with flat bases 
or even stand-rings though not with true handles. North of the Balkan 
range the stand-rings may be quatrefoil or cruciform (Fig. 46) or 
replaced by four nipples that farther south have grown into four solid 
legs. These vessels were elaborately decorated by rustication (often 
called barbotine), which in the Koros aspect is combined with con- 
ventional figures of goats, stags, or men in relief. This coarse ware, 
save perhaps in the Koros aspect, was generally accompanied by finer 
fabrics, also chaff-tempered, with a well-smoothed or even burnished 
surface, grey, buff, or red in colour. The fine grey wares may be decor- 
ated with narrow flutings or channellings that both at Starevo and 
on the Maritza may f ormj spiralif orm patterns. Finally, small vases, 
especially goblets on a low foot, may be painted in white or black on a 
red ground or in Yugoslavia in dark brown on buff, in fact just like 

86 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

Dimini ware (p. 64). The lines of paint form simple designs among 
which spirals occur only rarely and, according to Milojid, late. Neither 
the rusticated nor the painted designs were blended into harmonious 
compositions as in Thessaly. At Karanovo fluted ware seems to appear 
later than painted; both appear later than rusticated ware at Starfcevo 
according to Fewkes, 1 Milojtid, 2 and Mrs GaraSanin, 8 but Ehrich 4 denies 





FIG. 46. Cruciform-footed bowl in fine StarSevo ware and jar ot rusticated K6r6s 

style (^). 

this. Both Miloj&c and Mrs Garaganin agree that the rusticated KSros 
ware represents a still later phase of the culture. 

Trade brought obsidian to the encampments on the Pruth and along 
the Tisza and Koros, and Spondylus shells to the latter region from the 
Mediterranean. 

Clay stamps, as in neolithic Byblos, are common on the Koros 
sites, at Starievo itself and along the Pruth, but have not yet been 
reported south of the Balkans. Similarly figurines, well-modelled and 
markedly steatopygous, are common in the K6ros group but rare and 
rude at Starfcevo and on the Maritza. Burials were unceremonious, being 
represented by skeletons without grave goods, interred contracted in pits 
in the encampments. The expansion of the StarCevo culture must have 
occupied a considerable time, and in each area, though not at any 
single site, its life may well have been long. Earlier and later phases 



1 Fewkes, ASPRB., IX (i933). 44-- 
* BSA., XLIV (1949). 261-6. 
Startevatka Kultura (Ljubljana, 1954). 62-80, 134. 
4 Relative Chronologies in Old World Archeology (Chicago, 

8 7 



1954), 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

should then be distinguishable. Now in Thessaly Starfcevo rusticated 
ware is Early Neolithic, being stratified below Sesklo wares (p. 58). 
In Macedonia, on the contrary, the painted pottery of Olynthus is 
indistinguishable from painted Starfievo ware. 1 but is Late Neolithic. 
On the Pruth in Northern Romania Starfcevo wares (painted and rusti- 
cated) are stratified below Danubian I. At Vina too Starievo culture 
appears pure in the deepest level, though K6r6s sherds at least are 
mixed in the immediately overlying deposit of the Vinfca culture. But 
north of the Danube the KSros culture is said, sometimes at least, 
to be later than the Vinfca culture. 2 So the clay stamps that are com- 
monest on Koros sites are Danubian II on the Middle and Upper 
Danube. Hence the Koros aspect is probably a late ptoase of the 
Starfcevo culture as GaraSanin and Miloji<5 contend, and painting may 
be a secondary feature in the pottery. 

If this be correct, antler sleeves and mattocks and the spiral motive 
may be accretions developed or borrowed by Starfievo fanners from 
hypothetical hunter-fishers of Forest traditions along the Danube. 
Similarly vase painting, the manufacture of the more realistic figurines 
and of the stamps, that look most like Asiatic seals, and perhaps the 
improvement in rural economy, suggested by the more permanent 
settlements on the Maritsa, may be additions to the original culture 
inspired by fresh immigrants from Hither Asia. The hypothetical "pure 
Starfcevo culture", left by the abstraction of the foregoing accretions, 
could quite well have arisen in the Balkans, since the only directly 
attested cereals cultivated and animals 8 bred may be native there. It 
may, on the other hand, be due to immigrants from South-Western 
Asia related to the farmers who made unpainted pots in North Syria 
and Cilicia, or, if rusticated Starfcevo ware seems too unlike the recog- 
nized incised fabrics of the area, to farmers who made no pots at all. 4 

The relatively homogeneous StarCevo culture was in the sequel 
replaced by or by divergent adjustments to the environment grew 
into distinct local cultures in the several natural subdivisions of the 
province. Divergent development would be quite natural if a sparse 
population of herdsmen and shifting cultivators that had maintained 
communication between dispersed bands as a consequence of trans- 
humance, hunting expeditions, and the search for fresh soil to till, 
settled down in permanent villages; for owing to their neolithic self- 
sufficiency these could remain isolated. 

1 Heurtiey, PM.. 116. 

AE. (n.s.), VTI-IX (1946-48), 19-41. 

* But probably no sheep or goats, BRGK., XXXVI (1955), 21-5. 

4 The "nnfired pottery reported by Grbic from Subotica is really the clay lining 
to bottle-shaped silos on a sandy site. Normal Starevo pottery was found in the silos. 

88 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 



THE VARDAR-MORAVA OR VIN^A CULTURE 

In Western Macedonia, along the Vardar and Morava, on the Danube 
above the Iron Gates, and thence across the Banat and up the Maros, 
permanent villages growing into tells begin with the Vinta culture. 

In the great tell of Vinfca itself above the Starievo levels appear 
fabrics and ceramic forms that are not found in pure sites of the 
StarCevo culture but do occur at sites where StarCevo types are totally 
absent. These ceramic features Miloj&d 1 and GaraSanin 2 have isolated 
from the Starfievo assemblage and used to define a distinct Vinfia 
culture to which other traits may be attributed by association. As thus 
defined, the culture is represented at a series of sites from the Vardar- 
Morava watershed down the latter river, along the Save 8 and the 
Danube, and then beyond that river 4 as far as Tordos on the Maros 5 in 
Transylvania. The stratification at Vina allows of the definition of 
phases in the development of those data susceptible of statistical 
treatment, but not of the determination of the relative age of isolated 
objects. Miloj5i<5 distinguishes five main phases, but GaraSanin can 
recognize only two. He will be followed here. 

The basis of life was still mixed farming combined with hunting, 
fishing, and collecting. But the rural economy had been adjusted to 





FIG. 47. Bone combs and ring-pendant, Tordos, and "harpoon", Vinfia (J). 

maintain permanent villages on one site. To catch the large fish of the 
Danube, the Tisza, and the Maros, antler harpoons or leister-prongs 
(Fig. 47) were employed as well as nets and hook-and-line (by Vinfia II 
the hooks were barbed), Flint arrow-heads were only exceptionally 
used, but no clay sling-bolts have been found either. The houses of 
wattle and daub were rectilinear but rather irregular in plan, divided 
into two or three rooms and furnished with low-vaulted ovens. Adzes 

BSA.. XLIV (1949). 258-306. 

Hronologia Vintansha Gruppe (1951). 

Sfertnor (n.s.), III-IV (2953), 107-26. 

4J&, VIX-IX, 19-41. 

Roik*, M., Die Stmmbmg Zsofia Torma (Cluj-Koloszvar, 1941). 

89 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

were still preferred to axes. Perforated stone hammer-axes appeared 
first in Vinta II, but antlers were perforated for mattocks as in the 
StarSevo culture. 

The pottery was of high quality. The commonest fabric at all levels 
and sites was black burnished ware. A red-surfaced version (erroneously 
termed "red-slipped") was also made. Black and red part-coloured 
vases, as described on p. 65, are confined to the first phase/ To the 
same phase belongs what Miloj&d calls urfirnis and compares to the 
Late Neolithic ware of Greece (p. 65). Vases were flat-based. Handles 
were foreign to the pure Vinia tradition, but at Plofinik 1 and other late 
sites in the Morava valley appear handled tankards and mugs resembling 



1 2 3 4 5 I 7 I 9 10 




FIG. 48. "Face urn" lid from Vinda. After Vassits. 

the Early Macednic. Instead, vases were provided with lugs that even 
in phase I may be hornlike and are provided with button-like pro- 
jections in phase II. Tubular spouts may go back to phase I, but are 
commoner in II. Carinated bowls and dishes with flaring or vertical 
rims were popular throughout. Chalices on tall solid feet occur already 
in the first phase, tripod vases only in the second. Curious bottles, 
designed for carrying on the back, flat on one side and provided with 
looped lugs on the other, are assigned to Vinfca I. The same type occurs 
in the Kttros and Romanian variants of the StarCevo culture, but in 
Bulgaria is also post-Starevo. Distinctive of both phases of the Vinfia 
culture and found equally on the Save, the Morava, and the Maros are 
anthropomorphic lids (Fig. 48), traditionally compared to Trojan 

1 Grbic, Plotnik (Beograd, Narodni Muzeum, 1929). 
90 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

face-urns and really like some from Troy III. Anthropomorphic and 
zoomorphic vases were likewise manufactured, presumably for ritual use. 

Decoration was effected by stroke-burnishing, narrow flutings or 
corrugations, and incisions combined with punctuations; rouletting was 
introduced in phase II. White, red, or yellow colours were applied after 
firing to decorate altars and figurines in phase I, but crusted on the 
vase surface mainly in phase II. The motives in phase I include triangles, 
filled with punctuations, and punctured ribbons or corrugations, form- 
ing simple rectilinear patterns. Maeanders, spirals, and repetition 
patterns,, derived therefrom, are reputedly confined to phase II. 

In addition to pots, white limestone dishes were used at Vinfia. 
Toilet articles include a comb from Tordos (Fig. 47), resembling that 
from Late Neolithic Macedonia, and ring pendants. 

Ritual equipment was as rich in the Vinfca culture as in other Balkan, 
Greek, and South-West Asiatic cultures and implies a similar ideology. 
The earliest figurines are more schematic than those from KSr6s sites, 
but some were already seated on thrones. Later details of the visage 
were more carefully modelled; the face became pentagonal instead of 
triangular, the hands rest on the stomach, clasp the breasts or carry a 
suckling, but the legs fuse into pedestals. Mortuary ceremonial, on the 
other hand, is not well attested and must have played a minor part in 
ideological activity. Some dubious cases of cremation have indeed been 
mentioned, and at VinCa 1 nine skeletons were buried in a "pit cave" 
cut in the I6ss. but at VuSedol similar "chamber tombs" contained 
Slavonian pottery. 

The site of Vinta, close to the junction of the Morava with the 
Danube above the perilous rapids of the Iron Gates, was well-adapted 
for trade. Indeed, Vassits attributed the settlement to a colony 
of ^Egean merchants whom he eventually identified as lonians of 
the seventh century. Actually the adjacent cinnabar deposits of 
Suplja Stena were exploited by Vinta people. Unambiguous imports 
are Spondylus bracelets, found at all levels, and obsidian commonest 
in Milojfiid, phase B. The volcanic glass presumably came from North- 
East Hungary down the Tisza. With it came pots such as were being 
made along that river, first Koros types of Starievo pottery, then 
numerous complete Tisza vases. Smail scraps of copper are reported 
from all levels at Vina, but the abundance of stone adzes and other 
tools at all levels and all sites implies that no regular supplies were 
organized. But at PloCnik in phase II was found a hoard of thirteen 
copper adzes and a hammer-axe like Fig. 64, i, together with five stone 
adzes. Many similar Hungarian-Transylvanian types are scattered 

1 Vassits, PK., II, 9, pis. 8-17. 
9* 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

about throughout the Vina province, all presumably imports from 
beyond the Danube. At Kladova on the Save 1 a typical Hungarian 
axe-adze was found with thirty-nine long flint blades such as are proper 
to the Bodrogkeresztur culture of Danubian III. 

Such imports establish good synchronisms with the Danubian 
sequence: Vinia I overlaps with the Koros phase of Starfievo, but its 
later subdivisions (Miloji<5' B and C) are frankly contemporary with 
the Tisza culture. The latter should be Danubian II though direct links 
with the Lengyel culture, typical of that period, are lacking at Vinfia.* 
The succeeding Vinfia II phase is in turn contemporary with, or replaced 
locally by, the Baden and Bodrogkeresztur cultures of Danubian III. 
Correlations with the East Balkan sequence are equally explicit. On 
the Romanian bank of the Lower Danube, Vinfca I remains at Verbi- 
coara are stratified below those of the Salcufa culture while Boian 
pottery is found at Tordos, 8 presumably with the Vina I material 
from the site. Conversely the Vinia II relics from the upper Morava 
valley are hardly distinguishable from those proper to the Salcufa 
culture. In other words, Vina I and II are respectively homotaxial 
with Boian and Salcufa. 4 

Chronological relations with the ^Egean are much harder to deter- 
mine. Relations are plain enough, but not in the form of direct imports 
across the Balkans or local reproductions of ephemeral types. The 
Vina I culture on the Danube is so nearly identical with that of Late 
Neolithic Servia in Macedonia that we may say that this culture, like 
that of Starievo, crossed the frontier between the Mediterranean and 
the Temperate zones intact. Most Vinfca I pot-fabrics and forms recur 
also in Late Neolithic Central Greece, some even at Kum Tepe in the 
Troad. All that does not prove contemporaneity. Indeed, the priority 
of one region over the other would decide several crucial issues in Euro- 
pean and Indo-European prehistory. Now Miloji<5 6 has indeed claimed 
a pedestalled pyxis from his VinCa 62 as an Early Cycladic import, 
and it might well be a copy of an imported marble vase. An unstratified 
fragment from VinCa may again imitate an Early Helladic askoid 
jug,* while a vase from Bubanj II (i.e. Vinfia II) may imitate a meta 

1 Arh. Vest., Ljubljana, V (1954), 229-32. 

* The few sherds of crusted ware reported from Vinda (Vassits, PV. t II, p. 134) 
come mostly from late Vinda II levels. 

9 Rpska, Tortna-Sammlung, pi. CXV, 12-21; cf. St. s. fere., V (1954), 6l P 1 - V. 
4 Miloj&ic*, Chron., p. 64, writing before the Romanian data were available, equated 
Gumelnifa as well as Boian with Vinca I. 

* Chron., 77. 

* Fragmentary "Minyan" and "Early Helladic" vases from Humska Cuka, quoted 
by Garaianin (Arch. Jugoslav., I (1954). *9 f.) and Miloji6 (Chron., 55-6), are not really 
much help. Their ,gean provenance is not at all likely and their relation to the Vinca 
sequence debated. 

92 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

sauce-boat like those from Troy and the Peloponnese. The Vinia II 
handled jugs and tankards from the Morava sites must be related to 
the corresponding Early gean forms, but might be earlier as well as 
later. 

Yugoslavian prehistorians are agreed that the Vinfca culture did 
not develop out of the local Starievo culture, but must be attributed 
to fresh colonists from the south-east. It would be these, then, who 
introduced into temperate Europe the form of sedentary village life, 
the rural economy that supported it, and the ideology that held society 
together as they had been developed in South-Western Asia. On the 
other hand, as pointed out on p. 66, there may be archaeological and 
other grounds for believing that the Late Neolithic culture of Western 
Macedonia and Central Greece, now identified as the Vinia I culture, 
was introduced by an incursion from beyond the Balkans. If no 
development of the Starfcevo culture in that direction can be observed 
on the Morava, it may conceivably be traceable on the Maritza when 
the varied material from Karanovo I and Banyata I have been 
exhaustively studied and published. 

During phase I, the Vina culture exhibited remarkable uniformity 
from Servia on the Haliakmon, or at least from Pavlovce on the Vardar- 
Morava divide, to Tordos on the Maros, from Ostrul Corbului below 
the Iron Gates westward to Sarvas on the Drave. In phase II this 
unity dissolved, as had that of the Starievo. 

North of the Danube the permanent villages of Vina type give 
place to more temporary hamlets, probably based on shifting culti- 
vation. In the Balkans, however, many tells were still occupied and the 
ideology appropriate to settled agriculture everywhere continued to 
find expression in the production of female figurines. But in the NiS 
basin on the upper Morava the culture of Bubanj II is a sort of hybrid 
between Vin6a and Salcufa. About the same time arose on the Bosna 
the remarkable Butmir 1 culture. At the eponymous site, a low tell, 
adzes, figurines, and much of the pottery carry on the Vinfca tradition. 
But the exuberant development of spiral ribbons and mouldings, 
sometimes forming a net pattern as on Early Cydadic vases, and the 
multiplication of tanged flint arrow-heads is quite novel. Finally, at 
Vinfca itself the old culture persists. But in the levels between 4*5 and 
2 '5 below Vassits' datum obsidian is rare, and Miloj&d sees Baden 
influence in the pottery. Between the last two occupation levels were 
found vases belonging to the Middle Bronze Age of the Lower Maros, 
assignable to period V of the Danubian sequence. So unless an inter- 

1 Benac, A., Prthistorijsko naselje Nebo i problem Butmirske Kulture (Univerzav 
Ljubljana), 1952. 

93 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

ruption of habitation has produced an hiatus, Danubian III, IV, and V 
should be contemporary with later phases of the VinCa culture! 

It seems as if, having established a workable adjustment to the 
local environment, the self-sufficing Balkan villagers made no effort 
or at least failed to obtain regular supplies of metal. The widespread 
bronze types that define periods IV and V in the Danubian province 
are missing in the Balkans; a formally neolithic culture persisted. 

THE VESELINOVO CULTURE OF SOUTHERN THRACE 

According to the latest reports of Mikov and Detev, the Starfievo 
culture at Karanovo, 1 Banyata, 2 and Ginova mogila negr Celopec 8 
in the Maritza valley was immediately succeeded by one of very 
different aspect that may be named after another tell, Veselinovo. 4 

The permanent villages were composed of spacious houses comprising 
several rooms. The frame was constructed of upright wooden posts, 
but the walls consisted of clay mixed with straw. Their inhabitants 
were settled farmers who now cultivated emmer in addition to one- 
corn wheat. Perhaps, too, they bred, or at least hunted, horses whose 
bones are reported from Veselinovo. 6 Huntsmen still relied mainly on 
slings, but stone battle-axes may have been made for war. The pottery, 
even more than the architecture, reveals a thorough mastery of wood- 
work. For this adzes were still preferred, but axe-heads were made and 
perforated for mounting. The pottery marks a complete break with the 
Starievo traditions. The normal ware is self-coloured, usually black 
and sometimes burnished. Ornament, employed so profusely before, 
has been abandoned save for applied strips that may terminate in 
spirals. During building some pots were stood on rush mats, the impres- 
sions of which are common on bases. Pithoi, over 50 cm. high, were 
manufactured, but the most distinctive form is a straight-sided or 
pear-shaped mug (Fig. 49) provided with a stout handle prolonged 
upwards to a little pillar. The form is obviously inspired by a wooden 
model. So are bowls or lamps on four stout round legs and triangular 
ones on short flat legs. The latter are often decorated with excised 
chequer patterns, inspired by chip-carving (Fig. 49), and recur, 
similarly decorated, in the homotaxial Boian culture farther north 
and in the Chalcolithic of Ali$ar in Central Anatolia. Lop-sided bottles 

1 Information from the excavator. 
Goditnik Plovdiv, II (1950), 4-30. 

* God. Plovdiv, I (1948), 160-4; Raxkopki i Proutvaniya (Sofia, Naroden Muzei, 
1948). 75-8i. 

* IxbBAI., XIII (1939). 

1 The stratigrapnical position of the horses' bones and of the battle-axes is still 
uncertain. Neither have been yet found in situ at Karanovo. 

94 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

for carrying on the back were made in the Veselinovo level at Banyata 
as at Vina (p. 90). 

A few very conventional figurines come from Karanovo II, but in 
general the Veselinovo levels are conspicuously poor in those ritual 
objects of clay that illustrate the ideology of the Sesklo culture in 
Greece and of later Balkan cultures. Indeed, the Veselinovo culture 
seems to interrupt the Balkan tradition and can hardly be regarded 
as an autochthonous development of the Starfievo complex. Its plain 




FIG. 49. Mug, tripod bowl, and "altar" decorated by excision, Banyata II. 

self-coloured pots with thrust handles in particular look Anatolian. 
If Mikhalic (p. 66) really be parallel to Macedonian Late Neolithic and 
belong to Balkan period II, the Veselinovo culture could be regarded 
as a result of the same movement, more closely adapted to the Balkan 
environment. But none of the distinctive Troadic forms, so conspicuous 
at Mikhalic, has yet been found in situ in a Veselinovo layer. There are 
indeed analogies to Veselinovo handles and to the "chip-carved" lamps 
in Anatolia, but these are confined to Alaca Hoyiik, Biiyiik Giillucek, 1 
and Ali$ar, 2 all on the plateau. Moreover, these are imitations of wooden 
models such as are common all along the southern slopes of the Balkans 
and the Alps, even to Italy and South France. 

Now, at the eponymous site Mikov traced the development of the 
Veselinovo culture into one of Bronze Age type characterized by a 
copper shaft-hole axe, stone battle-axes, bowls with short trumpet 
lugs growing from the inturned rims, side-spouted bowls and jugs, 
and even something like a Minoan teapot. Similar material comes from 
Razkopanitsa, 8 Ezero, and Yunatsite, 4 where it certainly overlies 
Gumelnija deposits and so belongs to Balkan IV. Of course, the strati- 
fication at Banyata and Karanovo may have been misinterpreted, and 

i Belleten, XII (1948)* 475 . 

1 von der Osten, Alishar HUyUk, 1930-32, OIP., XXIX, fig. 93, 2393. 

8 IzvBAL, XVII (1950), 171 ff. 

4 Godihtik Plovdiv, 1927-9 (1940), 55 ff. 

95 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Veselinovo there may have followed Gumelni^a, as Mikov reported in 
1939. Alternatively it could be assumed that the Veselinovo culture, 
like the Macednic Bronze Age cultures, developed at some sites parallel 
to, but unaffected by, the intrusive Gumelni^a settlements, and that 
then in Balkan IV the Veselinovo tradition triumphed over the intru- 
sions from the north. In either case some ceramic forms of the 
developed Veselinovo culture from Ezero trumpet lugs and cord- 
ornament, though belonging to Balkan IV are more reminiscent of 
Mikhalic than anything yet observed in Karanovo II! 

THE BOIAN CULTURE 

North of the main Balkan range, on both sides of the Lower Danube 
and in Transylvania on the Upper Olt, Balkan period II is occupied 
by an assemblage termed, after an island in the Danube, the Boian 
culture. 1 Comsa 2 has recently claimed to distinguish two preparatory 
phases during which settlements were not yet quite stable villages, 
when only one-corn wheat and millet were cultivated, when arrows 
were armed with trapezes and lunates, and when pottery was tempered 
with chaff and decorated only with channelled or incised lines that 
might form spirals and maeanders. His stages, if reliable, would give 
hints at the acculturation of mesolithic survivors, already postulated 
(p. 88), or at their absorption by immigrant farmers. 

But, as found at the base of the tells of Vidra 3 and Tangaru, 4 and at 
the eponymous site, Boian denotes a regular village culture based on 
the cultivation of one-corn and emmer wheats and millet combined 
with stock-breeding, hunting, and fishing. The villages were made up of 
substantial rectangular houses, walled with split tree-trunks and wattle 
and daub and equipped with central fire-places and a very shallow 
porch, thus approximating to the megaron plan. 5 These are said to 
have been preceded by less substantial huts at Tangaru. Weaving is 
attested by clay loom-weights and cruciform whorls, like those used 
on the Koros. The carpenter used adzes of shoe-last form or bevelled 
as in the Sesklo culture of Thessaly. But they might be mounted in 
perforated antler sleeves as at Maglemose. 

The home-made pots are obviously influenced both in form and 
decoration by wooden models. Characteristic are cylindrical peg-footed 
boxes (Fig. 50), big biconical jars, two-storeyed urns, ladles with solid 

Gaul, ASPRB., XVI (1948), s.v. 
St. s. Cerc. t V (i954> 395 # 

Rosetti, Publicat. Muzeului Municip. Bucuresti, I (1934). 
Berciu, Bui. Muzeului Judet. Vlasca T. Antonescu, I (Bucurest, 1935). 
Bui. Muxeu, Jud. Vlasca T. Antonescu, II (1937), &g- 3- 

96 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

handles, and tiny vases with pointed bases that stood in pairs on 
cubical supports. Exceptional are pedestalled bowls of Danubian II 
form and others on human feet. For decorating these products the 
potter employed the wood-carver's technique of excision, but also 
incision, fluting, rustication, and, exceptionally, negative painting in 
graphite, and crusting with colours after the firing; spirals, maeanders, 




FIG. 50. Peg-footed vase, Denev (J). 

and cognate repetition patterns form the basis for a rich all-over 
decoration. 

The Boian farmers were acquainted with copper, but used it only 
for small ornaments and made no attempt to organize regular supplies 
for industrial use. The only other indication of rudimentary trade is 
provided by bracelets of Spondylus shell which were as popular on the 
Lower Danube as in Thessaly and Central Europe. And as there, 
triangular and quadrangular altars were made for domestic cult, but 
figurines, later so common, were very rarely modelled in clay. 

The Boian culture, as thus defined, eventually spread south across 
the Balkans to the Maritsa valley, but has not been isolated sharply 
enough there to be attributed to Balkan II rather than Balkan III. 
Northward, characteristic pottery is found as far as the mouth of the 
Danube and the upper valley of the Oltu, while unmistakable sherds 
are included in the collection from Tordos on the Maros. Here its 
position in the Balkan sequence is well established. Boian underlies 
Gumelni^a in the tells of Tangaru and Vidra. Near Le^i, on the Upper 
Oltu, early Boian pottery is stratified above Starievo ware but below 
Tripolye B x pottery of the Ariud style, while the Boian sherds from 
Tordos should denote a synchronism with Vina I. 

The neolithic elements, save perhaps the emmer wheat, can simply 

97 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

be derived from the antecedent Starfcevo culture. The antler work 
and the carpentry might be a legacy from surviving mesolithic hunter- 
fishers, represented by geometric microliths collected on some Romanian 
sites. These too might have transmitted the overall system of decora- 
tion using the maeander as a repetition pattern; for it was so used in 
late pleistocene times by the mammoth-hunters of Mezin on the 16ss 
lands of South Russia. 

THE GUMELNIJA AND SALCUJA CULTURES 

The Boian culture seems to have developed, though not without 
enrichment from Anatolia, the ^Egean, and the Middle Danube, into 
what Romanian prehistorians term the Gumelnifa culture. 1 This is 
represented at a larger number of sites in Wallachia and Bulgaria 
than the Boian culture owing to the foundation of new villages by an 
expanding population. And it endured a long time; at least three phases 
can be distinguished stratigraphically at Vidra and Tangaru, but the 
Wallachian divisions are inapplicable in Bulgaria. 

The basis of life remained unchanged save that antler harpoons, like 
those of the Vin6a and Tisza sites, were now employed for spearing 
fish. But from the first a tendency to industrial specialization was 
manifested; in several settlements hoards of flint blades and bone 
tools, all fresh as if designed for barter, were uncovered. Later, in 
phase III, metal must have been worked by craftsmen in some sites. 

Trade was also organized to some extent. In phase I at Vidra the 
material for stone implements was brought from Bulgaria and the 
Dobrudja, later from Transylvania and the Banat. Commerce brought 
actual manufactures, new ideas and eventually new technical processes. 
A binocular vase of the Tripolye A style from Moldavia or farther 
north and a vessel ornamented with punctured ribbons, as at Tordos 
and Vina, were brought to Vidra in phase I. From the same horizon 
and from several Bulgarian sites come clay stamps 2 imitating Asiatic 
seals though decorated always with spirals. By phase II, ring-pendants, 
as at Troy, Dimini, and Tordos, were being manufactured in bone, and 
bone -copies of double-spiral headed pins. Actual pins, like Fig. 27, 
save that the spirals are ribbons, not wiry, were found in level III at 
Vidra, as at many sites and Gaborevo in Bulgaria. 8 Finally, even the 
Macedonian-Helladic askoi were copied locally in Vidra III and other 
Wallachian and Thracian sites. 

1 Gaul, BASPR., XVI (1948). 

* One from Qunesti, Moldavia, Dacia, V-VI (1938), 117. 

BRGK.. XXII, Taf . 7. Maps in Gaul, lot. cit. 

98 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

By this time metallurgists, attracted perhaps by the copper lodes 
of Eastern Bulgaria, 1 were actually working in Bulgaria and WaUachia. 
The double-spiral pins they made show the Anatolian models that 
inspired these artisans, but they seem to have relied on hammering, 
presumably through ignorance of casting, 2 and not all their products 
were direct copies of Asiatic forms. A shaft-hole axe and a shaft-hole 
adze were fbund together at Gaborevo (Fig. 51). Combined in a single 




FIG. 51. Copper axe and adze from Gaborevo (J). 

casting, they would yield an axe-adze, and an actual specimen was 
found at Vidra. It may mark the starting-point of the Hungarian series 
of period III. 

Nevertheless, the Gumelni^a economy was never transformed so 
that metal could take the place of stone. Throughout the period tools 
were normally made of stone or bone. But in addition to adzes of Boian 
style, flint adzes were now used; the later specimens have splayed 
blades or polished faces in imitation of the rare copper adzes. Hammer- 
axes and even simple battle-axes, all hollow-bored as on the Middle 
Danube, came into fashion, and antler-axes with square-cut shaft- 
holes. Arrows were tipped with double-ended bone points, more rarely 
with triangular flint heads. Even a bowman's wrist-guard was found 
at Vidra III. Spheroid mace-heads occur sporadically, but the culture 
never assumes a bellicose aspect. 

The pottery carries on the old traditions. The peg-footed box went 
out of fashion and was replaced by the foot-base type (Fig. 52, 6), in 



i O. Davis, Man., XXXVI (1936), 1x9. describes prehistoric mines near Burgas; 
. Gaul, AJA., LXVI, 400. 
PZ., XIX (1928), 131. 

99 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

which the foot is open to the body but closed below, and a socketed 
ladle of Danubian II type was introduced by phase I at Vinfau Excised 
decoration became less popular, but rusticated designs remained 
current, and graphite painting, now positive, became the prevalent 
method of decoration. It was rarely supplemented by the use of white 




FIG. 52. Gumelnita pottery: i, Czernavoda (i); 2, Tel Metchkur (J); 
3-4, Tel Ratchev (j); 5-6, Kodja Dennan (J, i). 

paint applied before firing. The impression of a split reed producing 
the so-called bracket ornament (Fig. 52, 2) was popular south of the 
Danube. 

The relative stagnation in industry is counterbalanced or explained 
by an extravagant elaboration of magico-religious equipment. From 
phase I on, female figurines of clay were as carefully modelled as those 
from the middle strata at Vina (Fig. 53). One from VinCa has shell 

100 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

inlays for the eyes, like Early Sumerian statuettes. A vase from 
Vidra III is a grotesque female figure 42 cm. high; a smaller vae from 
Gaborevo represents a male personage. Both products belong to the 
same circle of ideas as the anthropomorphic vases from Vinta. Sitting 
figures, male or female (Fig. 54, i), were also made. Flat bone figurines 




FIG. 53. Painted clay head, VinCa (f). 

are distinctive in all phases (Fig. 54, 3) (especially II) in Wallachia, 
and also in Bulgaria, where the form was also reproduced in gold leaf. 1 
A much more conventional type is a simple bone prism (Fig. 54, 2); 
at Balbunar in Bulgaria prism figures were found in strata deeper than 
those containing flat figurines, but at Vidra the order of occurrence was 
reversed. 2 Stone idols rather like the Cycladic, were made of local 
Bulgarian marbles, 3 while a torso from Gumelni^a itself replicates the 
Thessalian type of Fig. 31, 4, save that the inserted head is of clay, 
not stone. 4 In addition to female personages, males were being modelled 
in clay from phase II (as in Thessaly C-D), and clay phalli, like the 
Anatolian and Minoan, were used as fertility symbols (Fig. 54/4)- 
Other ritual objects are horns of consecration (phase II), model altars 
and thrones, and by phase III models of houses (Fig. 55), as well as 
models of animals and doves. 

The dead were not objects of any elaborate cult or even tendence. 
At the base of the tell of Balbunar twenty-two contracted skeletons 



* Ixv. Bulg. Arch. Inst. t VIII (i934) 209. 

* But cf. Miloj&d, Chron., 61-2. 

Izv. Bulg. Ins*., Ill (1925), 91-101; XIX, 1-13. 

101 



< Daci*, VII-VIII, 97- 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

(accompanied in two or three cases only by flint adzes) and two trunk- 
less skulls had been buried under the house floors; four contracted 
burials more richly furnished were found at Ruse. But unburied skulls 
and ribs hacked about have been reported from other stations as 






FIG. 54. Clay and bone figurines (i) and clay phallus (}), Bulgaria. 




FiG.[55.[Models of houses, Denev 



evidences of cannibalism. The skulls from Romania were dolichocranial 
and allegedly Mediterranean, but two from Ruse 1 are round. 

In addition to the pins already mentioned and bracelets of Spondylus 
shell, ring-pendants of bone or gold (Vidra II) and conventional bulls' 
heads of gold leaf adorned with punctuations (Vidra III) were worn 
as ornaments or charms. 

The label "Salcufa" is applied to the version of the Gumelni|a culture 
found in Oltenia (i.e. on the north bank of the Lower Danube between 
the confluence with the Oltu and the Iron Gates)* and found also in the 

* IxbBAL, II (1924). i7 ff- I* I*bBAl. t XIX (1952), 182-9, thirty-six further burials 
at relatively high levels -are reported. 

Berciu, Arheologia pveistorica a Oltoniei (Craiova, 1939, 50-68). 

102 



FARMING VILLAGES IN THE BALKANS 

Sofia basin above Veselinovo remains 1 and in Bubanj II on the 
Upper Morava. 8 It is distinguished chiefly by ceramic peculiarities: 
graphite painting and bracket ornament are relatively rare, narrow 
flutings and crusting with colours after firing commoner. Among shapes, 
askoi and handled cups or mugs were particularly popular. The two- 
handled tankards are reminiscent of the Early Macednic, but some are 
ridiculously like the Silesian Jordanova type of Fig. 94.* A distinctive 
Bulgarian form is a lamp in the shape of a goat. 4 Most of the Gumelni^a 
ritual objects, including even prismatic bone figurines, recur in a 
Salcufa context. Finally, a stone "sceptre head" carved to represent 
an animal's snout (Fig. 76)* from Salcuja may be an import from the 
steppes as another came from an ochre grave (cf. p. 158). So no very 
sharp frontiers can be drawn between Gumelni^a and Salcu^a. Even 
on the slopes of Rhodope, Banyata III might be classed as Salcufa 
rather than Gumelni^a. The Salcufa culture presumably developed 
on the same Boian basis as Gumelnifa, but was more strongly influenced 
by the Vinfia culture and the Early Macednic. 

It should be easy to fit Balkan III into the Danubian sequence and 
assign it an absolute date in virtue of the Danubian and ^Bgean 
parallels in Gumelni^a and Salcu^a assemblages. Clay stamps are 
proper to Danubian II, but battle-axes and axe-adzes belong there to 
period III. The double-spiral pins, the askoi, and the Salcuja mugs 
are Early ^Egean types, but of course none are actual imports. If taken 
as denoting synchronisms, they should date the third phase of Gumel- 
nifa and Salcufa not later than 2000 B.C. 

In that case we should have painfully little archaeological material 
to fill the next thousand years. The Lower Danube and Eastern Thrace 
were incorporated, no more than the Western Balkans, in either the 
Danubian or the ^Egean commercial system. The bronze types defining 
Danubian IV and V are, if possible, even worse represented here than 
on the Morava and the Bosna. Half a dozen local copies of Late 
Minoan I horned rapiers have turned up in Bulgaria, but all are strays. 
Apart from urnfields of period VI along the Lower Danube, Bronze 
Age graves are lacking in Bulgaria. The funerary record begins, richly, 
with the Early Iron Age. Material from domestic sites is scarce and 
poor, compared with the rich deposits of Gumelntya and earlier cultures 
from so many sites, and it still looks "neolithic". 

1 E.g. at Krivodol, Rax. i Pro. (1948), 26-57. 
1 MPK. (1940), IV B, 1-2. 
Rax. i Pro. (1948). fig- 43- 

4 At Yasatepe, Plovdiv (God. Plovdiv. I (1948). 4-. fig* 12), and Banyata III (ibid., 
II (X95<>), fig. 30). 

Dacia, VII-VIII, 90 ff.; St. s. &rc., V (1954). 54<>-8. 

103 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Above the Gumelnif a levels at Vidra is a thin deposit of the Glina 
culture, the product of a less sedentary, more pastoral and warlike 
society. Though copper or bronze was worked, metal did not replace 
stone in industry or armament. Painted pottery and female figurines 
have alike disappeared. Homotaxial assemblages are rather more 
substantial in Bulgaria. At Yunatsite, 1 in the middle (II) levels above 
a Gumelnifa layer (I), Vesilnovo handled vases with pillar handles are 
said to be associated with askoi that would have been expected in 
the lower, Gumelnifa, level. Higher up in Yunatsite HI, immediately 
below a Thracian settlement of the seventh century B.C., occur cups 
and tankards with pointed bases. These are found also in late houses at 
Razkopanitsa 8 on the Struma, in Karanovo V, Veselinovo*and a few 
other Bulgarian sites, and in Oltenia 8 and in the Ni basin of the 
Morava. 4 Jugs and cups with oblique mouths, presumably descended 
from Anatolian beaked jugs, are found in Karanovo V, Banyata IV, 
the earlier houses at Razkopanitsa, the highest levels at Ruse. 5 All 
this pottery, self-coloured and rarely decorated, looks at least as 
Anatolian as the Veselinovo ware from Karanovo II. It might be 
derived therefrom if a long Gumelni^a occupation did not intervene 
(cf. p. 95). 

Hence if we placed even the first two phases of Gumelni^a in the 
third millennium, we should get the impression that the large sedentary 
population, attested by the numerous Gumelni^a tells, was either 
decimated or relapsed into shifting cultivation. Be that as it may, one 
conclusion can be drawn. Neolithic societies in the Balkans quite 
quickly adapted the South-West Asiatic rural economy to their inter- 
mediate environment and elaborated or adopted a similar ideology 
appropriate to settled village life. They did not take the next step 
towards civilization to adjust their economy to support a bronze 
industry nor, as far as our evidence goes, did they help to transmit 
northward the technical skills of their neighbours round the ^Egean. 
The Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages of the Lower Danube and the 
Balkans were based entirely on Central European traditions to which 
Greek contributions were superadded only subsequently. 

1 Godiinik Plovdiv (1940), 55-70; Milojdtt, Chron., 50-2. 

1 IxvBAI, XVII (1950), 171-87, with list of other sites on 187. 

1 Berciu, Arheol. preistoricd a Olteniei, figs. 136-8. 

4 Milojltt, Chron., 55, and fig. 2. * IzvBAL, XIX (1952), 121-8. 



104 



CHAPTER VII 

DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

PERIOD I 

IMMEDIATELY north of the Serbian Danube and the Save begin I6ss- 
clad plains and slopes which extend, not without formidable interrup- 
tions, right up to the edge of the moraines in Poland, Germany, and 
Belgium. These Central European I6ss lands had been frequented in 
Aurignacian and Solutrean times by mammoth- and reindeer-hunters, 
but mesolithic successors of such food-gatherers survived only on 
isolated patches of sandy soil and among the post-glacial forests on 
the northern and western fringes. To food-producers, the I6ss lands, 
naturally drained, not too heavily wooded and easy to till, offered a 
domain where they could practise the simplest conceivable sort of 
farming. With unstinted water supplies and seemingly boundless 
territories the peasant was free to shift his hut and break fresh ground 
as soon as his former fields showed signs of exhaustion. And in fact we 
find prevailing throughout Central Europe a system of nomadic culti- 
vation that does look really primitive such as the earliest food- 
producers, undisciplined by environmental limitations, might be 
expected to invent. 

The cultures 1 based upon this economy exhibit considerable uni- 
formity throughout the loss lands. Though the temporary nature of 
the settlements excludes tell formation and the stratigraphical chron- 
ology derived therefrom, the cultural sequence is well established. 
Throughout the area three main periods can be recognized before the 
Early Bronze Age, which coincides with period IV. In period I we can 
distinguish three main groups: the K6r6s culture, already described 
under StarCevo in Chapter VI, the Biikk culture in North-Eastern 
Hungary and Slovakia, and the Danubian I extending from Western 
Hungary to the northern confines of the I6ss. 

DANUBIAN I CULTURE 

The I6ss lands west and north of the Danube were first occupied by a 
neolithic population whose whole culture down to the finest details 

1 For points not otherwise documented see Childe, Danube. 

105 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

remains identical from the Drave to the Baltic and from the Dniester 
to the Meuse. 1 This is the best known culture in Central Europe and 
perhaps the most classically neolithic in the ancient world. Hence the 
term Danubian I may be legitimately applied to it in preference to the 
clumsy and inaccurate terms ''linear pottery" or "spiral-maeander" 
culture. 

The Danubian I economy was based on the cultivation of barley, 
one-corn, and perhaps also emmer 2 wheats, beans, peas, lentils, and 
flax, in small plots tilled with stone hoes. Only small herds of stock 
were kept; bones of sheep, Bezoar goats, oxen, and pigs turn up in settle- 
ments, but animal dung was never incorporated in hut walls, as is 
usual where the farmyards are well stocked. To hunting therDanubians 
made no resort. Danubian I settlement sites are dotted very densely 
all over the loss lands, but none shows evidence of prolonged occupa- 
tion. That is a result of the Danubians' crude agricultural technique, 
one still illustrated by some hoe-cultivators in Africa to-day. They 
cultivated a plot till it would bear no more and then another, and so on 
until they had used up all the land round the hamlet; thereupon they 
shifted bag and baggage to a new site on fresh virgin soil. 

Yet these shifting cultivators lived in commodious and substantial 
rectangular houses 8 from 10 to 40 m. in length and 6 to 7-5 m. wide; 
five rows of posts supported a gabled roof and walls of wattle and daub 
or split saplings (Fig. 56). Four hearths in a row were identified on 
the floor of a house, 33-5 m. long, at Postoloprty in Bohemia, 4 but at 
other sites remains of fireplaces or ovens are curiously missing. Outside 
the long houses irregular pits, once termed pit-dwellings, had been 
dug to get day and subsequently used as rubbish-pits, silos, pig-sties, 
or working-places. Intersections of house plans at many sites prove 
intermittent return to settlements that, nevertheless, did not grow 
into stratified tells. On the assumption that all contemporary houses 
were exactly parallel, Sangmeister infers 6 that Koln-Lindental, 6 the 
best explored Danubian village, had been occupied seven times and 
at its largest comprised twenty-one households. But of course the 

1 For the distribution in Hungary, BRGK. t XXIV-XXV, 30-2; AE. t XLIV, 30 ff.; 
in Poland and East Germany, Przeg A., VIII (1949). 315-17; for the rest of Germany, 
Buttler, Donau; for Bohemia, Stock^, Boh. Prh.; for Belgium, Mari&i, Oud-Belgie, 
13-47; * or Austria, Pittioni, Ostcrreich, 125-40. 

1 Emmer is reported only from the Rhineland and Belgium, bread wheat from 
Poland alone; both might have been borrowed from other populations. Of. BRGK., 
XX (1930), 30. 

BRGK., XXXIII (1943-50), 66-82; AR. t II (1950), 208; VII (1955), 5-10. 
PA. t XLV (1954). 8i-5. 

BRGK., XXXIII, 90-109. 

Buttler and Habery, Das bandkcramische Dorf Kdln-Lindenthal (Rdmisch-Germtni- 
sche Forschungen n) (Berlin, 1936). 

106 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

"household" must have been more like a clan than a pairing family. 
In its latest phase K61n-Lindental was surrounded with a trench and 
palisade. Sangmeister suggests that each occupation might last ten 




FIG. 56. Small Danubian I house from Saxony; the walls marked by a double row of 

posts, yftf. After Sangmeister. 

years and postulates abandonment for regeneration of scrub for fifty 
years. 
The rest of the Danubians' equipment was equally home-made. 





I '/ 

FIG. 57. "Shoe-last celts." L After Seger (f). 

Shoe-last celts of stone (Fig. 57) served, if mounted on knee-shafts, as 
hoe-blades and adzes, or, if perforated, as axes and hammers. Knives, 
sickles, and scrapers were made on flint blades. No whorls nor loom* 

107 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

weights attest a textile industry; the flax found at K6ln-Lindental 
may have been grown for oil. At Statenice in Bohemia, 1 a bone imple- 
ment like the spatulae of the Koros was found. 

Two sorts of pots (Fig. 58) were manufactured hemispherical bowls 
and globular bottles (some flattened for carrying on the back) pro- 




FIG. 58. Danubian I pottery ( 7 8 a ). 

vided with 3, 6, or 9 lugs and clearly derived from gourd models. The 
resemblance is often enhanced by zig-zag incised lines reproducing the 
slings in which gourds are carried. But instead of skeuomorphic patterns 
the peasants often incised on their vases the continuous spiral and 
maeander designs that are regarded as distinctively Danubian. Some 
designs, perhaps late, suggest human figures, double-axes, and other 
objects. And some coarse vases were just rusticated as on the Koros. 
Lugs may be modelled to resemble animals' heads as on the Vardar 
and the Morava, while the incised double-axe patterns may be inspired 
from Crete or North Syria, 2 but probably belong to Danubian II. 

In principle this economy was essentially self-sufficing. But in 
practice materials had to be carefully selected and often transported 
over long distances. The green schist, used for adzes at Koln-Lindental, 
must have been brought 60 or 70 miles from the Hunsriick or the 
Taunus; Niedermendig lava from near Mayen was used for querns 
in Belgium. 8 Such partiality for selected materials, without destroying 
self-sufficiency, encouraged intercourse between distinct communities. 
In fact, a few vases, made from local clays in the Main valley, were 
transported to Koln-Lindental, 50 miles away. Moreover, in Moravia, 
Bohemia, Thuringia, and even the Rhine valley ornaments made from 



1 Stock?, Boh. Pr4k., 62. 

IPEK. t XI (1936-37). 16 .; PA. t XL (1934-35), 3- 

108 



8 Buttler, Donau. t 32. 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

the Mediterranean Spondylus shell were worn as in Thessaly and on 
the Middle Danube; they must have been handed on by some sort of 
inter-tribal exchange from the ^Egean or the Adriatic! So too African 
ivory reached Flamborn near Worms. 1 The interchange of goods, thus 
disclosed, developed into something like regular trade. Particularly on 
the borders of the Danubian province in Brandenburg, Holstein, and 
West Poland, hoards 2 of shoe-last adzes turn up. Like the later hoards 
of bronzes, these must be the stocks of specialized travelling merchants. 
Individuals must already have been at least supplementing their 
livelihood by satisfying the Danubians' prejudices in favour of selected 
materials and extending their activities to other still mesolithic tribes. 
Such were surely the forerunners of the bronze-merchants described 
on p. 128. And workshop debris in villages may indicate even industrial 
specialization within a community. 

The Danubians were a peaceful folk. The only weapons found in 
their settlements are disc-shaped mace-heads, such as had been used 
by the predynastic Egyptians, and occasional flint arrow-heads. They 
were democratic and perhaps even communistic; there are no hints of 
chiefs concentrating the communities' wealth. Nor did deities fulfil 
that function. As expressions of ideology clay figurines or schematic 
representations of the human form are rare, confined to peripheral 
areas, and probably late enough to be attributed to the south-eastern 
influence that is conspicuous in Danubian II. Nothing like the ritual 
paraphernalia, distinctive of South- West Asian and Balkan cultures, 
has survived. Nor is an elaborate ancestor cult illustrated by many 
ceremonial burials. 3 Cemeteries are practically confined to the Rhine 
valley. There the dead were generally interred in the contracted posi- 
tion, more rarely cremated. The few skulls examined are all dolicho- 
cranial and in a general way Mediterranean. One from an Alsatian 
cemetery 4 had been trephined. 

The culture just described had reached Germany by 4000 B.C. 6 and 
lasted a long time; on Sangmeister's estimate the seven settlements at 
Koln-Lindental occupy between them 430 years. It can hardly have 
appeared simultaneously at all points within the vast area eventually 
colonized. But save in ceramic decoration, no development can be 
recognized. In the Rhineland and Belgium, styles in which the spirals 
and maeanders have disintegrated and simple lines are combined with 
punctuations, comb-imprints, and cord-impressions have been shown 
stratigraphically to be late. So too the "music note" style in which 

1 Buttler, Donau., 36; Marburger Studien, I, 27-9. 
* /ST., XXIII (1935), 73; Bl.f. d. Vorg., VII, 51; Buttler, D<mau. t 21 
., VIII, 



Listed in AR., VIII, 697 ff. Germania, XXVI (1942). 

* Radio-carbon date, Schachermeyr, Die Alt. Kulturen Griechenlands, 98. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

lines are supplemented by pits, like breves, is often regarded as late, 
but Soudsky 1 has challenged this assumption. The densest concentra- 
tion of sites with simple linear decoration still seems to lie on the 
Upper Elbe and the Upper Rhine, but these just happen to be the best 
explored parts of the loss lands. Only since 1950 has Danubian I 
pottery of the music-note style been identified on the Dniestr and 
the Sereth, 1 but that is no proof that these outposts were really planted 
in the last areas to be colonized! 

But it is significant that the main concentrations do lie north of the 
Bakony and the Carpathians, i.e. north of the ecological limit beyond 
which gourds will not harden. If First Danubian pots be really substi- 
tutes for gourd vessels, they may have been made by "^receramic 
farmers, spreading from the southern cradle of cereals, when they had 
reached the areas where their traditional receptacles were no longer 
available. Such immigrants, bringing the materials and technique 
of farming, would then have reached the Danube basin before the 
emergence there of the Starfcevo culture. Alternatively, Danubian I 
might be a secondary neolithic culture, created by autochthonous 
hunter-fishers who would have learned farming and pot-making from 
the StarCevo immigrants. As there are at present no evidence for a 
mesolithic population on the Danubian loss lands and mesolithic sur- 
vivals appear only late in Danubian industry, 8 the former hypothesis 
is the more plausible. The Danubian penchant for Spondylus shells is a 
positive argument for a southern origin, but the bone spatula from 
Statenice is strong evidence for some sort of connection with Starievo. 

THE BUKK CULTURE 

In Eastern Slovakia and North-East Hungary the Biikk culture 4 may 
be regarded as a parallel to Danubian I in the latter part of period I, 
though it is more nearly contemporary with Vina I than with Starfievo. 
In the Biikk economy, in contrast to the First Danubian, hunting and 
fishing (with hook-and-line as well as with nets) were as important as 
farming. No houses have been identified, but caves were used for 
habitations according to Hillebrandt 5 mainly as winter shelters. 
Hollow-bored stone axes and perforated antler mattocks were used as 
well as the usual Danubian adzes. The Biikkians controlled the obsidian 

> PA., XLV. (1954). 81 & 

* SA.. XX, 100; KSU. t IV (i955). 142-5 (Nezviska, stratified below Tripolye Bi); 
St. s. fere.. II (1951)* 54- 

9 Anihropotdikum, III (Praha, 1953), 207-222. 

* Tompa, Arch. Hi***., V-VT (1929), 9-38; BRGK., XXIV-XXV, 32-9; Slav. Dej. t 58. 

* AE., XUV (1930). 301; cf., AE. (1943), 22. 

HO 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

deposits of the Hegyalya near Tokaj and made from the volcanic glass 
knives and scrapers, but no bifacially worked arrow-heads. 

The pottery which defines the culture is of high quality, usually 
grey. The commonest form is a hemispherical bowl, like the First 
Danubian, and decorated, like the latter, with spirals and maeanders 
in an all-over style but enriched with fine embroideries. Besides such 
Danubian forms, bowls with tubular spouts and fruit stands were 
made. Besides grey ware, a kiln-fired buff fabric was manufactured 
and decorated with thin lines of warm black paint forming patterns 
in the Biikk style. In both fabrics the designs include human 
figures, 1 and some fruitstands have human legs as at Thermi. Otherwise 
figurines are missing as in Danubian I. 

The inclusion of the Biikk culture in period I may be justified by 
a grave at Nagytet&iy (Pest) furnished with early Biikk and late 
Danubian I vases and by observations at sites where Biikk pottery 
lay in the same stratum as Danubian I or below that yielding Tisza 
sherds of period II. 2 But elsewhere Biikk and Tisza remains are con- 
temporary 3 and the culture must largely belong to period II. The ritual 
anthropomorphic vases and day copies of cylinder seals 4 attributed 
to the Biikkian may be due to Vinfia I-Tisza influence. The technique 
of painting could, however, be derived from Starievo, though fruit- 
stands are normally Danubian II. 



PERIOD II 
THE TISZA CULTURE 

On the loss lands east of the Tisza, occupied in period I by the K6r6s 
and Vina or Biikk cultures, the Tisza culture of period II had developed 
a rural economy better suited to regular agriculture and directed par- 
ticularly to exploiting the fish abounding in the rivers and the game 
haunting their banks. The settlements do not form tells, but the houses 
were superior to those of the Koros folk. At the village of K6k6ny- 
domb, 6 the dwellings rectangular houses measuring up to 7-2 m. by 
3-4 m., entered through the long side and decorated with painted clay 
models of bulls' heads were strung out in a single row along the river 
bank. The fisherman now employed harpoons of antler (Fig. 47) (as at 
Vinfia) and double or triple rings of bone in addition to nets. 6 Stock- 

Arck. Hung.. V-VI, pis. XVIII, 5, XXIV, 13. 

AR., VIII, 637; AE. t XLIX, 86 and 70. 

Folya Arch., Ill (IQ4 1 ). 1-271 VII (1955). 42-4. 

Ibid., pi. V, 1-3. 

Banner, MTK., 31-8; Dole., VI (1930). 50-150; AE. (1943), 22. 

Dolg., VI, pis. Ill, VI; BRGK., XXIV-XXV, 43. 

Ill 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

breeding and agriculture still provided the basis of life. Grain was 
stored in large day jars or rectangular vessels, 70 cm. by 50 cm. by 
65 cm. in volume and exactly like the wooden bins used locally to-day. 1 

The general economy remained neolithic. The materials for axes 
were drawn from the Banat, Transylvania, and Northern Hungary, 
but obsidian was no longer imported. Shells were still imported from 
southern seas and typical vases were exported to VinSa and Silesia 
(p. 91), but clay "stamp seals" were no longer used. 

Pots, including cylindrical jars and large oval bowls, suitable for 
cooking fish in, may be provided with indented lugs like the Early 
Macednic, or short, tubular spouts, sometimes fitted with strainers. 
They are decorated with coarse incisions in a thick slip? sometimes 
supplemented by crusting with red or yellow colours after firing. The 
designs are grouped in vertical panels in contrast to the Danubian 
all-over style and are often derived from basketry. 2 The motives include 
concentric circles and mseanders, conventionalized faces and hut 
roofs. 

Clay figurines were no longer manufactured, but a cognate ideology 
may be implied by large vases in human form, 8 as at Vinfia, Vidra, and 
Tsani. Clay rattles in animal form may have been used in ritual. The 
dead were ceremonially buried flexed in small cemeteries. Shell or 
marble buttons with shanks were worn as brow-ornaments. 

In the Tisza culture elements from Biikk and Vina have perhaps 
been blended. The rural economy could be derived from that of Vina, 
although less sedentary. The ideology expressed in anthropomorphic 
vases and metopic composition, could likewise be derived from the 
south-east. Now Schachermeyr 4 has enumerated thirty-five motives, 
some of them significantly improbable, common to Tisza and Dimini 
ceramic decoration, and a Late Neolithic vase from Olynthus 6 might 
pass for an actual Tisza product. If the Dimini culture must be brought 
from north of the Balkans into Greece, the Tisza culture has the best 
claim to its parentage. But then the relative ages of the Tisza and 
Vinia cultures in terms of the JEgean sequence would need revision. 

THE LENGYEL CULTURES 

On the I6ss lands, colonized in period I by First Danubian peasants, 
the remarkable cultural uniformity thus created dissolved in period II 
AE., XLV (1931), 253. 

CsaJog, FA., IIMV (1941), i ff.; VII (1955). 37-4L 
FA. t VII, 27-36; Germania, XXIII (i939), 145 .; Dalg. t XIX, 130. 
MAGW. t LXXXIII (1953-54), 21-34. 

Mylonas, Excavations at Otynthos (Johns Hopkins University, Studies in Archeology, 
6) (199), fig- 39- 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

to give place to a multiplicity of distinct regional cultures as a result 
of extraneous influences as well as mere divergent development. From 
the Drave to the Upper Danube, in Austria, the Upper Elbe in 
Bohemia, and the Upper Vistula, 1 the period witnessed the spread of 
the South-West Asian-Balkan ideology reflected in female figurines, 
model houses, clay stamps, and a taste for coloured vases, and of a 
rural economy in which cultivation was better balanced by stock- 
breeding though it did not yet allow settlement in one spot long enough 
for tell formation. The result was not a single culture even in this 
limited region, but several related cultural facies. As none exhibits a 
well-defined spatial distribution, all may still be grouped together and 
designated by the name given to the first one recognized, the Lengyel 
culture. 2 

Some settlements at least were fortified. At Hlubok6 MaSovky in 
Southern Moravia an area of some 15 acres (60,000 sq. m.) was enclosed 
by a flat-bottomed fosse supplemented by a stockade, the gate being 
flanked by stout projecting walls as at Troy. 8 So near Zlota on the 
Vistula 4 two adjacent settlements, possibly of a later stage, were 
surrounded by entrenchments. Small rectangular houses, probably 
divided into two rooms that are best known outside the Lengyel 
province at Ariu$d in Transylvania and in Rossen and Michelsberg 
settlements round the Alps, replaced the earlier long communal houses. 
From within our area we have only clay models. 

Commerce, as in Danubian I, is most clearly attested by the importa- 
tion from the south of Spondylus and Tridacna shells. North Hun- 
garian obsidian was distributed all over the Middle Danube basin and 
northward to Moravia, Western Galicia, Silesia, and Bohemia, but in 
the northern districts it is found only in the earliest settlements, as 
if stocks had been brought by the colonists but not subsequently 
replenished by trade. Cubical blocks of clay, perforated at the corners, 
in which one, or exceptionally two, cups have been hollowed out 5 
(Fig. 59) have been claimed as copies of Early Minoan block vases 
of stone. Clay imitations of stamp seals are attributed to the later 
phase of the period in Moravia, and by that time copper trinkets began 
to be distributed in Moravia and Silesia (Fig. 60). 

1 Buttler, Donau., 38-43; Arch. Hung., XXIII (1939); Slovenskl Dejiny, 58-61; 
Obxor, VIII (1929), 1-53; XIV (1950), 163-72; Prx*g.A. t VIII (1949), 318-21; B6hm, 
Kronika, 136-49; Pittioni, Osterreich, 143-67. 

* Tompa'B extension to this of the name "Tisza" (BRGK. t XXIV-XXV, 70) has 
caused confusion with the quite different assemblage just described; cf., Milojcic, 
Chron., 80, and Csalog, FA. t VII, 24-6. 

AR. t II (1950). 5-6; HI, 136-9. 

* WA. t XIX (1953), 7-53- 

1 Schranil, Bdhmtn, 50; cf . p. 19 here. 

113 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Besides shoe-last adzes, triangular greenstone axes (Fig. 60), 
hollow-bored axe-hammers and antler axes were employed. A few 
spheroid mace-heads and flint arrow-heads and, in Bohemia, stone 




FIG. 59. Clay block vase, Strelide I, Moravia (f). 

arrow-straighteners, 1 may point to warlike behaviour. Whorls and 
loom-weights attest a textile industry. 

Characteristic pot forms are hollow-pedestalled bowls (Fig. 61, i), 
ladles with socketed handles (Fig. 61, 2), biconical jars (Fig. 61, 3), 
and variants on the older bottles. Bowls are flat-bottomed and often 






FIG. 60. Copper trinkets (), and triangular axe (f), Jordanova. After Seger. 

carinated, but inturned rims do not occur till the end of the period. 
Handles remain unknown. The most characteristic and nearly universal 
ware is black-polished, as in the Vinca and Larisa cultures. It may 
be decorated with crusted patterns in red, white, and yellow colours 
applied after firing, that may be supplemented by incised lines or low 
round bosses (Fig. 61, 3, 4). Buff and red wares also occur, and in 
Moravia 2 characterize a second phase of the culture. There the red 



1 PA., XXXIX (1933), 50-3. 



114 



8 Vildomec in Obzor, VIII, 1-43. 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

ware may be burnished and ornamented with designs in white paint 
or covered with a white slip on which the design is painted in red, as in 
Middle Neolithic Thessalian or Tripolye B wares. In the latest Moravian 
phase, coloured decoration was abandoned altogether. While crusted 
spirals were everywhere employed and in Hungary composed in the 
old Danubian style (Fig. 61, i), basketry patterns, breaking up the 
surface into panels as in the Tisza style, were even more popular. 




FIG. 61. Danubian II pottery, Lengyel. i, 3, 4 (J); 2 (J). 

A South- West Asian ideology found expression in female figurines, 
models of animals and doves, and zoomorphic vases. But in Hungary 
regular cemeteries of well-furnished graves containing flexed skeletons 
attest already ancestor tendence; at Zengovarkony near Pecs, seventy- 
eight graves (including six double burials of male and female ? sati) 
divided between eleven groups (? lineages) had been uncovered by 
I939. 1 Farther north Danubian II burials are rare; at one Moravian 
site twelve skeletons were found buried together in a shaft grave, 2 at 
others cremations, or evidence for cannibalism 8 , are reported. 

The Lengyel culture could most readily be explained as a result of 
the further extension of the south-eastern influence that induced the 
Vinca culture on the Danube. But if such influence be denied, Lengyel 
might claim a parental relation to Vin6a and so to Larisa! 

Comparisons with the ^Egean and Anatolia offer ambiguous possi- 
bilities for dating period II. The resemblances of crusted ware to that 



1 Arch. Hung.. XXIII (1939). 
8 AR., VIII, 1956, 773-4. 



Obzor, XIV (1950), 335. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

of phase C in Thessaly, of the indented lugs on the Tisza to Early 
Macedonian* and of clay stamps and block vases to Early Minoan 
forms, suggest a date round about 2500 B.C. for the period's beginning. 
On the other hand, pedestalled bowls, very much of Danubian II form, 
may go back to the fourth millennium in the chalcolithic of Ali$ar, at 
Kum Tepe and in "neolithic" Crete; the red on white painted sherds 
from Moravia recall equally ancient Thessalian fabrics. On this evi- 
dence 3000-2600 would seem just as plausible as 2500-2200 as the 
historical dates of period II. 

DANUBIAN I SURVIVALS IN THE NORTH * 

The expansion of Danubian II farmers, like that of their precursors 
in Danubian I, was a slow process. Indeed, it had begun while Danubian 
I folk were still spreading down the Oder, the Elbe, and the Rhine 
valleys. Since period II begins with the emergence of the Danubian II 
and Tisza cultures in the Middle Danube basin, we may say that 
Danubian I cultures survived in the north into period II. In fact they 
outlasted even that period in remote places. Moreover, the Danubian I 
expansion did not take place in vacuo. In the hill countries between the 
Danube and the Rhine and in Thuringia, along the rivers of the North 
European plain and on the sand-dunes of Silesia and Poland, still 
lived scattered groups of Tardenoisian, Maglemosian, and Swiderian 
food-gatherers. Some of these were absorbed into Danubian com- 
munities or copied the Danubians* way of life. Thus arose various 
cultural groups, 1 essentially Danubian in economy and equipment, 
but diverging from the norm in details, particularly in ceramic art. 
Hence the groups are defined by their pottery. And most flourished 
in period III too. 

(i) Stroke-ornamented ware (Stichbandkeramik) (Fig. 62, i) distin- 
guishes a group which arose probably in Bohemia and spread thence 
back into Moravia, and into Bavaria, Central Germany, and Western 
Poland in the wake of the Danubian I groups, and under pressure from 
the same economic forces. Economically it differs from Danubian I 
only in a tendency to supplement farming by hunting, for which 
transverse arrow-heads 1 of Tardenoisian ancestry were employed. 
The arrow-shafts were straightened on grooved stones, as in the 
Danubian II culture and farther east. 8 The pots were still round- 
bottomed, but were decorated exclusively with skeuomorphic zig-zag 
patterns composed of ribbons executed by a series of distinct jabs 

Battier, Donau., 29, 45; Anthropoirfkum, III, (1953), 207; IV, 411. 
E.g. at Lobec, Bohemia, AR., Ill, 130. PA., XXXIX (1933). 50-3- 

116 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

instead of continuous lines. In Bohemia, Bavaria, and Central Germany 
the dead were cremated. 1 In Moravia and Poland stroke-ornamented 
ware occurs in late Danubian II settlements, and at Gleinitz in Silesia 
an imported Tisza vase was found with stroke-ornamented ware, 2 




FIG. 62. Stroke-ornamented vases, Bohemia (\, J); ROssen vases, Central 

Germany (fa). 

while at Vochov near Plzen a figurine of Danubian II type turned up 
in a similar context. 8 Hence the culture thus defined at least lasts into 
period II. 

(2) The Rossen group arose in Western Bohemia and Saxo-Thuringia 
through the adoption by Forest-folk of a fundamentally Danubian 
equipment and economy. 4 They spread down the Main and then up the 
Rhine to Switzerland, and into France through the Belfort gap. 5 
Though the Danubian agricultural economy had been taken over 

1 AR. t VIII (1956), 710-18. 

1 Altschles., Ill (1931), 153; Buttler, Donau., 60. 

8 Obxor, XIV (1950), 330. 

4 * The theory of its derivation from "the North- West German Megalith Culture", mice 
dominant in Germany, was refuted by Stocktf, Bok. Pr4h., 161, and more conclusively 
by Engel, Mannus, XXXII (1940), 57-81. 

6 See Buttler, Donau., 40 ff., and Kimmig, Bad, Fb. (1948-50). 47-62. 

7 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

entire, hunting retained much of the importance that it had enjoyed 
in the ancestral Forest culture. The increased competition for land, 
due to the rise of this and other new groups of cultivators, may by 
now have led to war. The Rossen people were the first in the Rhine 
valley to fortify their settlements, while weapons transverse and 
hollow-based arrow-heads, disc-shaped mace-heads and the old per- 
forated antler-axes of the Forest-folk were relatively common. The 
Rossen folk lived in rectangular houses with vertical walls and gabled 
roofs supported by three rows of earth-fast posts, 1 and they also 
erected rectangular granaries. But their settlements were no more 
permanent than those of the preceding groups. Their pots are hemi- 
spherical or globular in profile, but are often provided with stand-rings 
and are decorated with rectilinear patterns imitating basketry and 
executed in stab-and-drag technique (Fig. 62, 2). Exceptional forms 
are quadrilobate dishes with analogues in the Balkans and North Italy 
and a small clay barrel with closed ends and an opening in the side, 
a form well-represented in Troy I. 1 

As ornaments the Rossen folk wore marble bracelets, disc-beads 
of shell, bored tusks and deers' teeth and marble buttons identical 
with those from Lengyel. The dead were buried contracted in ceme- 
teries. One skull from Alsace had been trepanned. 8 

The buttons of Danubian II type from the graves at Rossen in 
Central Germany prove that the group even there belongs to period II, 
while on the Isar, in Alsace, and in the Wetterau, Rossen house- 
foundations have disturbed the ruins of those left by later Danubian I 
peasants. On the other hand, on the Goldberg, in Wurttemburg, the 
Rossen village was succeeded by a settlement of the Western Michels- 
berg culture that generally belongs to period III. Hence R6ssen 
flourished in period II. 4 

The Danubian I peasants themselves persisted, wandering about 
during period II and in the Rhine basin even into period III, preserving 
their culture intact, but not unaffected by the example of their neigh- 
bours and rivals. Plastic suggestions of a human face from K6ln- 
Lindental, in the manner of Trojan face-urns, may belong to this 
phase. 5 Even in Central Germany the later Danubian I pottery is 
associated with the stroke-ornamented ware of period II. Such late 
Danubian I people fortified K6ln-Lindental. Pressure on the land was 

1 Gcrmania, XX (1936), 229-34; 8ee Fig. 137 here. 

1 Battler, Donau., 47, pis. 10, 12; 12, i; cf. Blegen, Troy, I, form D 28. The Rftssen 
and Troadic "barrels" could both be derived from geomorphic vases of the Lengyel 
culture like Stock?, Boh. Prth., pi. LIX, n, or WPZ. t XXVIII (1941), 39. 

1 Germania, XXVI (1942), 177-81. 

4 Buttler, Donau. t 62. * Buttler, Donau. t 31. 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

becoming serious. In addition to the natural increase of the population 
and the competitive groups resulting from the conversion of food- 
gatherers into cultivators, new groups were spreading from the south- 
east and from the west. 

PERIOD III 

By period III the natural growth of peasant populations, the con- 
version to food-production of food-gathering communities, and immi- 
grations of fresh tribes from beyond the loss lands had produced a 
pressure upon the soil that entailed adjustments in everyday life. 
Inferior lands above the loss were exploited; hunting and pastoralism 
became more important economically, and in fact in the temperate 
zone they would be more productive than hoe-agriculture. Settlements 
were often planted on hilltops as well as in the valleys, and were fre- 
quently fortified. 1 Competition for land assumed a bellicose character, 
and weapons such as battle-axes became specialized for warfare. The 
consequent preponderance of the male members in the communities 
may account for the general disappearance of female figurines. Part 
of the new surplus population may have sought an outlet in industry 
and trade; imported substances such as Baltic amber, Galician flint 
and copper begin to be distributed more regularly than heretofore. 
Warriors would appreciate more readily than cultivators the superiority 
of metal, and chiefs may already have been concentrating surplus 
wealth to make the demand for metal effective. Its satisfaction was 
none the less dependent on the diffusion of the requisite technical 
knowledge, whether by immigrant prospectors or captives, from the 
south-east. 

A general picture of the period in the loss lands would present a 
bewildering variety of small conflicting groups. Some of these are 
admittedly intruders and can be better described elsewhere. From the 
West, Michelsberg folk (p. 291) spread as far as Upper Austria, Bohemia, 
and Central Germany, while Beaker-folk (p. 223) reached the Danube 
near Buda-Pest and spread across Germany and Czechoslovakia as far 
as the Vistula. From the Pontic-North European plain warriors using 
battle-axes and cord-ornamented pottery spread as far as Bavaria, 
Bohemia, and Moravia, and even into the Middle Danube basin. In 
other groups there is an injection of types (collared flasks, globular 
amphorae, and so on) which we shall find in Chapter X to be genuinely 
Northern. But these hardly suffice to demonstrate a large-scale "Nordic" 
invasion of the Danubian province. We shall describe here only certain 

1 E.g. Homolka in Bohemia, Proc. Am. Phil. Soc., LXXI (1932), 357-9 2 - 

119 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

cultures which remain fundamentally Danubian even though they be 
found on fortified hilltops or in caves. 

Bodrogkeresztur designates the culture into which the Lengyel 
culture developed through a Tiszapolgdr stage in North-East Hungary 
and beyond the Tisza, whence it spread north to Silesia. 1 It is known 
almost exclusively from cemeteries larger than those of previous 
periods. That at the patent station comprised at least fifty graves, at 
Jaszladdny forty, at Pusztaistvdnh&za thirty-two, 2 while at Tiszapolgdr- 




FIG. 63. Copper battle-axes, Hungary (J). 

Basatanya 158 graves have been excavated out of an estimated total 
of 225.* The size of the cemeteries may be due as much to prolonged 
occupation of the same village as to density of population. At Basatanya, 
Kutzian could distinguish two consecutive phases, both transitional, 
between Lengyel and mature Bodrogkeresztur. Double graves, in 
which one body had been buried with rich furniture, the other with 
none, suggest a division of society into classes. 

Trade now brought to the Hungarian plain flint from Galicia, gold 
and copper from Transylvania. In the cemeteries copper is represented 
by several quadrangular awls, three or four rhomboid knife-daggers 
without midribs or rivet holes, a flat adze, five axe-adzes and at least 
one battle-axe. 4 Several similar battle-axes (Fig. 63) have been found 

1 Nbl.f. d. V., XV (1939), 4-i7. 

Arch. Hung., IV; AE., XLI (1927), 50-7; BRGK. t XXIV-XXV, 53. 
1 Report by Kutzian to the "Conference Archdologique de I'Acad&nie hongroise des 
Sciences" (Buda-Pest, 1955); cf. AE. (1946-48), 42-62. 
4 PZ., XXII, m; AE. (1944-45), i * 

120 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

stray and disclose the translation into metal of antler axes that in 
turn became the model for stone weapons (p. 159). Adzes and axe- 
adzes are very common stray and sometimes occur in hoards. 1 Evi- 
dently copper was being systematically extracted in the Carpathian 
basin. Roska 2 long ago argued that axe-adzes served as miners' tools. 
Driehaus 8 has now shown that the simplest types, like Fig. 64, i and 
5, are virtually confined to metalliferous Transylvania while the classic 
type of Fig. 64, 6, radiates thence to the Balkans, Bavaria, Silesia, 






FIG. 64. Copper axe-adzes and axes, Hungary (J). 

and the Ukraine. They must have been traded; and the hoards, though 
rare, suggest an incipient organization on the lines established by 
period IV. The metal employed was mainly native copper, of which 
there must once have been really large deposits. It was undoubtedly 
melted, but none of the products shows unambiguous evidence of 
having been shaped by casting in a mould, 4 but all traces would be 
removed by the necessary hammering. 

1 Doig. t XIX (1943). 135-9- 

1 Dacia, III-IV, 352-55; cf. Kfitleminyek, Cluj, II (1942), 15 * 

s Arckaologia Geographic*, III (1952), x~5- 

Inst. Arch, AR., VII (1951), 44~5* 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



Copper did not oust stone tools. Graves contain long knives on flint 
blades, polished stone adzes, hollow-bored celts and, in a late phase, 
triangular flint or obsidian arrow-heads and a mace embellished with 
four projecting knobs (Fig. 65). 

Technically Bodrogkeresztur pottery carries on the 
late Lengyel tradition and in the Tiszapolgdr phase 
at least vessels on high hollow pedestals though 
more often bowls as in Tripolye than fruitstandfc were 
still popular. But bowls' rims are now inverted, never 
expanding. Distinctive of mature Bodrogkeresztur are 
the so-called milk-jugs (Fig. 66, 2.) 1 Handled tankards 
and pyxides, very like Early ^Egean ones/occur spo- 
radically. Apart from warts and dimples, ornament 
is not common. Some vases, however, are decorated 
with cross-hatched ribbons forming maeander patterns 
even more like those of Dimini than the cognate Tisza designs. Late 
vases decorated with plastic ribs foreshadow the Bronze Age usage. 




FIG. 65. 

Knobbed mace- 
head from Maros 
Decse (J). 




I 2 

FIG. 66. Bodrogkeresztur pyxis and milk- jug. After Tompa (i). 

Girdles of disc-beads of shell together with stray copper or gold 
trinkets were worn as ornaments. 
Obviously the Bodrogkeresztur population was descended from the 

1 What looks like a typical milk-jug was found at Maltepe near Sivas in northern 
Anatolia, BelUten, XI (i937) $59 ff. 

122 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

Lengyel group. But had mining and metallurgy been initiated by 
prospectors from the ^Egean or the Caucasus? No doubt axe-adzes of 
different shapes were used by Early ^Egean peoples and were actually 
manufactured by casting in clay moulds at Tepe Hissar in Northern 
Iran. Prospectors should have introduced the techniques of casting 
and smelting, but the Transylvanian products seem made of native 
copper. The forms could be regarded as translations into this "superior 
stone" of Danubian II adzes, hammer-axes and battle-axes of ordinary 
stone or antler. Native copper-working could perfectly well have 
originated in such a metalliferous region. Indeed, the ^Egean axe-adzes 
could theoretically be derived from Transylvania while Heine-Geldern 1 
has invoked axe-adzes like Fig. 80, to mark the Aryans' route to 
India. In other words the ^Egean and Asiatic parallels to Bodiog- 
keresztur metal types might just as well give termini ante, as 
termini post, quos. Still, independent invention of casting is hard to 
admit. 

The Jordanova culture of Bohemia 2 and Silesia 8 can be regarded as 
a parallel local development of the Lengyel tradition. It too is best 
known from graves fifty-seven from the eponymous site (once called 
Jordansmiihl) in Silesia and thirty-eight at Brze<5 Kujawski on the 
middle Vistula. 4 Metal was here used solely for ornaments spectacle 
spirals (Fig. 60, i), cylindrical ribbon armlets, and small discs bearing 
embossed patterns. Antler axes, deposited in men's graves at Brze<5 
Kujawski, illustrate the weapons, copper translations of which were 
current south of the Carpathians. The distinctive pot-forms are mugs 
with one or two band handles (Fig. 94) and bowls, again with inverted 
rims. Bracelets were made of Spondylus shell or of engraved bone, 
while disc beads of shell were strung together as girdles or necklaces. 
As in the Bodrogkeresztur culture, female figurines are no more in 
evidence. The old ideology has been changed. That may reflect a change 
from a matrilineal to a patrilineal organization of society. 

The copper spectacle spirals might have been inspired by Early 
jEgean gold ones like those of Fig. 22. If so, they would constitute a 
substantial argument for Oriental participation in the foundation of 
the Danubian III copper industry. Otherwise there are no more indi- 
cations of influence from that quarter in Jordanova than in Bodrog- 
keresztur. Such can, however, be detected in the largely contemporary 
Baden culture. 

1 /. Indian Oriental Soc., IV (1936), x-3 
1 Obxor, XIV (1950), 163-257. 
1 Buttler, Donau., 43. 

4 WA. t XV (1938), 1-105; the graves have disturbed foundations of Danubian I 
long houses. 

123 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



THE TRANSITIONAL BADEN-PCEL CULTURE 

West and north of the Danube between Buda-Pest and Vienna emerged 
a culture complex variously designated Baden, 1 Ossarn,* or P6cel 8 
after Austrian and Hungarian sites or "channel" 4 or "radially 6 orna- 
mented" after ceramic features. Its domain extends northward through 
Moravia to the Upper Elbe and the Upper Vistula and eastward across 
the Tisza and the Maros. Its regional manifestations in architecture 
and burial rites as well as pottery differ so widely as to raise doubts 
whether the discrepancies be due to the partial assimilation of distinct 
traditions or local divergences of a single tradition. Much of the data 
comes from isolated burials or rubbish pits; only Ossarn In Austria, 
Vuedol on the Drave, some sites near the Maros, and two large ceme- 
teries near Buda-Pest have been systematically explored on an adequate 
scale. 

While one-corn and emmer wheats 2 were regularly cultivated (very 
likely with the plough), stock-breeding combined with hunting made 
major contributions to the food-supply. Ritual burials of cattle and 
deer underline the importance of these activities. Experts conclude 
that the cattle were bred for milk, not just for flesh. 6 The bones from 
Ossarn 2 disclose for the first time on the Middle Danube large flocks 
of sheep. The first remains of horses in the province, too, have been 
reported from this and other sites. Perhaps they were already domesti- 
cated. 7 At least there were vehicles for horses to draw. 

A model waggon, carried on four solid disc wheels, 8 from the ceme- 
tery of Buda-Kalasz affords the oldest evidence for such vehicles 
north of the Alps, if not in Europe as a whole. But these vehicles were 
not drawn by horses. At least paired oxen, buried in two rich graves 
at Als6n6medi, 9 must surely have drawn the hearses in which their 
masters were conveyed to the grave. 

On the fertile plains and in mountain valleys the farmers lived 
on fortified hilltops or in caves. The best-attested house type is a 
one-roomed rectangular hut with rounded corners, 10 but at Vuiedol, 

Pittioni, Osterreich., 189-208. 

Bayer, Die Eiszeit, V (Vienna, 1928), 60 ff. 

Banner, "Die Peceler Kultur" Arch. Hung., XXXV (1956). 

Stocky, Boh. Pr4h. t 115 ff.; Bohm, Kronika, 134-49; cf. Slovcnskt Dejiny, 61-4. 

WA., XII (1933). 140-67. 

AAH., 1 (1951), 49, 75- 

Dolg., XV. (1939), 1 66; the attribution of an antler cheek-piece from a bit to the 
Pecel culture is dubious. 

Folya Arch., VI (1952), 29-35; Banner, loc. cit., 127. 

AAH., I (1951), 38-40. 
10 Measuring 4-5 by 3*4 m. at Palotabazsok (Banner, "Plceler Kultur", 214), 
8-0 by 5-5 m. at Praha-Bubenic (Bohm, Kronika, 198). 

124 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

Schmidt 1 reports apsidal houses. Circular pits (? bothroi) are common in 
all settlements; at Vuiedol they led into subterranean cellars excavated 
in the loss. At least in Hungary the size of the cemeteries 305 graves 
at Buda-Kalasz, 4! at Als6n6medi point to large and stable villages. 
But these did not grow into tells, and the huts seem more appropriate 
to semi-nomad pastoralists. Their location, like the weapons from 
graves, emphasizes the martial aspect of pastoral societies. 

Stone was still the normal material for knives, axes and adzes, 
arrow-heads, and battle-axes. But the last-named exhibit an imitation 
seam as if copied from a cast metal model, and Pittioni 2 assigns copper 
weapons, like Fig. 63, from Austria to the Baden culture. Copper 
ornaments alone have so far been found in graves; two in Lower 
Austria 8 were furnished with neck-rings of twisted wire with recoiled 
ends, immediate precursors of the cast ingot-torques (Fig. 69, 11-12) 
of period IV. Long-distance trade is positively documented by Spon- 
dylus and Tridacna shells, imported from the Mediterranean. 

Spools, like the Early Troadic, and whorls attest an active textile 
industry. Pottery was self-coloured and generally dark-faced, occasion- 
ally mottled. A universal peculiarity is presented by large ribbon 
handles rising above the rims of mugs and jugs; at the top they are 
often deeply flanged, as in Fig. 96, or fanned out. Subcutaneous 
string-holes are not uncommon, and occasionally trumpet lugs (like Fig. 
17, column i) grow from the bowls. Bowls have inverted rims and, in 
Hungary and Slovakia, are divided into two unequal compartments 
and provided with conspicuous button handles. Channelled decoration 
is universal, but is often combined with other techniques punctured 
ribbons, incised lattices, exceptionally crusting combined with incision 
as in the Tisza culture, or even cord impressions. 

Female figurines have not been recorded, but clay animal figures 
and models of waggons and boats may represent a survival of the old 
ideological tradition. It was quite overshadowed by funerary ritual. 
A few burials of men and women together may be taken as evidences of 
satl and of a patriarchal family. At Als6n6medi two centrally situated 
graves containing oxen and hearses must belong to chiefs interred in 
accordance with the tradition of royal burials that can be traced back 
to the Early Dynastic tombs of Kish and Ur and here marking the 
oldest royal funerals in Europe, The normal burial rite was interment 
in a contracted or flexed position, but in Hungary a small group of 
cremation graves has been recently reported. In a couple of Austrian 
tombs five or eight corpses had been buried together. Round Buda- 
Pest graves were grouped in distinct cemeteries; at some other sites 

1 Vutedol, 10-15. * Osterreich., 204. * WPZ., XXIV (1937) *5-2i- 

125 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

they are said to have been dug within the inhabited area. Collective 
tombs containing up to twenty corpses were reported from Slovakia. 1 
But in western Hungary cemeteries of cremation burials in urns 
constitute regular urnfields. 2 At Vufiedol men were laid on the right, 
women on the left side. 

In the Danubian sequence Baden is undoubtedly later than Lengyel. 
At Kiskoros 8 on the Hungarian plain a Bodrogkeresztur grave had 
been dug into an abandoned Baden settlement, but east of the Tisza 
the relation between the two cultures was reversed. At Fony6d Baden 
graves had been disturbed by later Early Bronze Age graves of the 
Kisapostag culture, while the copper neck-rings from Austria are 
typologically older than the torques of period IV. So the Baden culture 
is well fixed within period III; the extent of its overlap with the Bell- 
beaker culture remains to be determined. Racially the P6cel population 
shows a mixture of round and long heads. 4 

To Menghin, R. R. Schmidt and Pittioni Baden is just a "Nordic" 
culture, the result of an invasion from the wooded plain of Northern 
Europe. No doubt a few specifically Northern types, like collared 
flasks, occur sporadically on Baden sites as at JeviSovice in Moravia. 
On the other hand, peculiarities in Northern ceramic decoration have 
been ascribed to Baden influence, 6 and there is far more evidence for 
southern than for northern influences in the fundamentally Danubian 
Baden pottery. The distinctive channelled ornament is prominent in 
the VinCa culture; the incised and punctured patterns can be paralleled 
there and, still more precisely, in the Macedonian Late Neolithic; 
trumpet lugs are Troadic; flanged handles have been met in Troy 
while the Chalcolithic of Mersin 6 provides an exact parallel to the 
Baden variant. Similarly, subcutaneous string-holes recur in the 
Rinaldone culture of Central Italy. The wire torques from the Austrian 
graves can be exactly matched in "Copper Age' 1 burials at Ahlatlibel 
in Anatolia 7 and so could be claimed as concrete evidence of the south- 
eastern inspiration for the metallurgy at least of the Baden culture. 
Finally, wheeled vehicles were invented in Mesopotamia about 3000 B.C. 
and employed as hearses in royal funerals there by 2500. They were 
surely diffused thence, though the nearest analogues spatially and 
chronologically- to the Baden model from South Russia are two- 
wheeled carts. 

AR. t IV (1952). 244; V, 733-6. 

Banner "Prefer Kultur", 200-4. PZ.> XXII (1931), 111-15. 

Arch. Hung., XXXV, 293-309. 
Maier in Germania, XXXIII (1955), 159-73. 
Garstang, LAAA.> XXV, p. XXVIII," 22. 
7 Turk Tarih Arkeologya ve Etnografya, Dergisi, II (1934), 9- 

126 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

The southern connections just summarized, save the last, do not 
necessarily mean influences from the south. The " torque bearers 1 ' who 
introduced better metallurgical techniques into Syria 1 might conceiv- 
ably have come from Central Europe, and, if so, the earlier torque 
from Ahlatlibel might after all be Danubian. Italian prehistorians 
would prefer to derive the Baden features in the Rinaldone culture 
from the north. If the Baden analogies in the Balkans, Macedonia, and 
Anatolia too could be thus interpreted, the Baden culture does exhibit 
all the archaeological characters horses, wheeled vehicles, cattle and 
sheep, a dairy economy, patriarchal families, bows and arrows 
deduced by linguistic palaeontology for the ancestral Indo-Europeans; 
their expansion could be beautifully documented by the connections 
just mentioned! Of course, such an interpretation would demand a 
literal inversion of current chronologies both relative and absolute. 
Still, these are based mainly but not entirely on undemonstrated 
postulates. With that reservation on purely archaeological evidence 
the Baden culture cannot begin more than a couple of centuries before 
2000 B.C. and so could only be influenced by Late Neolithic and Early 
Bronze Age cultures of the ^Egean. 

THE EARLY BRONZE AGE 

During period III the growth of population was calling for a new 
economy and making labour available for industry and commerce. 
War was stimulating a demand for metal, and chiefs were accumulating 
capital; the prejudices of immigrant warriors had to be satisfied with 
trade-goods from the Baltic and Galicia. The Bell-beaker folk (pp. 222- 
227.) established regular communications with the West and North 
and opened up new connections with the Mediterranean across the 
Brenner Pass. The rise of rich cities on the Levant coasts by 2000 B.C., 
in Crete by 1800, and in peninsular Greece by 1600 had created markets 
for metals and other raw materials not too far from Central European 
sources of supply and provided capital for their exploitation. Perhaps 
prospectors trained in Asiatic traditions had begun working the copper 
of Transylvania, Slovakia, and the Eastern Alps, and even the tin 
lodes of Bohemia and Saxony. At least as soon as the lords of Mycenae 
and Knossos began to demand amber, it became worthwhile to organize 
the transport of the magic resin from Denmark and at the same time 
the distribution of metal among the peasant societies of the Danube 
basin. The appearance of the metal wares thus distributed defines 
for archaeologists period IV. 

i PPS., XVII (1951). i?8 ff. 

127 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

No actual mines can be dated by direct evidence to period IV, but 
there are indications that the copper lodes of the eastern Alps, demon- 
strably mined during period VI, may have been exploited by surface 
workings as early as period IV (p. 301). Equally early exploitation of 
copper lodes near Saalfeld and of Vogtland tin has been deduced from 
recent analyses. 1 Moulds have been found in several settlements, but 
do not necessarily belong to resident smiths. 

The distribution of the industry's products was effected by a regular 
class of itinerant merchant-artificers. Their routes are defined by hoards 
of finished and half-finished articlesthe merchant's stock in trade- 
that had been buried when danger threatened and never ^recovered. 
They show that the merchants were following ancient* Danubian 
traditions (p. 109) and that they dealt also in amber, gold, and presum- 
ably substances such as salt that leave no trace in the archaeological 
record. The amber routes are particularly well defined: the fossil resin 
was brought from Jutland and Sammland to the Saale valley and 
thence passed on through Bohemia and across the Brenner to Upper 
Italy and the /Egean, while a little was diverted across Moravia to the 
Hungarian plain and the Maros. 2 A counterpart to this export trade 
is certainly to be seen in segmented and cruciform beads of Egyptian 
or jEgean fayence common in cemeteries round Szeged 8 and in Slovakia, 4 
and found sporadically in Western Hungary/ Lower Austria, 6 Moravia, 7 
and Poland. 

The activities of these merchants linked up the Central European 
region round the Brenner amber route into a single commercial system 
with branches to the tin-lodes of Cornwall and the gold-fields of Tran- 
sylvania, but completely by-passing the Balkans. The types of metal 
ware thus diffused from the beginning of the Bronze Age produce a 
superficial appearance of uniformity throughout the Danubian province 
which no longer includes the Save or Drave, the Danube below Buda- 
Pest, or the Tisza south of the Maros mouth. At the same time Asiatic 
parallels to the arbitrary metal ornaments suggest the source of the 
fresh chemical knowledge, the alloy of copper with tin, on which the 
new economy was based. 

Cast neck-rings with recoiled ends (Fig. 69, n) were not only worn 

Otto-Witter, Handbuch der Altesten Metallurgie in Mitteleuropa (Leipzig, 1952). 
1 Only in graves 2 and 211 at Sztaeg and 14 at Deszk; Dolg., XVII (1941)1 cf - MilojCid, 
CISPP. (Zurich. 1950), 268. 
A JA. t XLIII (1939), 17; Banner, Dolg., XVII. 
Especially at Vyfcapy-Opatovce near Nitra, unpublished. 

In Kisapostag graves at Dunapenteie, AAH. t U (1952), 66. 

Germanic XXI (193?) . 89. 

' At Nem&ce and Jirikovice, Mus. Brno. 

128 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

as ornaments but served also as ingots and therefore are termed "ingot- 
torques". Such torques were the insignia of members of a metal-working 
clan or guild in North Syria about 2000 B.C. 1 and were deposited as 
symbols of abstract wealth in contemporary shrines at Byblos.* Lock- 
rings with flattened ends and racket pins have explicitly Sumerian 
prototypes 8 ; knot-headed pins (Fig. 67, o), appearing in predynastic 
Egypt 4 recur later at Troy and in Cyprus: the basket-shaped earrings of 
gold wire (Fig. 67, 4, 5) are detached members of the Trojan ornaments 



t 




4 5 

FIG. 67. Pins and earrings from UnStician graves. After Schranil (J). 

shown in Fig. 22, i. The first bronze-smiths producing for a Central 
European market seem to have been trained in Asiatic schools and to 
have introduced, together with the secret of bronze, Oriental fashions 
in personal adornment. 5 If so, the absence of these types on the Euro- 
pean coasts of the ^Egean and in the Balkans requires the admission 

1 Schaeffer, Ugaritica, II (1949), 49. calls these metallurgists "Torque-Bearers . 

1 Syria, VI (1925), 18. 

Childe, NLMAE., 161-2. 

4 Ibid., 53, 63. 

* MilojSic, Germania, XXXIII (1955). 45-7> P ints out that the "Asiatic" types do 
not all appear simultaneously at the beginning of period IV, but severally during 
phases Ai, A2, and B respectively. 

129 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

that they were introduced up the Adriatic and across the Brenner, 
unless they had been introduced through Troy by metallurgists work- 
ing for export only till the fall of the "second city" destroyed their 
market. 

The novel metal tools and weapons appearing at the same time were 
neither so uniform in the Danubian province nor so clearly related to 
Oriental models. The flat axe which at Thermi had been provided with 
flanges by hammering (p. 38) was translated into a flanged axe, cast 
in a two-piece mould (Fig. 69, i). Hence it can be inferred that Central 
European bronze axes, like Danubian adzes, were mounted in knee 
shafts. Chisels were evenjprovided with cast tubular sockets in Moravia 
and Austria. 1 Only in Hungary was a shaft-tube axe of Sumerian 
ancestry preferred (Fig. 64, 5-6). 2 Shaft-hole axes were, however, used 
as weapons elsewhere in the province, while a remarkable weapon from 
a Saxon hoard 8 of the end of period IV seems a barbaric version of the 
crescentic axe represented in the Royal Tombs of Ur and rather later 
in North Syria. 4 

The universal weapon was the round-heeled knife-dagger (Fig. 68). 
Its bone or wooden hilt was hollowed at the base like the bronze hilt of 
the rather later dagger shown in Fig. 70, an old Egyptian trick never 
popular in Asia nor Greece, but traceable in Central, as in Western, 
Europe, on the flat-tanged daggers of the Bell-beaker folk during 
period III. Halberds 5 were used in Germany and Lower Austria and 
occasionally even in Hungary, but not in Bohemia. The type is sup- 
posedly West European, and reached the Danubian province from 
Ireland or from the Iberian Peninsula. 

The unity created by the metallurgical industry and commerce had 
no political counterpart. It was imposed on a number of distinct 
cultures called after the sites of Perjamos 6 on the Maros, T6szeg, or 
Nagyr6v on the Tisza, 7 Kisapostag west of the Danube, 8 UnStice in 
Bohemia, and Straubing in Bavaria, and asserting their independence 
not only in peculiarities of pottery and personal ornaments but even 
by divergences in burial rites and economic status. Most are presumably 

PA., XLIV (1953), 203; Arch. Aust., VII (1950), 1-8. 

Derived through the Caucasus, or Crete; cf. PZ., XXVII (1936), 150; Folya Arch., 
VIII, 43. 

PZ. t XXXIV (1949-50), 232-8; JMV., XXXV (1951), 65. 

Iraq. XI (i949) "* 

P.Z., XXV. 130-42; Arch., LXXXVI (1937), 222-5. 

Banner, Dolgoxatok, VII (1931), I-53J XVII, 70-82; Patay, FrUhbronxexeitliche 
Kulturen in Ungarn; Nestor, BRGK., XXII, 84-8; CISPP. (1950), 267-77. 

7 The culture from the lowest levels in the Toszeg tell is termed Nagyrev.; cf. Patay, 
FrUhbrontexeiUiche Kulturen in Ungarn (1939); Mozsolic, AAH., if (1952); Banner, 
PPS., XXI, 127. 

Mozsolic, Arch. Hung., XXVI (1942); Patay, op. cit.; in Slovakia Kisapostag and 
Untice types occur with inhumations, AR., VI (1954), 297-300. 

130 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

descended from local groups; for everywhere the pottery is technically 
in the Lengyel-Baden tradition, but everywhere, save on the Tisza, 
influence from Bell-beaker folk is patent even in the pottery. But the 
universally used strap-handled jugs and tankards with the body and 
neck modelled separately have nothing to do with the Bell-beakers. 




70 



FIG. 68. Daggers from UnStician graves 
FIG. 69. Hoard of Sobochleby (J). 
FIG. 70. Bronze-hilted dagger (J). 
All after Schrml. 



In the Middle Danube basin settlements were founded in period IV 
on sites chosen primarily with a view to commerce where natural 
routes intersect at a ford or pass mouth, 1 And these settlements weie 
permanent townships occupied so long that their ruins form tells. 
Cemeteries of contracted skeletons no less clearly attest a sedentary 
life; that at Szoreg near Szeged comprised 200 graves, 103 attributed 
to period IV and 54 to period V. But even these communities were 

i PZ., XXII (1931), 33- 
13* 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

more nearly sell-sufficing villages than industrial cities. Bone and stone 
were still used for implements and even battle-axes; metal toilet- 
articles such as girdle-clasps were imitated in bone. The pots were 
hand-made, but the slipped and polished vases, red, black, or mottled, 
recall Anatolian and Iberic fabrics. In the basal or Nagyr6v levels at 
T6szeg and in the older SzSreg graves the jugs have only one loop or 
strap handle. Later these give place to hour-glass tankards which 
develop in period V into metallic-looking cantharoi with quatrefoil 
mouths like the Middle Minoan and Hittite vases (p. 33). While the 
local smiths made most of the types characteristic of the period, they 
did not develop the flanged axe nor the same variety of pins as was 
popular farther north. Segmented fayence beads wer^ however, 
imported and Oriental lunula-pendants 1 were imitated, as were Jgean 
"sacred ivy-leaves". 8 

North of the Bakony and Carpathians no tells have been recognized, 
but cemeteries in Austria comprising over a hundred graves 8 must 
belong to permanent villages, occupied even into period V (sixteen 
rectilinear houses have in fact been recognized at Postoloprty). 4 All 
the foregoing graves contained contracted skeletons. Only in the 
Kisapostag group and the earliest graves near Szeged was cremation 
the normal practice. Their cemeteries are indeed urnfields like that of 
Troy VI. Of course, cremation had been practised locally by some 
Baden communities and also by Bell-beaker folk in Hungary. In South 
Bohemia, Poland, and Thuringia Unfitician burials have been found 
under barrows (p. 200) 

The UnStician culture proper extends from the Austrian Danube 
to Silesia and Saxony, but is most typically developed on the Upper 
Elbe in Bohemia and along the Saale and Oder. Here, owing to the 
proximity of the Ore Mountains and the amber trade across the 
Brenner, the metal industry developed most luxuriantly. By casting 
in valve-moulds, the celts were equipped with high flanges and the 
knot-headed pin was translated into the distinctive "Bohemian eyelet- 
pin" (Fig. 67, 2). Towards the end of period IV core casting allowed 
the manufacture of socketed spear-heads and socketed chisels. More- 
over, Unfitician smiths could produce not only ornaments of sheet 
bronze but also bell helmets if, as Hencken* has shown grounds for 
believing, the specimen found a century ago at Beitsch in Saxony was 

* Cf. e.g. Sdtaefier, Stratigraphie comparte, fig. 183, 36. 

* Ettays in JB&a* Arckaology, ed. Casson, pp. 1-4; cf. Petrie, Ancient Coxa, III, 

pL XIV, a9-33' 

* Four hundred at Hainberg-Teichtal (MAGW,, LX (1930), 65 ff.); 255 at Gemein- 
lebam (Swmbathy) Flackgrtber bie Gemeinlebam, R.-G. Forsck. & Berlin, 1929. 

AR.,V(*9S3), 308-18. 

* "Beitech and Knowos", PPS., XVIII (1952), 36-47, cf. p. 30 above. 

132 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

really associated with Ungtician ingot-torques and a triangular daggei. 
Amber, gold, and Mediterranean shells were freely imported, but 
fayence beads are rare and the segmented variety (like Fig. 157) is not 
found north of Brno. 




FIG. 71. Bulb, disc, trilobate, and crutch-headed pins from later Un&tician 
graves. After Schranil (J). 

The hand-made pots agree in fabric with those from Perj&mos, but 
the most distinctive shapes were at first pouched jugs and mugs some- 
times decorated with cord-impressions or incised lines (Fig. 

1 Formerly attributed to a distinct ''MarschwitE culture'' and period III. 

133 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Then in the classical phase of UnStice (IVb) these are transformed by 
flattening out the belly into keeled mugs and jugs. Neumann 1 has 
analysed the constituents of UnStician pottery into elements derived 
from the Bell-beaker and Corded ware groups and a southern com- 




FIG. 72. Marschwitz and early UnStician pottery, Silesia and Bohemia. 
After Stock^. 

ponent. His analysis summarizes the constitution of the whole culture. 
Bell-beaker folk established the requisite commercial connection, 
battle-axe warriors made the demand for metal effective, metallurgists 
from the south may have provided the technical basis, but the founda- 
tion was still Baden and so Danubian. 

The development of the Central European bronze industry was 
undoubtedly correlated with that of the amber trade across the 
province; the guaranteed market that alone could make regular trade 
among barbarians worth while was in Mycenaean Greece and Crete. 
It is undoubtedly assumed that the initiation of the industry was 
equally due to prospectors, ultimately relying for a livelihood on the 
purchasing power of East Mediterranean cities. On this assumption 
the Oriental types reproduced by Danubian smiths should provide 
limiting dates for period IV. The limits thus given prove to be unex- 
pectedly wide. Most of the ornaments mentioned on p. 129 had been 
current in Egypt or Mesopotamia long before 2000 B.C. Even the ingot- 
toiques, introduced into Syria about that date, had earlier wiry pre- 
cursors at Ahlatlibel, as in Austria (p. 125). So period IV might begin 
before 2000 B.C. But regular trade with the ^Egean is attested first 
about 1600 B.C. 

The initial assumption, however intrinsically probable, has not yet 
been demonstrated by actual dateable imports; for segmented fayence 
beads were current in Hither Asia for a millennium before 1400 B.C. 
Now the metal-working clan, who introduced ingot-torques with core 
casting and other advances into Syria, are thought to have been 

* PZ. t XX (1929), 70-128. 



DANUBIAN CIVILIZATION 

immigrants. As no other cradle has been found for them, they might 
have come from Central Europe. In that case their advent a century 
before or after 2000 B.C. would be a terminus ante quern for the beginning 
of Danubian IV. So too the amber beads from the Shaft Graves of 
Mycenae at least prove that the commerce that enriched the UnStician 
culture was fully established before 1550 B.C. Crescentic necklaces with 
pattern-bored spacers, like the Mycenaean, in Bavaria and Alsace are 
found in graves of period V. So 1550 should be near the end of period IV. 
If so, the strikingly close Middle Minoan and contemporary Hittite 
analogies to the quatrefoil cantharoi that developed from the Perj&mos 
tankards in period V (p. 132) become chronologically significant. 
Moreover, by 1200 B.C. fibulae and other Central European or North 
Italian types were appearing in Greece, and the types in question are 
more proper to period VI than to period V. 1 If, then, period V the 
Middle Bronze Age ended about 1250 B.C., and began in 1550, period IV, 
the initial phase of the Continental Bronze Age, might very well have 
occupied five centuries and begun before 2000 B.C. On the available 
Central European evidence, 2100 is as likely a date as 1700 for the 
start of the Early Bronze Age. 

But whether Perjdmos and UnStice are to be compared to Sargonid 
cities in Mesopotamia or early Mycenaean townships in Greece, they 
must rank several stages lower in the cultural scale. Economically they 
have not reached the level of the Early Aegean townships of the 
Peloponnese or the Troad. Most of the population must remain peasants. 
But one industry at least did absorb a few of the farmers' younger sons; 
trade did indirectly secure a share in the Oriental surplus to supple- 
ment home-grown supplies. The smiths, the only specialist craftsmen 
recognizable in the archaeological record of period IV, displayed far 
more originality and inventiveness than their fellows in Asia or Egypt. 
And their products were more democratic. Even in period IV they were 
making sickles while Egyptian peasants were still reaping with flints. 
By period VI their successors would have invented an axe of bronze 
that was as efficient and as cheap as an iron one, and an armament 
with which European barbarians could challenge the well-equipped 
armies of Oriental monarchies. 

1 Cf. p. 83; even violin-bow fibulae are first reliably attested in urnfields of period VI. 
A fragment from an UnStice grave at Polepy in Bohemia (Schrinil, Bohmtn, 101; 
B6hm, CISPP. (London. 1932), 242; cf. AR., VI (1954)* 533. where the fragment 
is accepted [as an UnStician fibula) is too small for reliable diagnosis; another from 
Gemeinlebarn is just as likely to belong to the urnfield at that site as to the late 
Ungtician cemetery. 



135 



CHAPTER VIII 
THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH 

ON the 16ss-clad flanks of the Carpathians, in the valleys of the upper 
Oltu and the Seret, and on the parkland plateau extending north- 
eastward across the Prut, the Dniestr, and the Southern Bug to the 
Dniepr, there developed, on a Starievo foundation enriched by Dan- 
ubian elements, a remarkable farming culture named after Tripolye, 
a site near Kiev. 1 Though its authors were throughout farmers and lived 
in large villages of substantial houses, they seem, like their kinsmen 
farther west, to have practised a sort of shifting cultivation. 2 Hence 
the village sites are very numerous twenty-six have been identified 
in no sq. miles just south of Kiev but none formed tells. A few sites 
Nezviska 8 on the Dniestr, Cucuteni 4 and Izvoare 6 on the Prut, 
Traian 6 on the Seret were occupied more than once. The stratigraphy 
there observed justifies a division of the culture into four main stages: 
A, Bi, B2, and C 7 . It is based primarily on a stylistic analysis of the 
ceramic decoration in which local divergences may have sometimes 
been mistaken for discrepancies in age. Phase A is confined to a few 
sites on the upper reaches of the Prut, the Dniestr, and the Bug. The 
valleys of the Oltu and Dniepr would then have been colonized in 
phase Bi (AB). Only in phase C does Tripolye pottery occur in settle- 
ments of quite different cultures on the steppes and in the forests north 
of the Teterev. 

The basis of life was throughout the cultivation of wheats Triticum 
monococcum, dicoccum, and vulgar e barley, and millet, and the breed- 
ing of cattle, goats, sheep, and pigs. 8 Cows were always the most 
important stock; horses' 9 bones occur in all stages, but perhaps repre- 
sent game animals save in the latest stage. Hunting was at all times 
important, but the percentage of game bones in the food refuse declines 
from 52 in stage A to 20 in stage C. Fishing must also have made 

1 Passek, Periodixaisiya Tripolskikh Poselenil (MA., X, 1949), though written in 
1946, documents facts unless another reference be given. 
Kricevskii, KS., VIII (1940), 53. 

KSU., IV (1955), 142-6. 

Schmidt, H. f Cucuteni in der oberen Moldau (Berlin, 1932). 

Vulpe, ESA,, XI (1937). I34-46. 

St. s. Cere., V (i954J. 3^54- 

Passek, La Ctramique tripolienne (GAIMK., Leningrad, 1935). 

Bibflcov, Ranne-tripolshoe poselenie Luka-Vrublevetska, MIA., XXXVIII (1953). 

Hancar, Das Pferd, 65 ff; KS. t LI (1953). 53- 

136 



THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH 

a substantial contribution; hooks of copper or bone are found even on 
phase A sites, while along the Dniestr remains of fish over 1-5 m. long 
have been reported. Net-fishing may be inferred from clay sinkers. 
Finally, the collection of shell-fish and berries added substantially to 
the food-supply. 

The settlements are normally located on spurs of loss, protected on 
three sides by ravines. At the time of their occupation the plateaux 
were moister than to-day, liable to swamping, covered with damp 
woods and inhabited by tortoises, otters, and water-rats. 1 Most 
sites were probably defended by ditch and rampart. Those at Ariu^d 8 
on the Oltu (phase Bi) enclosed ij acres that would accommodate 
at most 21 houses arranged in three rows. Hab$e$ti on the Seret 8 
comprised perhaps 44 dwellings, while as many as 150, mostly 62, 
are reported from Vladimirovka. Normal villages of phases B2 and 
C consisted of 30 to 42 houses usually arranged radially on the 
circumferences of one or more concentric circles 200 m. to 500 m. in 
diameter. 

Only alleged pit-dwellings of phase A have been described; the 
houses of later phases are represented by the celebrated pkitadki, 
areas of baked clay resulting from the burning and collapse of walls 
and floors. The walls of wattle and daub heavily plastered with clay 
and straw were supported by earth-fast posts at Ariu^d in phase Bi; 
their sockets define houses measuring 8-25 by 5-4 m. and divided into 
two rooms by a partition. Ovens were found in both rooms, a hearth 
in the outer one. In plan and internal arrangements these houses are 
identical with those of Rossen and contemporary settlements round 
the Alps (Fig. 137), and assumed for period II along the Middle Danube. 
In phases 62 and C, posts planted in sleeper beams seem to have served 
to support only a skeleton frame and the roof-tree, the walls being 
built of compacted earth kerpitsh. In most villages a few houses 
were small and one-roomed, 7 by 4 m. in area and containing only 
a single oven. The average house measured about 14 by 5-5 m. and 
contained two to four ovens. The largest house recorded measured 
27 by 6-5 m. and was divided into five rooms, four furnished with one 
oven each, the fifth with two. The most puzzling features in many 
houses are the hard-baked and well-smoothed clay floors on which 
ovens, querns, and vases stood and on the undersides of which imprints 
of close-set timbers are preserved. 4 

1 Pidopliika in Passek, note i, 146. 
1 Childe, Danube, 98-104. 

Hdb&fefti, Monografie Arheologica (Acad. Rcpub. Pop. Romine, Bucuresti, 1954). 
Krifcjvsktt, "Tripolskie HoS6adki", SA., VI (1940), argued that the floors were 
baked by fires kindled upon them before the house was roofed over. 

137 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The large ovens, 2 m. or more square, were made of clay on a frame- 
work of saplings. In addition, some rooms were furnished with raised 
benches of baked clay, and at least in phase B2 on the Bug also 




FIG. 73. Model hut from Popudnia. 

with cruciform pediments ornamented on their surfaces with engraved 
lines or with paint. Russian archaeologists agree that these last were 
offering-places. Six or seven fragmentary models illustrate the interior 
of a Tripolye house, showing the porch, the oven, the cruciform pedi- 
ment, the jars of grain, and the quern just as excavators have found 
them (Fig. 73). All these models stand on legs and so suggest that 



THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH 

Tripolye houses were really raised on piles. That would be quite 
reasonable as the sites were liable to swamping; it would at once 
explain the burning of the clay floors and of the wooden beams under 
them. But there is no excavational evidence for this very plausible 
hypothesis. Russian excavators frequently refer also to half-subter- 
ranean dwellings or zemlianki, but the plans look almost as dubious 
as those of Danubian "pit-dwellings". 

Krifcevskil believed that the large houses with three or more rooms 
resulted from the enlargement of one-roomed houses to accommodate 
married children of the latters' builders. The enlarged family would 
keep together, as in the recent Slav zadruga. If so, the sites in question 
must have been occupied for at least two generations. 

Tripolye farmers were generally content to use local materials for 
their equipment which consequently looks purely neolithic. Adzes 
were made of local stone, often rather soft, but axe-hammers or even 
simple battle-axes were perforated with a hollow borer, and mattocks 
or adzes were made from bored antlers (Fig. 75, 15). Weapons are not 
common. Triangular flint arrow-heads occur sporadically from phase 
Bi at least. A knob bed mace like one from Danubian III is reported 
from a 62 site near Kiev, 1 while model battle-axes surely warriors' 
weapons were made at Ariud and Habife$ti in phase Bi. 

Trade secured farmers even at Petreny on the middle Dniestr 
obsidian from west of the Carpathians by phase B2. Copper too was 
similarly obtained from the very first, but in phase A 2 was employed 
only for fish-hooks, rings, bangles, and beads; one fragment analysed 
contained 30 per cent of zinc, so native copper at least is excluded. In 
phase Bi copper was used occasionally for making flat adzes, while 
a 62 site yielded a copper pick-axe, allied to the Transylvanian axe- 
adzes of Danubian III. Phase C is certainly contemporary with the 
frankly Bronze Age Usatova culture (p. 145), but even in Bi a knot- 
headed pin is reported from Sabatinovka on the Bug. 8 It may be 
evidence for Asiatic inspiration of the school of metallurgy that grew 
up west of the Black Sea, but it could just as well be derived from the 
Perjimos and Ungtician cultures in the Danube valley. In that case 
phase Bi of Tripolye would fall already into Danubian IV. 

The products of Tripolye potters have been celebrated in archaeo- 
logical literature for nearly a century. In every village local potters 
made vases of sophisticated forms and substantial dimensions and 

1 F. Vovk in Antropologiya, 1927 (Kiev, 1928)* 20-5, pi. III, 9. 

? See p. 137, n. 3. 

1 Arkheohg. Pamat. Ukrain. S.S.R., IV (Kiev, 1952), 78-83; a day copy oi a Scythian 
cauldron, allegedly from the same horizon, prompts doubts as to the reliability of the 
excavation report. 

139 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

fired them in kilns to a hard red or orange ware. A model vertical kiln 
and remains of an actual one stacked with vases were found at Ariujd 1 
(Fig. 74), perforated clay grills from Hab&e?ti 2 may have served to 
separate the firing chamber from the hearth. Yet housewives most 
probably made at home the pots required for domestic use instead of 
purchasing them from a full-time specialist potter; for stocks of pre- 








FIG. 74. Potters' oven and model, Ariud (Er6sd). After Laszl6. 

pared clay were discovered in some houses and instruments for decor- 
ating vases in many. Actually two wares are found on most Tripolye 
sites a coarse ware tempered with shell and a finer fabric with chaff 
or sand temper. The former, not reported from phase A sites, is orna- 
mented with a comb, impressed into, or drawn over, the wet clay; 
its affinities lie with the products of surviving hunter-fisher societies 
in the boreal forest zone of North-Eastern Europe. 

The finer wares, red or orange in hue, were richly decorated. In all 
phases the patterns might be outlined with deep channelled grooves 
supplemented with dots and, in phases A and Bi, filled with rouletted 
lines; the curved stamps of antler, bone, or shell used to produce such 
lines have been found on several sites 8 (Fig, 75, Bi, 12). Broad flutings 
were sometimes employed with, or instead of, grooves in phase A and 
especially in Bi. 4 Exceptionally these devices were enriched by incrusta- 
tions in ochre or with lines of white paint applied before firing to the 
red ground in phase A. The most familiar decoration in phases B and 



1 See p. 137, n. 2. 
1 Page 157, n. 3, pp. 189 ff., fig. 9. 

At Luka-Vrublevetska (p. 136, n. 8); Ariu$d; Sabatinovka, etc. 
4 Especially at Traian on the Seret, Dacia, IX-X (1941-44), n ff. 

140 




FIG. 75. Tripolye types (after Passek). 

B I: Polychrome pottery (fa) and ladle, figurine, clay cone, and stamp (J), comb for 
decorating pottery, stone adze, antler pick. 

B II: i (fa), 3, 7 (fa) grooved, 5-6 painted ware (fa), PyaniSkovo; Vladimirovka. 
C I: 1-3 Popodnia; 6-8 (fa), Staraya Buda. 

141 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

C was, however, painted in white or red (mainly in Bi), outlined 
with black on red, or red outlined in black on a white slip. Warm 
black, sometimes supplemented by thin lines in red, on buff or orange 
was the favourite style in phases 82 and C. In phase A running spirals, 
used as a repetition pattern, formed the basis of the decoration, but 
they gave place to closed S spirals in phase Bi. In the sequel these 
dissolved into circles and the old all-over composition gave place to a 
tectonic arrangement emphasizing the vase's articulation. 

From the first the vase forms are highly sophisticated and too 
varied even for enumeration. Tubular stands (Fig. 75, Bi, 2) are con- 
fined to phases A and Bi. Fruitstands (Fig. 75, Bi, i) were most popular 
in phase Bi and in that phase alone are accompanied by jar? on profiled 
and perforated pedestals. "Binocular vases 1 ' (Fig. 75, Bn, 7) were char- 
acteristic at all periods. Vases in the form of animals, usually bulls, 
or anthropomorphic, may rank as ritual vessels, but a ''bird vase" of 
phase A 1 could just as well be regarded as an askos. 

In the light of the total excavation of Kolomishchina Tripolye society 
would seem to have been as democratic and equalitarian as the Dan- 
ubian of Koln-Lindental, since the size of the houses was determined 
by the number of families inhabiting them jointly. But at Fedele^eni, 
a Moldavian village of stage Bi, Nestor 2 mentions that one house was 
more richly furnished than the rest and contained a stone animal 
sceptre-head (Fig. 76) as if it had belonged to a chief. Moreover, the 
mace-head from Veremye might be interpreted as a symbol of authority. 

The ideology of the Tripolye farmers was as " Asiatic" as that of their 
Balkan and Danubian II contemporaries. In addition to the cruciform 
"altars' 1 , many houses were littered with clay figurines and models. 
The former, predominantly female, in phases A and Bi were steato- 
pygous, and in phase Bi richly ornamented with incised spirals (Fig. 
75, Bi, 10), though fiddle-shaped types like Fig. 8, 2 were also common 
at Hibi?eti. 8 In phase B2 the figurines are flat, often perforated for 
suspension and painted (Fig. 75, BII, 13; C, 8). Males are represented 
sporadically even in phase A, phalli 4 too in phase Bi. Clay stamps 
occur only in phase Bi and are confined to sites between the Oltu 
and the Prut Ariud, Cucuteni, Hib&^ti, and Ruginoasa; one bears 
a filled cross design, the rest spirals (Fig. 76). 

As ornaments, besides copper and very rare gold trinkets, clay beads, 
some star-shaped, were worn at all periods. Copper beads and bored 
deers 1 teeth seem confined to phases A and Bi, to which belong also 

* MIA., XXXVIII, p. 338, tab. 46. 

* BRGK. t XXII, 45 ;and 51, n. 80. 
Page 137, n. 3, 414. 

4 Page 137, n. 4, 468. 
142 



THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH 

laminae from boars 1 tusks perforated at the four corners. Clay cones, 
common in phase Bi (Fig. 75, 8} may have been gamesmen, though 
one is surmounted by a rough human head. 

The position of the Tripolye phases in the Balkan sequence is fairly 
clear. On the Seret, phase A is preceded by Boian, while a broken 
binocular vase was found as an import in the earliest Gumelntya level 
at Vidra (p. 98). At Verbicoara in Wallachia, polychrome sherds, 
attributed to phase Bi, were found in the Salcufa layer, while the 





FIG. 76. Stone sceptre-head, Fedele?eni and clay stamp, Ariusd. 

sceptre-head from Fedele?eni is paralleled at Salcu^a itself. On the 
Upper Oltu, remains of the Ariusd, Bi, version of Tripolye are super- 
imposed on early Boian strata. On the Dniestr at Nezviska, the 
settlement with early Bi pottery overlies the late Danubian I village 
(p. no), but at Traian, Danubian I sherds are reported from a Tripolye 
A layer. 1 Hence, while phase A may overlap with Boian in Balkan II, 
most of phases A and B must be parallel with Gumelnifa and Salcufa 
in Balkan III. 

Links with the Danubian sequence are more ambiguous. The day 
stamp-seals might be used as a basis for synchronizing phase Bi with 
Danubian II, and so might the Ariusd figurines that, as in Moravia, 
were modelled in two parts separately and then stuck together. On 
the other hand, the relative abundance of metal, the battle-axes, repre- 
sented by models, a bossed copper disc from Hb&$e$ti* would all be 

1 St. s. fere. (1954), v 3 6 - 

1 Page 136, n. 6, 436; the disc is very like that from the Danubian III grave at Brzdtt 
Kujawski, p. 123 above. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

more appropriate to Danubian III. So the jars on high profiled pedestals 
of phase Bi have their closest analogies in the transitional Tiszapolgdr 
pottery that is likewise Danubian III, while at Marosvasarhely poly- 
chrome Bi and decorated Bodrogkeresztur pottery seem to have been 
associated. An even lower limit in terms of the Danubian sequence 
would be given by the one possible import found in a Tripolye settle- 
ment: the knot-headed pin from Sabatinovka, if imported from 
Bohemia or Hungary, would mean that Tripolye Bi did not end 
before Danubian IV began. But of course the pin might have come 
from Asia. That Tripolye C lasts into and perhaps beyond Danubian IV 
is nearly certain. 1 Here Tripolye has been assigned to periods II, III, 
and IV, but perhaps its several phases should each be set a^>eriod later. 

In its economy, as in its art, the Tripolye culture is so fundamentally 
Danubian that one might speak of a Dniestro-Danubian cycle of 
cultures. The Danubian element can be most economically derived 
from the colonists established at Nezviska and elsewhere in pre- 
Tripolian times. But they had been preceded by earlier Starevo 
settlers, if not by the hypothetical hunter-fishers who might have 
remained in occupation of the region since the Ice Age (p. 88). Indeed, 
the latter now become almost tangible in the coarse ware found on all 
Tripolye sites and related to that of the more boreal hunter-fisher 
tribes of the Eurasiatic taiga. It is now no longer necessary to look 
to Central Asia to account for the painted Tripolye vases, since the 
Starievo pioneers painted their vases and must have possessed the 
vertical kilns requisite for producing light-faced wares. 

The Tripolye ideology and the elaborate ritual paraphernalia that 
expressed it were of course shared by the Tripolye farmers with their 
cultural antecedents in South- West Asia, but equally with neighbour- 
ing Gumelnifa, Vinfca, and Danubian II societies; it could have reached 
the Tripolye province thence, if not earlier with the StarCevo colonists. 

THE BEGINNINGS OF METALLURGY ON THE WEST PONTIC COASTS 

By Tripolye phase C, and probably earlier, there had arisen pn the 
steppes bordering the Black Sea a local metal industry serving stratified 
societies, best represented in the Usatova culture, 2 so named after a 
village and cemeteries near Odessa. Warlike chiefs, leaders of a pastoral 
aristocracy, were enabled to exercise an effective demand for metal 
armaments by concentrating the surplus wealth produced by their 
pastoral followers and by their Tripolye subjects. 

1 Sulimirski, PPS., XVI (1950), 45-52. 

1 Full summary by Passek in MIA., X, 190-200. 

144 



THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH 

The new pastoral aspect of the economy is disclosed by the very 
numerous animal bones from the village and the prominence among 
them of sheep and horses, now surely domesticated; the percentages 
are : 37-8 sheep, 31 cows, 15-5 horses, only 2-2 pigs. Game accounts for 
only 28-4 per cent of the total. 1 

The rulers were buried under barrows which form two cemeteries 
near the village. A chief 2 was interred contracted on one side or on 
his back in a central shaft grave encircled by a ring of slabs on edge. 
Under one barrow a slab in the kerb had been engraved with very 
rough representations of a man, a stag, and perhaps a horse. 8 Before 
the barrow was heaped, one or two slaves or dependents would be 
slain and interred in accessory graves. Bones of animals and statuettes, 
too, were buried in separate pits. 

Contrasted with these almost royal tombs are the flat graves belong- 
ing presumably to the cultivators. These are shallow pits, each covered 
by a flat slab and containing a single contracted skeleton. That these 
cultivators were an off-shoot from Tripolye communities may be 
inferred from survivals of the Tripolye ideology and ceramic art. 
Figurines were still made in clay though stylized almost beyond 
recognition (Fig. 77, 6-8). 

In the village and both under the barrows and in flat graves well- 
fired vases, painted and fashioned in the Tripolye technique, occur 
side by side with coarser vessels ornamented with cord impressions. 
The designs on the painted pots can be regarded as degenerations of 
the good spiral ornament of Tripolye A and Bi, and some old Tripolye 
forms are reproduced. The cord-ornamented pottery must represent 
the new pastoral element; some of the jars could be regarded as degen- 
erations of Thuringian amphorae (Fig. 77, 1,3), but the impressed cord 
designs are more elaborate than any from North or Central Europe 
and include the imprints of crocheted necklaces, maggot patterns, and 
horse-shoe loops. 4 

Trade brought amber, presumably from the Baltic, antimonite 
allegedly from Turkey, and substantial supplies of copper. The metal 
was cast into characteristic local types. The most distinctive is a kite- 
shaped riveted dagger with a midrib on one face only (Fig. 77, 4), but 
flat axes and quadrangular awls were also made. The shaft-hole axe 
from Cucuteni may also be a product of Usatova industry, since a 
typical dagger comes from the site. Small spiral rings of copper or 

1 SA., V, 258; Naukove Zapiski IIMK., II (Ukrain. Akad. Nauk, Kiev, 193?)* 
116. 

1 For these barrows see also SA. t V (1940). 240-56. 
1 Figured in Mongalt, Arhheologiya v SSSR. (Moskva, 1955), 109. 
4 Rosenberg, Kulturstrdmungen in Ewopa xur SUinxnt (Copenhagen). 

145 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



silver were worn as well as necklaces of bored deers' teeth. The stone 
industry is comparatively poor. A perforated antler axe had been 
buried with one of the chiefs and so must rank as a battle-axe, as in 
the Danubian III graves of Brze6-Kujawski. 







FIG. 77. Usatova types. 

(Top) Usatova Barrows: 1-2, cord-ornamented and painted vases (i); 3-5, copper objects 
(() barrow I; 6-10, figurine (J), painted pot (J), copper spirals, bored wolfs teeth (J) 
barrow II. 

(Below) 3-7, cord-ornamented and painted pots (i), day figurine () from other barrows; 
8 figurine from Usatova settlement (after Passek). 

146 



THE PEASANTS OF THE BLACK EARTH 

Ustatova ceramic and metal types occur in a number of barrow 
graves on the steppes between the Tripolye province and the Black 
Sea and in a few marginal Tripolye villages. 1 The first two villages at 
the fortified site of Mikhaflovka 2 on a tributary of the Lower Dniepr 
may well have been occupied by a kindred society, again predomin- 
antly pastoral. Metal was certainly worked here too, but no distinctively 
Usatova types have been published in 1956. 

Krifievskil 8 and Passek treated the Usatova culture as the final 
result of the conversion of the Tripolye economy to pastoralism. 
Briusov, 4 however, could easily show that Usatova represented a 
distinct culture not later than Tripolye B2 or at least C. A Tripolye 
component is indeed obvious enough. The origin of the pastoral 
element will be considered in Chapter IX. What of the metal industry? 

The distribution of the distinctive metal types leaves little doubt 
that the raw material reached the Black Sea coasts by sea. If that 
means that the knowledge of metal-working was introduced by pro- 
spectors from the ^Egean or Asia Minor, it cannot be claimed that their 
local products reproduced any specific southern models. The technique 
of casting midrib daggers in a one-piece mould is a barbarism quite 
foreign to any of the advanced schools of metallurgy and paralleled 
only in the Iberian peninsula and South France. Usatova metal types 
give no clue as to the origin of their makers nor as to the absolute 
date of the Usatova culture. Relatively it might be assigned to period 
IV or a late phase of period III in the Balkan sequence. In the Danubian 
sequence it should occupy a similar position. Usatova must surely 
be earlier than period V, since Hungarian bronzes of that phase are 
quite common in the province. 6 A little support for an equation with 
Danubian IV might be derived from the kite-shaped daggers of the 
East Polish and Slovakian Tomasz6w culture 6 ; at least in plan they 
recall the Usatova type and they are associated with segmented fayence 
beads. Still the latter might be correlated with the amber beads from 
Troy II and Usatova as indicative of a trade in metals and Sammland 
amber in the IHrd., millennium. 

Passek. loc. cit.\ Arkheologiya, VIII (Kiev, 1953). 95-i7- 

KSU., IV (1955). 119-23; V, 13-17- 

MIA., II (1941), 251-3- 

Oterki, 240 ff. Note distribution map on p. 234. 

Ta11trr/n Jf^jl TT 

Kostrzewski, /.'. Prehistoria Ziem PolsMch (Krakdw, I939-4 8 ). P 1 - LXII. 18. 



147 



CHAPTER IX 
CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER THE EURASIAN PLAIN? 

LAST century anthropologists regarded the Eurasiatic plain as a 
corridor through which Asiatic hordes, precursors of the Huns and the 
Tartars, swept neolithic culture to Western Europe. Their guess is 
hardly confirmed by the evidence of the spade. But of course con- 
firmatory evidence would be hard to obtain; predominantly pastoral 
and ex hypothcsi mobile communities need leave no durable equipment 
that archaeologists could recognize, and certainly would leave no 
stratified tells in their wake. Stock-breeding is indeed not attested 
earlier near the eastern than near the western extremities of the plain, 
but only in the sense that no geological nor pollen dates are available 
in the former area while the culture sequence as distinguished in 1956 
seems less varied, and therefore shorter, than farther west. No doubt 
in the wide chilly forest zone a "palaeolithic" economy based on collect- 
ing, hunting, and fishing along the shores of meres and rivers persisted 
long, albeit made increasingly sedentary by the emphasis on fishing. 
Farther south, in the wide belt of parkland and the steppe zone border- 
ing the Black Sea, collections of flint tools may indicate a continuity 
of settlement from late pleistocene times. Chopping tools, sharpened 
by a tranchet blow (p. 9), are reported from the parklands of Vol- 
hynia, Podolia, and the Ukraine. 1 Only in a few stratified caves in 
Crimea 1 can even the relative antiquity of the aichaic flints be deter- 
mined, and even there, though microliths are associated with pots 
with pointed bases 8 no very high antiquity need be assigned to them 
since geometric microliths may survive quite late. 

Still less can such collections be cited as documenting precocious 
animal husbandry, since no bones survive on sandhill sites. The flints 
collected from dunes between Lake Aral and the Oder may have been 
left by ancestors of the herdsmen who reached Denmark in Atlantic 
times, but there is not a scrap of evidence that they were. 

On the fringe of the vast 16ss lands, colonized by primary neolithic 
Danubian, Starfcevo and Tripolye peasants, there did indeed emerge 
communities of herdsmen, known almost exclusively from graves. Do 

1 Briusov, Obrki, 181-203. 

1 Antrofolojiya. II (Kiev, 1928), 190-1. 

* liCS., XXXI (1950)1 110-16; SA. t V (1940). 97-100; cf. Gerasimov, Litsa, 263-5. 

148 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

these represent pastoral tribes separated out from the more agricultural 
Dniestro-Danubian societies? Or are they local mesolithic communities 
converted by their neighbours 1 example to food-production? Or, 
finally, are they immigrants from the steppes farther south and east? 
There, too, are barrow graves of a peculiar kind, the so-called ochre 
graves. 

THE OCHRE GRAVE CULTURES OF THE PONTIC STEPPES 

The true steppe zone extends from the Dobrudja and the wooded 
outpo&ts of the Carpathians round the Black Sea coasts to the Caucasus 
and beyond the Volga to the Altai. The steppes are covered with 
barrows of all periods down to the late Middle Ages. The prehistoric 
ones, generally small, cluster in little cemeteries, presumably marking 
some sort of tribal territory, and most cover many successive inter- 
ments. On the strength of his excavations between the Donets and the 
Don, Gorodtsov defined three main stages on periods distinguished 
primarily by tomb types first shaft graves (yamy), next pit-caves 
("catacombs") and finally wooden cists (sruby). Hence the archaeo- 
logical record in South Russia has been divided into yamno, catacomb, 
and srubno periods, and this terminology is retained even though 
it is now established that catacomb graves are confined to the Black 
Sea coasts and the valleys of the Donetz, the Don, and the Many, 
and define a culture rather than a period of time. On the slopes of the 
metalliferous Caucasus, however, some barrows are so rich that a 
finer typological division into five periods has been established by 
Yessen. 1 His phases I and II correspond roughly to the old Early 
Kuban 2 and more roughly to Gorodtsov's yamno stage, 8 while his 
group III may equal Middle Kuban and catacomb. But these burials 
under round barrows are not the earliest. Just as the funerary record 
in Britain begins with collective burial under long barrows, so in South 
Russia it begins with multiple burials in long trenches or under long 
mounds. 

In all these graves the skeletons lie extended, usually covered with 
red ochre and arranged in groups. At Vovnigi 4 , near Dniepropetrovsk, 
130 skeletons in three layers were lying side by side under a sandhill. 
At Mariupol on the Sea of Azov 6 120 adults and six children had been 

1 5.4., XII (1950). 157-85. * ESA., IV, 1-19. 

1 Degen-Kovalevskii (KS., II (1939), 14-16) and Artamonov (SA. t X (1948), 161-81) 
proposed much later dates for the Early Kuban barrows. 

4 KSU., IV (1955), *47-9; cf. Arkheologiya, V (Kiev, 1951), 163, for a similar burial 
farther down the Dniepr, and Gerasimov, Litsa, 260-80, for others; the skulls are 
"Cromagnonoid" . 

5 Makarenko, Mariupilski Mogilnik (Kiev, Vse-Ukrainska Akad. Nauk, 1933); 
Stolyar (SA. t XXIII, 16) distributes the burials over four successive phases. 

149 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

buried in groups across one long trench filled with red earth. At Nal&k 1 
a low irregular mound covered 130 contracted skeletons, again buried 
in groups and covered with red pigment. Such numbers exceed those 
recorded from any mesolithic cemetery of food-gatherers so that the 
denial of neolithic status may be unjustified. Actually flint celts with 
polished blades were found at Mariupol together with stone beads and 
bracelets and a variety of ornaments carved out of wild beasts 1 teeth 
and boars' tusks. Two skeletons were accompanied by knobbed mace- 
heads (cf. Fig. 65), interpreted as emblems of chieftainship. A female 
figurine of stone lay in one grave at Nal&k, and pottery in others. 
However these communities got their food, they were not economically 
isolated. A pendant of porphyry imported from the Urals occurred at 
Mariupol; a copper lock-ring and beads of "vitreous paste" and car- 
nelian at Nal&k. The last-named ornaments are explicitly results of 
connection with Oriental civilization, and even the knobbed maces 
from Mariupol may be thus interpreted, since the type was common 
in Mesopotamia from Early Dynastic times. 

The burials just described recall most strikingly those of mesolithic 
Natufians in the Wad cave on Mount Carmel, but agree in several 
points also with those of neolithic hunter-fishers on Gotland and on 
Olenii Island in Lake Onega. They are not for these reasons neces- 
sarily earlier than the single burials, sometimes accompanied by metal 
objects, under the commoner round barrows. Indeed, knobbed mace- 
heads farther west are Danubian III or Balkan III (pp. 122). On the 
other hand, microliths are found in Early Kuban barrows. 

The earliest food-producers detectable on the steppes in South Russia 
are those buried under round barrows in the yamno graves. In these, 
remains of domestic animals only sheep have been recorded are 
exceptional, while bones of game, flint arrow-heads, and bone harpoons 
do attest hunting and fishing. Finds from domestic sites, 2 however, 
prove that cows, sheep, goats, and probably horses and pigs were bred 
and millet cultivated. The stock-breeders were interred, thickly sprinkled 
with red ochre, lying on a bier or bed of rushes on the back with the 
legs drawn up or more rarely extended, sometimes in a tent-shaped 
mortuary house, 8 at the bottom of the shaft, which was roofed with birch 
poles resting on ledges in the sides (as in the Shaft Graves of Mycenae). 4 
In the Ukraine, rudely anthropomorphic stelae covered some graves. 6 

1 MIA., Ill (1940), 69 fi. 

Near Nalttk, MIA., Ill (1940), 192; Mikhaflovka on the Lower Dniepr, KSU. t IV 
(1955), 119-22. 

IGAIMK., 100 (1933), 105. 

4 Rau, Hockergr&ber for Wolgasteppe (Marxstadt, 1928); SA. t IV (1937), 93 3-1 
MIA. t XLVT, 12 ff. 

KSU.. I (1952), 21; V (1935), 75-8- 

150 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 



In no grave does much furniture survive at best a pot, some hunting 
or fishing tackle, necklaces of bored teeth and only in the latest 
graves a hammer-headed pin of bone (Fig. 78, 5-6). 1 The pot, if 
present, is an ovoid beaker, often plain, sometimes decorated with 
pits below the inturned rim or even with cord impressions 2 (Fig. 79, 4). 






FIG. 78. Copper battle-axe, Vozdvizhenskaya (J), copper beads (f), copper 
spear-head (J), copper and bone hammer-pins ($). 

A lucky chance has revealed dramatically how unreliable negative 
conclusions, based on the inevitable deficiencies of the archaeological 
record, may be. Under a large barrow of the period, "Storozhevaya", 
near Dnepropetrovsk 8 an exceptional conjuncture has preserved 
remains of a wooden cart with two solid wheels, 48 cm. in diameter, 
that served as a hearse. It demonstrates at once that wheeled vehicles 
were used by the steppe folk, that these had not only domesticated 
but also harnessed oxen or conceivably horses and that they 
recognized chiefs who enjoyed the privileges of Sumerian kings. 

On the slopes of the Caucasus such chiefs secured more substantial 
emblems and instruments of authority. A celebrated barrow near 
Maikop 4 is representative of the eleven rich "royal burials" that con- 
stitute Yessen's group I. The tomb was a tripartite wooden chamber 
in a deep shaft enciicled by a ring of boulders. A prince had been 
buried in the main chamber under a canopy adorned with gold and 
silver lions and bulls. A male and a female corpse occupied the remain- 

1 Though found in graves that are typologically "yamno", most common from 
"catacombs". 

* Found from the Dniepr to as far east as Stalingrad. 

8 KS., XXXVII (1951), 117; Arkheologiya, V (Kiev, 1951), 183-8. 

4 Handar, 248. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

ing compartments, less richly furnished, but all the bodies were covered 
with red ochre. The royal weapons (Fig. 80) include a transverse axe, 
certainly, and a straight axe together with an axe-adze 1 that looks like a 
combination of the other two, but also rhomboid arrow-heads of flint 
and microlithic lunates of mesolithic ancestry. A gold flask with a 
silver ring round the neck, jars of silver and of stone, and imitations 
in reduced grey pottery are certainly Asiatic. Beads of turquoise and 






FIG. 79. Vases: i, from Catacomb grave, Donetz (J); 2-3, from pit-graves, Yatskovice, near 
Kiev (J); 4, from yamno grave Donetz basin (J); 5, B funnel beaker from Denmark (J). 

lapis lazuli had been imported from Iran, meerschaum 2 from Anatolia. 
Two silver vases are engraved with local mountain scenes and a pro- 
cession of animals two kinds of ox, a mouflon, a tame boar, Prze- 
walski's horse, and a panther. 

Yessen's second and rather less homogeneous chronological division 
within the Early Kuban period is represented by the furniture of the 
tombs in two huge cairns at Novosvobodnaya (generally but incor- 
rectly termed Tsarevskaya). 8 Both were inegalithic cists divided into 
two compartments by porthole slabs (Fig. 81, i). Cist II measured 



* LA A A., xxni (1936), 114-15. 

* Yessn, TGATMK.. 120, 81. 

152 



Hantar, 244. 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

internally i-8o m.+ 1-15 m. by 1-60 m. by 1-20 m. t and was surrounded 
by a ring of orthostats over a metre high. The princely dead, one 
wearing a linen garment, dyed red and purple, a cloak of camel's wool 









FIG. 80, Transverse axe, axe-adze, knife, and gold and silver vases (J), 
carnelian bead and flint arrow-heads (|), from Maikop barrow. 





FIG. 8 1. i, Megalithic cist, Novosvobodnaya; 2, Catacomb grave, Donetz basin. 

153 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

covered with a black hide and profusely sprinkled with red ochre, 
were provided with shaft-hole axes, bidents, spear-heads, cauldrons, 
ladles, wands, and drill bits of copper, together with flint arrow-heads 
and globular day vases (Fig. 82). The spear-head is directly derived 
from an Early Sumerian type and the bident and gouge have an equally 
Early Sumerian pedigree, but exact parallels to them and to the ladles, 
perhaps also to the wand, can be cited from Hissar III 1 in Northern 
Iran. The pottery, on the contrary, undoubtedly resembles the Central 
Russian Fatyanovo ware and the Globular Amphorae of Central 
Europe (pp. 170, 194). 

A dozen other burials are assigned to this second phase of the Early 
Kuban period and enlarge the repertory of types attributable to it. 
They include battle-axes 2 both in copper (Fig. 78, i) and stone and 
probably a clay model of a covered cart 8 ; the latter, if really Early 
Kuban, demonstrates the use of wheeled vehicles and ox traction on 
the slopes of the Caucasus as on the steppes. 

Yessen 4 insists that none of the metal ware from any Early Kuban 
tomb is a local North Caucasian product; all are imports or loot from 
more advanced regions south of the range. By the Middle Kuban 
period resident or itinerant smiths were producing local types of tools, 
weapons, and ornaments, and Oriental imports have disappeared. 

The North Caucasian smiths manufactured flat axes, chisels* with 
an incomplete socket, made by folding the butt end round a mandril, 
flat daggers the tang of which expands for the pommel, 6 shaft-hole 
axes with a drooping shaft-hole and long narrow body, and ornaments 
including elaborate versions of the hammer-pin (Fig. 78, 4) on which 
filigree work has been ingeniously imitated by cire perdue casting. 
Most of these types recur farther north in the catacomb and con- 
temporary shaft graves. Their extension suggests that the rich copper 
resources of the Urals were now being exploited. Querns, pestles, flint 
sickle-teeth, 7 and animal bones attest a regular farming economy to 
support the metal-workers and the chiefs. 

On the Caucasian foothills, south of the Kuban and the Terek, the 
Middle Kuban graves are more varied and more numerous than the 
Early Kuban. None are so obviously "royal" as those described above, 
but many must belong to small chiefs. The catacomb graves that define 
a contemporary local culture extending from near Odessa to the valleys 

M*3/., XXIII (1933), Pk. CXIX, CXX. 

Vozdvirhcnskaya, Hantar, 253; Letniskoe, Yessen, SA., XII. 

Ulski aul, Hancar, he. cit. 

"Iz Istorii drevnei Metallurgiya Kavkaza", IGAIMK., 120 (1935)- 

IGAIMK., 120, 99- 

SA. , XII. Plate, Col. Ill, 3; Ran, HockergrAber, pi. Ill, 3. 

Hooked metal sickles were being made in Yemen's phase IV. 

154 





FIG. 82. Pottery (i), weapons and tools (), and pins (i) from tomb at 

Novosvobodnaya. 



155 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

of the Donets, Don, Manyt, and Upper Kuban-Terek and just into 
Daghestan (Fig. 8x, 2) are really pit-caves under barrows. Most contain 
only a single corpse, but some served as family tombs housing as many 
as seven persons. There is explicit evidence of one or even two females 
having been slain to accompany their lords. 1 Round-headed persons 
now appear and these perhaps practised annular deformation of the 
skull.* 

Additions to armaments peculiar to the catacomb graves are heeled 
battle-axes, 8 like Fig. 35, arrow-shaft straighteners, and sling bullets. 
The pottery, distinctive of the period, is represented by flat-bottomed 
vases profusely decorated with the imprints of cords, whipped or 
braided cords, and shells sometimes forming spiral patterns (Fig. 79, i). 4 
Peculiar to the Manyt and Kuban-Terek group of catacomb graves are 
cruciform-footed lamps shallow saucers, divided into two unequal 
compartments and standing on four solid and united feet. They are 
richly decorated in the style of the period. 

Other characteristic pots and catacomb types recur in shaft graves 
in several regions. On the Lower Volga, one grave probably of this 
period under a very large barrow contained no less than three carts 
with tripartite disc wheels, while a clay model of a covered cart lay 
in an "offering place 11 above the shaft mouth. 6 

The catacomb type of tomb and its distribution suggest ^Egean 
inspiration. Cranial deformation had been practised in Cyprus from 
neolithic times. 6 A few beads of "paste", presumably fayence, reported 
from catacomb tombs and copper imitations of winged beads (Fig. 78, 2) 
might be derived from the same quarter. A hoard of metal objects from 
Cetkovo near the mouth of the Dniepr, 7 probably assignable to this 
period, comprises double-axes, presumably of Minoan or Helladic 
manufacture. Conversely, the unfinished battle-axe from the Early 
Macednic site of H. Mamas (p. 68) belongs to a distinctively South 
Russian family first appearing in the catacomb phase. On the other 
hand, the cross-footed lamps are absurdly like Starfievo forms from 
Moldavia and Hungary (Fig. 46) and still more the later Vufcedol type. 
Moreover, the "pit-caves" of the VuCedo culture at VuCedol are rather 
like catacomb graves. 

Artsikovskil, Osnovy Arkheologi! (4954), 75. 

SA. t IV, 122; XI (1949), 327; KS. t VIII, 86; cf. Dingwall, Artificial Cranial De- 
formation. 

ESA. t VIII. 61; in Cis-Caucasia Yessen attributes these to phase IV. 

Popova, SA,, XXII (1955). 20-60 distinguishes six local varieties, some not repre- 
sented m catacomb tombs at all. 

SA., X (1948), I47-56. 

Angell in Dikaios, Khirokitia (London, 1953). 

ESA. t II (1932). 

156 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIU? 

But if the chiefs of the pastoral clans were imitating the fashions of 
^Egean colonists on the Black Sea coasts, nothing of precise dating 
value has come from their tombs. The battle-axe from H. Mamas 
alone could be invoked to justify a partial synchronism between the 
Middle Kuban-Catacomb period and the Early gean. 

The actual Oriental imports in the Early Kuban tombs are not 
incompatible with such a dating, but are all too long-lived to confirm 
it. The transverse axe from Maikop is a type of undoubtedly Meso- 
potamian origin, but was current from 3000 B.C. for nearly two mil- 
lennia. 1 The type was being cast in clay moulds at Shah Tepe in Trans- 
caspia, 8 while axe-adzes of the Maikop variant were being similarly 
manufactured in the contemporary settlement of Hissar III. 8 The 
grey ware from Maikop likewise recalls Iranian fabrics of the Hissar III 
phase. There too the ladles, bidents, and drill-bit from Novosvobodnaya 
can be paralleled, 4 but just as well in the Early Sumerian metal-work 
of Ur. Only the hammer-pins are more illuminating, for the type is 
comparatively rare. In Anatolia, gold specimens occur in the Royal 
Tombs of Alaca, 6 at Ahlatlibel, in Troy Ilf ., and in the Middle Helladic 
Greece. Moreover, bone hammer-pins have been found in a Danish 
passage grave of Northern IIIc and in Central European graves of 
Danubian III or IV. In time the Pontic pins should come at least 
between the Anatolian and the Central European examples. 

Now the rare gold pins from the treasures of Anatolian princes may 
well be luxury versions of a Pontic type. If so, their absolute date 
certainly about 2000 B.C. is a terminus ante quern for the creation 
of the type in South Russia. Hammer-pins are not attested before the 
Middle Kuban phase in Cis-Caucasia and mark the end of the yamno 
period of the steppes. Thus the beginnings of the Ochre Grave culture 
should go back well into the third millennium. So too yamno graves in 
Eastern Poland had been dug before the dry Sub-Boreal climate had 
promoted the formation of black earth. 

Only in the light of these chronological considerations can possible 
contributions from the Steppe societies to the development of European 
culture farther west be evaluated. That they did really transmit ideas 
westward is proved by the hammer-pins just mentioned and by the 

1 Childe, NLMAE., 159. 

1 Arne, Excavations at Shah Tepi (Sino-Swedish Expedition, Pub. 27, Stockholm, 
1945). 258. 

1 Schmidt, Excavations at Tepe Hissar, 1931*3 (Philadelphia, 1937), l8 5 Actual 
axe-adzes of this precise type are known from Uzbekistan (KS. t XXXIII, 1950, 152) 
and the Indus valley. 

4 Schmidt, op. tit. 

* Hamit Zubeyr Kosay, Alaca Hoyitk Katisi, 1937-9 {Ankara, 1951), pi. 135, 68-9; 
cf. Ger mania, XXXIII (1955), 240-2* and pp. 44, 183 here. 

157 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

animal sceptre-beads from Romania (p. 103); one of these came from 
an ochre grave in the Dobrudja 1 and there is another from Cis-Caucasia. 2 
Yet early Central European metallurgy cannot be proved to owe any- 
thing to the Caucasian school. To derive the great family of Transyl- 
vanian axe-adzes from the single Maikop specimen seems far-fetched. 
Nor are the later Hungarian shaft-tube axes obviously related to the 
Maikop-Novosvobodnaya type and its Middle Kuban derivatives. 
Even at Usatova no types are distinctively Caucasian, and at Mikhafl- 
ovka metal had been worked in the first settlement perhaps before 
makers of yamno pots arrived there in the third. 

Wheeled vehicles, horses, and even sheep are in a different category. 
Genuine ochre graves under round- barrows in Romania, Eastern 
Slovakia, 8 and Eastern Poland 4 do attest infiltrations of herdsmen from 
the steppes into the zone of temperate forest. But the position of these 
graves in the Danubian sequence is still undetermined. Further west 
cord-ornamented pots from barrow-burials 5 and globular amphorae 
from porthole cists have been claimed at once as indications of a wider 
expansion and as proofs that the steppe folk themselves came from 
Germany! 

For the moment it will suffice to insist that there is no evidence 
for an origin in Central Asia. Relations can indeed be traced right to 
the Yenesei. There the earliest steppe culture, termed Afanasievo, 8 
is characterized by ovoid vases resembling those from European 
yamno graves; but they seem later, being accompanied by catacomb 
types; and they accompany skeletons of Europeoid type. At the same 
time the ovoid yamno pots are strikingly like those made by the 
hunter-fisher folk of the Eurasian taiga from the Baltic to Lake Baikal. 
But these hunter-fishers were mostly Lapponoid, the Steppe herdsmen 
Europeoid. 

BATTLE-AXE CULTURES 

All the cultures that emerge round the fringe of the territories colonized 
by Dniestro-Danubian peasants on the wooded North European plain 
from the Middle Dniepr to the Lower Rhine exhibit so many common 
features that they may be designated by a single name, Battle-axe 
cultures. That does not imply that all are branches of a single culture. 
By divergences in burial rites, armament, and pottery we may dis- 

Dttia. VII-VIII (1937-40), 81-91. 

* KS., XLVI (195*), 48-33. 
' SkvtnsM Dtiiny, 64-6. 

4 Ktiega Pamtetkowa, 141-95; Swiatowit, XVI (i934'35) 7'34- 

* Shaft graves under barrows without pottery may, however, be earlier even in Saxo- 
Thuringia. Festchr. d. Rdm-Germ. Zentralmuseums, III (Mainz, 1953). 168. 

Kisetev, Drevnaya Istoriya Yuxhnoi Sibiri (Moskva, 1951)* 

158 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

tinguish a number of cultures, of which the most important are: 
(i) the Single Grave culture of Jutland with relatives in North-West 
Germany and Holland; (2) the Swedish Boat-axe culture with exten- 
sions east of the Baltic; (3) the Saxo-Thuringian or "Classical" Corded 
Ware culture; (4) the Oder culture; (5) the Middle Dniepr culture; 
and (6) the Fatyanovo groups in Central Russia. 

All these cultures were based primarily on stock-breeding and hunt- 
ing, but always combined with cereal cultivation. In all groups at 
least the earliest paves contain a single skeleton 1 buried in the con- 
tracted position. Timber linings to the grave pit have been observed in 
groups i, 2, 3, and 6. Save in groups 2, 4, and 6, the grave was normally 
surmounted by a barrow. Grave goods common to all groups include 
stone battle-axes, necklaces of bored teeth, and a pottery drinking- 
vessd that may be termed a beaker and that may everywhere be 
ornamented with cord-imp>ressions. All the battle-axes in this series 
are characterized by drooping blades that is the blade expands only 
downwards in contrast to the symmetrical splay of Baden and poly- 
gonal battle-axes. Though each group is distinguished by peculiar 
local types, in nearly every area are to be found specimens of a simple 
type, like a stone version of Fig. 63, i, and at least in Jutland these 
are stratigraphically, as well as typologically, the oldest. 1 Finally, 
on all early drooping-bladed battle-axes a longitudinal ridge imitates 
the seam of a casting and reinforces the metallic impression given by 
the splayed blade though the original model were antler. 8 

NORTH SEA-BALTIC BATTLE-AXE CULTURES 

Towards the western extension of the plain between the Vistula and 
the Rhine the pastoral societies represented by barrow cemeteries 
were juxtaposed to and contrasted with more sedentary farmers. 
After such fanners had already reached Denmark, a herding group 
who sometimes decorated their funnel-breakers (Fig. 79, 5) with cord 
imprints had cleared tracts of Denmark and Southern Sweden for 
pasture in Late Atlantic times. They do not seem to have settled 
permanently, since forests soon returned and smothered the pastures 
they had cleared. 4 A second and more drastic clearance by fire was 
made in Jutland, and this time no regeneration of forest followed. 5 
A new wave of herdsmen had colonized Jutland, and their free-grazing 

1 Save for occasional sail burials of a male and female. 

11 ( \ 933) i 2 GU>b * A ** ('944) i* Founder, Boot**., 56. 
(X934) 130-67. 



. 

4 Troels-Smith, Aarbtgtr (1953), P- 178, below. 
* Troels-Smith in Mathiaasen, Dyvholmen (1942), 175-6. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

stock ate up the young tree seedlings, Arch&ologkally these graziers 
are known only by little cemeteries of barrows, and so they are termed 
the Single Grave folk. 

In Jutland the Single Grave folk 1 replaced all remnants of the 
Gudenaa hunter-fishers and came to occupy the interior of the peninsula 
to the exclusion of the Megalith-builders, but never engaged in that 
commerce the results of which allow the several phases of Megalithic 
culture to be arranged in the general scheme of prehistoric chronology. 
Contact between the two groups was, however, sufficiently frequent to 
allow the chronology for the Northern Stone Age, set forth on p. 176, 
to be applied also to the Battle-axe cultures. A reliable chronology of 
these cultures' own development can in turn be based upoirsuccessive 
interments under the same barrow, as on the Pontic steppes. 

The oldest graves (Bottom Graves or Undergrave), timber-lined 
pits* dug in virgin soil and designed to hold a single contracted corpse, 
contain the finest battle-axes (often very metallic looking) and beakers 
with an S profile decorated with cord imprints round the neck (Fig. 83). 
Next, in graves on the ground surface (Ground Graves or Bundgrave), 
large enough to hold an extended skeleton, the axes deteriorate and 
the beakers are decorated with incised herring-bones. Finally, the 
Upper Graves (Overgrave) in the body of the mound contain flower- 
pot vases decorated with rouletted zig-zags, degenerate axes, and even 
flint daggers such as are found in the latest megalithic tombs. They 
denote the fusion of the two cultures, with that of the Battle-axe folk 
triumphant. 

The furniture of the Upper Graves shows that the latest phase of 
the Battle-axe culture in Denmark falls into Northern period IV. The 
prior development represented by only two or three interments in the 
same barrow cannot cover a vast number of years indeed perhaps 
only three generations. But it begins already during Northern Illb or 
IIIc.* 

In Sweden 4 separate graves containing contracted skeletons, but 
not surmounted by barrows, are contrasted to the collective tombs 
of the agricultural megalith-builders and to the extended burials of 
a native food-gathering population. They are furnished at first with 
battle-axes, gouges of flint or greenstone, facetted polishing stones, 
and shallow beakers decorated round the neck with cord imprints. 
The battle-axes (Fig. 83), termed boat-axes, are always provided with 



1 Brendsted, Danmarks, I, 215 ft.; Aarfoger (1944). 

1 Sometimes encircled by an annular ditch, Aarbigcr \ 

9 Glob. Aarbeger (1944), 207, implicitly dates the beginning to M.N.IIb (Ilia), Becker, 

rt. Arch., XXV (1954), "4 * " "" " " 

4 Forssander, Die schwtdisck* . 



!.. XXV (I934J, ?I4. "7- explicitly to M.N.IH (IIIc). 
BootaxtkuUur (Lund, 1933). 



160 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

a shaft-tube which gives them a very metallic look. Indeed, a copper 
boat-axe was found in East Russia, but the tube might be suggested 
by the tine stump through which the shaft-hole of some antler axes 



CANMARK- 






SVCRIGC 



JQSMiA-SKCOCT 






FIG. 83. Pottery and battle-axes from the Single Graves of Jutland (left) 
and Sweden (right). After Fv, 1922 (^). 

has been bored. Pottery of this type has been found associated with 
that in vogue about the middle of the Passage Grave phase (Northern 
IIIc), while later graves containing rouletted vases like the bottom 
row in Fig. 83 admittedly belong to Northern IV. Very similar graves 
with just the same kind of battle-axes are found in Norway 1 and on 

1 Hinsch, "Yngre steinalders stridsokskulturer i Norge", Bergen Universitets 
Arbok (1954), No. i. 

161 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

the opposite coasts of the Baltic in Esthonia and Finland. The dis- 
tribution of these graves, confined to South-Western Finland with a 
sharp frontier between them and the encampments of the native 
hunter-fishers, leaves no doubt that the Boat-axe folk were intruders. 1 

On the heathlands of North- West Germany and Holland 2 many 
barrows (two dated by radio carbon to 2480 and 2240 B.C.) covering 
Single Graves reveal an extension of the Battle-axe cultures to the 
English Channel. Many barrows are demarcated by a ring" of upright 
posts; some, that may belong to period IV, cover small mortuary 
houses 8 and so may rank as chieftains' tombs. The earlier graves are 
furnished with battle-axes akin to Jutland types, but less finely worked, 
and S beakers, bearing cord or herring-bone ornament, and exceptionally 
also with amphorae of Saxo-Thuringian form. But the Battle-axe folk 
here came into contact with local Megalith-builders (p. 192) and Bell- 
beaker folk from the west and developed hybrid cultures. S beakers are 
not seldom found with the later burials in megalithic tombs; from the 
Bell-beaker group the Battle-axe folk took over their bow and the 
wrist-guards appropriate thereto and even adopted the roulette 
technique for ornamenting their beakers and spread the designs in 
zones over the whole vase-surface in the style regularly applied on 
Bell-beakers. Nevertheless, the Battle-axe component remained 
dominant in the resultant fusion. 

Despite their intimate contact with the metal-using westerners, the 
Battle-axe folk in North- West Germany and Holland remained con- 
tent with a neolithic equipment throughout period IV. They managed 
at times to import Danish amber and English jet, but failed to secure 
regular supplies of metal. However, a flat axe of copper was found with 
an S beaker in a cremation grave at Sande near Hamburg. 4 This grave 
incidentally forms part of a regular urnfield which is perhaps the 
earliest example of such a cremation cemetery in Northern Europe, 
though no earlier than the Bronze Age urnfields of Kisapostag in 
Hungary. 

Battle-axe cultures arrive later on the Danish islands where the 
Megalith-builders were firmly established, and are represented prin- 
cipally by intrusive elements in late Passage Graves and only rarely by 
true separate graves. 5 The battle-axes approximate to the later Jutland 

1 SM. (1952), 22-5; cf. SM YA., XXXII, i, 152 ff. For Esthonia, see Gerasimov, 
Litsa, 396-9; the skulls closely resemble those from Pontic yamno graves. 

1 van Gififen, Die Bauart der Einxelgr fiber; Stampfuss, Jungneol. Kulturen; NNU., II 
(1928), 20; Albrecht, "Die Htigelgraber der jiingeren Steinzeit in Westfalen", Westfalen, 
XIX (1934). "2 &; Glaabergen, PalaoMstona, V, VI. 

See e.g. Qffa, I (1936), 62-77. 4 Kill-Festschrift (1936), 79- 

* Aarbtger (1936), 145 ff,, for parallels from Holstein, see Mannus, XXVII (1935), 60; 
cf. Brondsted, Danmarhs, I, 269-75, and Acta Arch., XXV, 74-6. 

162 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

or even Swedish types. The funerary pots are squat S beakers, recurving 
at the rim and ornamented all over with rouletted zig-zags or wavy 
ribbons executed with a comb, dearly inspired by the Bell-beaker 
style. Indeed, the Battle-axe folk who reached the islands probably 
brought with them the Bell-beaker culture's bows and wrist-guards 
and arrow-straighteners. 

SAXO-THURINGIAN CORDED WARE AND ITS CONGENERS 

Food-gatherers undoubtedly survived from mesolithic times on the 
heaths and boulder clays of Central Germany and on the sandy lands 
farther east fringing and interrupting the 16ss. But here Battle-axe 






'*. v /t 

FIG. 84. Saxo-Thuringian corded ware 

cultures represent neither the first food-producers those were the 
Danubians (pp. 105, 118) nor yet the sole result of the acculturation 
of residual food-gatherers or of the internal development of Danubian 
society itself. The most important the Saxo-Thuringian to whose 
pottery alone the term Corded Ware was originally applied emerges 
in Central Germany and Bohemia as only one among several groups, 
all more pastoral and more warlike than any Danubians. 

Its distinctive cemeteries of barrows or flat graves are concentrated 
in the Saale basin, but extend south-east into Central Bohemia and 
westward to the Rhineland and even Central Switzerland* While 
common enough on the Idss, Saxo-Thuringian barrows are still more 

163 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

prominent on heaths and uplands, as if hunting and stock-breeding 
had been the foundations of the economy, Yet the cemeteries are too 
extensive to belong to nomads, and grain imprints on vases 1 prove 
some sort of cultivation. 

Characteristic of Saxo-Thuringian corded ware is the conjunction of 
amphorae (Fig, 84, 1-3) with the usual beakers which here have an 
ovoid body contrasted with a long straight neck (Fig. 84, 4-7). Ornament 
is effected, as usual, on the earlier vases by cord impressions which 
then later give place to stamped herring-bone patterns (Fig. 84, 3). 
Equally distinctive is the faceted battle-axe (Fig. 85, i), though this 





FIG. 85. i and 2, Thuringian faceted battle-axe (-J); 3, Silesian battle-axe (J). 

is not often found in graves and then not with the earliest pottery. 2 
Its peculiar form may show some influence from spiked club-heads 8 
of mesolithic ancestry (the Vogtland type), but stray copper battle- 
axes exhibit much the same form 4 and the influence of antler weapons 
is admitted. Actual antler axes, asymmetrical stone axes like Danubian 
"ploughshares", almond-shaped celts of flint or greenstone mounted 
as adzes (one was found thus mounted in an antler haft) and occasional 
spheroid mace-heads or rough flint daggers also served as weapons. 

Small rings of copper and even spirals of poor bronze sometimes 
served as ornaments. But though these were allegedly made from local 



jsr. t xiv, 30; xxrv, 115. 

M*nnu$ t XXV (1933), 271-82. 



164 



* Forasander, Bootoxtkultur, 146. 
4 E.g. Danube, fig. 92. 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

ores, 1 the SaxoThuringians remained content with a neolithic equip- 
ment and armoury. The best evidences for trade of any kind are a 
carving in Sammland style and a few other amber beads. Discs 
made from local shells but ornamented with a cross 2 constitute the most 
distinctive additions to the usual bored-teeth necklaces. One man, 
buried with a herring-bone beaker and a tanged copper spear-head 
or dagger, had worn a hammer pin of Pontic type as a head ornament. 8 

Normally the Saxo-Thuringians were interred in simple pit graves, 
rarely in wood-lined shafts, by no means always covered by barrows. 
North of the Unstrut, modest megalithic cists, measuring up to 3*5 m. 
by 2-25 m., were often used as collective sepulchres. 4 The practice was 
presumably borrowed from adjacent Northern or Horgen megalith- 
builders (p. 190), but might have been inspired from the Kuban* since 
some are divided by a porthole slab as in Fig. 81, I, Trephined skulls 
occur in both Central German and Bohemian graves. In some tombs, 
mostly late and more often in Western than in Central Germany, the 
bodies have been burned. Exceptionally the cremated remains lay in 
wooden mortuary houses. 6 The latter prove that some Saxo-Thuringian 
groups were led by chiefs and that the herdsmen lived in substantial 
houses with at least a porch in addition to a living-room. 

The later phases of the Saxo-Thuringian culture admittedly last 
into period IV, and grave-groups 7 establish synchronisms with Globular 
Amphorae and Walternienburg 2 in period III. A beginning in period II 
might be deduced from corded ware sherds in Danubian village-sites 
and faceted battle-axes associated in hoards with shoe-last celts, but 
the associations are not very reliable. 

Westward, burials under barrows accompanied by corded beakers 
and amphorae and faceted battle-axes document an extension of Saxo- 
Thuringian culture to the Rhine. Beyond it in Switzerland, in the latest 
occupation levels of the neolithic Alpine lake-dwellings, sherds of 
corded ware mark the replacement of the Middle Neolithic Horgen 
population or the superposition thereon of a pastoral aristocracy such 
as we met at Usatova. Eastward, too, barrow-burials if accompanied 
by cord-ornamented vases that could be derived from amphorae like 
Fig, 84, 1-3, are likewise attributed to colonists from Saxo-Thuringia. 

1 NbL f. d. V. t X (1934), 146: XIV, 73; Witter, Die AUcste Erxgewinnung in nord- 
german. Lebenskrris. 

PA.. XL (1934-35). 21. 
Behrens, JMV., XXXVI (1952), 5?-$5- 
Mannus, XXVIII (1936), 363; Nbl.f. d. V., IX (1933). 93- 
Forssander, Bootaxtkultur, 164; ArsberM. (i937'38), 38- 

Germania, VI (1922), no (Haldorf nearCassel); Mannus, VI, Erg.-Bd., 214 (Sarmens- 
torf, Switzerland). 

f Altschles.. V (1934), 37J Mannus, XXVIII, 376. 

165 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

So in Sammland 1 are graves furnished with amphorae and beakers, and 
in a couple of cases with bone hammer-pins, while at least three faceted 
battle-axes are reported from the province. Here corded ware is found 
also in the substantial houses of farmers who combined cultivation 
and the breeding of cattle, sheep, and pigs with hunting, fowling, and 
fishing with bone harpoons. 2 But with the supposedly Saxo-Thuringian 
pots go other vases that may represent an East Baltic version of the 
Erteb0Ue or First Northern culture. 




FIG. 86. Zlota pottery. After Koztowski. 

On the Polish loss lands within the great elbow of the Vistula, 
already intensively colonized by Danubians by period II, corded 
beakers and amphorae are associated with Oder flower-pots, handled 
cups, funnel-necked beakers, and globular amphorae that elsewhere 
denote distinct groups, in the Ztota culture (Fig. 86) . 8 Extensive 
cemeteries of contracted skeletons, generally in flat graves, sometimes 

1 Killian, Die Haffktistenkultur (Bonn, 1955). * Altschles. t V, 62. 

1 Childe, Danube^ 152; Kozlowski, Mhdsa. 66; WA. t VIII, 98; IX, 34. 

166 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

in pit-caves, mark the population as sedentary. Ritual burials of cattle, 
pigs, and horses demonstrate the economic importance of these domestic 
animals. Battle-axes are not very often included among the grave goods, 
but such as occur -are typologically early. 

In Eastern Moravia 1 one barrow at NSmetice covered a shaft grave 
containing an amphora and a beaker, and another barrow one furnished 
with a faceted battle-axe. But other graves here, as also at Drevohostice 
and Prusinovice, contained battle-axes of Silesian type (Fig. 85, 3) and 
keeled mugs with cylindrical necks and strap handles derived from the 
Jordanova group; others again Bell-beakers. 

Then in East Galicia 1 some barrows, girt with a circular trench and 
heaped after the black earth's formation and therefore later than 
those mentioned on p. 166 above cover graves containing corded 
amphorae and beakers and copper trinkets. So do the flat graves of the 
Tomasz6w culture 8 forming large cemeteries and representing a sedent- 
ary population extending across the Carpathians into the Nitra valley 
of Slovakia. 4 These burials are furnished with segmented fayence 
beads like those from the Tisza-Maros region (p. 128) and occasional 
round-heeled triangular daggers. The Tomasz6w cemeteries therefore 
extend ovfer period IV. 

Still farther east the corded ware from Usatova (p. 145) has been 
claimed as evidence that the pastoral aristocracy there superimposed 
on Tripolye peasants was of Saxo-Thuringian extraction! Even the 
Middle Dniepr culture 5 has been regarded as an offshoot of the Saxo- 
Thuringian. "Amphorae" do no doubt occur in the urnfield of Sofiivka 6 ; 
among the grave goods associated with 141 cremations are also stone 
battle-axes, flat axes and daggers of copper, flint celts and sickles, and 
vases painted in late Tripolye style (as at Usatova). Barrows of this 
culture, however, do not seem to have contained amphorae; the beakers 
are sometimes ovoid as inyamno graves (Fig. 79, 3), more often basket- 
shaped (Fig. 79, 2). 

THE ODER AND MARSCHWITZ CULTURES 

On the other hand, between these alleged outposts of Saxo-Thuringian 
culture and its centre on the Saale-Elbe intervene other groups dis- 
tinguished by corded ware and battle-axes of quite different forms. 

Pravek, V (1909), 56-130; Real., s.v. Drevohostice. 

Ksifga Pamietkowa, 141-9; Swiatowit, XVI (i934"35) "7-441 Sulimirski, "Die 
schnurkeramischen Kulturen", 3-5. 

Kostrzewski, Prekistoria, 183; Swiatowit, XIX (1946-47), 105 fif. 

Material from 300 graves at Nitra, unpublished. 

Briusov, Oterhi, 215-20; KS. t XVI (1947). 

Arkh. Pam., IV (1952), 112-21; Arkhertogiya, Kiev, VIII (1953). 94' 101 * 

167 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The Oder culture in Brandenburg shares with the Saxo-Thuringian the 
usual beaker, but is distinguished by the absence of amphorae and 
the presence of cylindrical "flower-pot" vases, sometimes with ledge- 
handles. 1 Such are found in pit graves, occasionally under barrows and 
at least once containing red ochre, but also in slab cists of Central 
German type. Other grave goods include small battle-axes, flint adzes 
with a pointed-oval cross-section, and Danubian "plough-shares" as 
in Saxo-Thuringia. While occasionally associated with Globular 
Amphorae or Walternienburg 3-5 pottery (p. 193), a few bronze orna- 
ments and Scandinavian flint daggers 1 show that the Oder culture 
lasted well into period IV. 

In the Marschwitz culture of Silesia and Moravia this persistence is 
more amply demonstrated. The graves contain flower-pots of Oder 
form, but these are accompanied by pouched jugs, decorated with 
cord-impressions, but of early Ungtice shapes (Fig. 72, i). With them 
go battle-axes made of Sobotka serpentine 8 (Fig. 85, 3), rather like 
the Fatyanovo form but also wrist-guards, derived from the Beaker 
folk, and even bronze ornaments. The whole group occupies economic- 
ally as well as geographically an intermediate position between the 
Bronze Age Un&ician culture of Bohemia and the still neolithic culture 
of the middle and lower Oder. 

THE FATYANOVO CULTURE* 

In the forest zone of Central Russia the first reliable indications of the 
neolithic economy are afforded by bones of domestic cattle, swine, 
sheep, goats, and horses, and grain-rubbers from graves of the Fatya- 
novo cycle of cultures. These have been divided into three local 
groups which differ in age as well as in spatial distribution, by 
Kritsova-Grakova. 6 The earliest is the Moscow group on the Oka and 
Kliazma, next the Yaroslav group on the Upper Volga to which the 
eponymous cemetery belongs. The Cuva group on the lower Kama 
near the confluence of that river and the Oka with the Volga should 
begin latest. 

The graves, never surmounted by barrows and normally containing 
one contracted skeleton, rarely a male and female together, occasionally 
cremations, 6 form cemeteries of half a dozen to a score, and occur both 

1 Sprockhoff, Mark-Brandenburg, 60 if., 160; Mannus, XXVIII, 374. 

* Forssander, Ostskandinav., 60; Btthm, BronMtxcit Mark-Brandenburg, 30. 
PrtegA., VIII (1949), 256. 

4 Tretyakov, IGAIMK., 106, 126-8; SA., II 32; cf. FM. (1924), i ff. Hftusler, 
Wissensckaftliche Zts. d Martin-Luther University, Halle-Wittenberg, V (1955-56), H. i 
(Arbeiten aus d. Inst.f. Vor- u. FrUhgesckickto, 5) gives a convenient German summary 
of the Russian literature. 

* KS. f XVI (1947), 22-32. Problemy GAIMK. (1934)* Noa. 11-12. 

168 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

in the low-lying basins, long occupied by the hunter-fishera, and also 
on the uplands right to the Volga-Oka watershed, where the gatherers 
had never settled. This extension is itself a symbol of the new economy 
since the uplands are better suited to tillage and grazing than the 
chilly vales, 1 but it was possible only with aid of the polished flint celts 
that occur alike in men's and women's graves, 8 since the new territory 
was densely wooded. At the same time bones of pike and teeth of bear, 
wolf, fox, lynx, and reindeer, as well as shells, used for ornaments, 
attest a persistence of the old economy of the Forest. 

But now cattle-raising provided a prize for more serious warfare 
than the hunter-fishers had indulged in, and so the graves are furnished 
with an armoury of weapons strange to the older forest dwelling-places. 




I 2 

FIG. 87. Fatyanovo battle-axe and Finnish boat-axe (J). 

Stone battle-axes accompany every male interment. The finest, the 
classical Fatyanovo axes (Fig. 87, i) are confined to the Yaroslav 
group; some of the rest can be treated as degenerations of these, 8 but 
at least one, from the Trusovo cemetery in the Moscow 4 group, belongs 
to the heeled type proper to the Catacomb culture of the steppes. 
Another grave contained a pair of arrow-shaft straighteners, 5 yet 
another a Pontic hammer-pin. In chieftains' graves in the Yaroslav 
and CuvaS groups copper shaft-hole axes accompany or replace the 
stone weapons, but miniature clay battle-axes were buried with 
children in the Yaroslav group. 6 

Flint strike-a-lights with tinder too were sometimes 7 buried with the 
dead. Perforated day discs, some 5*5 cm. in diameter, 8 are doubtless 
model wheels and attest familiafity with wheeled vehicles. 

i 5,4. , II, 33-5* * TGIM., XII (1941), 125. 

As by Ayrapaa, ESA. t VIII, 16-23- 4 SA IV 3<>2. * SA., XXII, *2o. 

TGIM., VIII, 63. Showing that the models from Mikhalic and Tripolye sites are 
not necessarily ritual objects! 

' TGIM., XII, 132. ' SA., VI, 79. 

169 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The numerous pots tend to be globular, provided with flat bases, 
sometimes ornamented, and distinct necks, but never with handles; 
so none could be called an amphora! In the Moscow group early vases 
are ornamented with cord impressions (Fig. 88, i); elsewhere combs 
or other stamps were used. 




FIG. 88. Fatyanovo pottery of the Moscow, Yaroslav, and divas' groups. 

Peaceful if irregular commerce brought the Fatyanovo warriors 
occasional amber beads, 1 silver earrings, disc-pendants, lock-rings, cuff 
armlets, and neck-rings of copper. 

In the Vaulovo cemetery two rich graves, each containing male and 
female skeletons buried together and furnished with copper shaft-hole 
axes, surely belong to chieftains. Graves in the same cemetery, con- 
taining respectively the skeleton of a boar and that of a kid, suggest 
to Krafciov* the totems of two clans. 

A due to the relative position of the Central Russian cultures in 
the general sequence is given by the Catacomb types; they establish 
a partial synchronism between the Moscow group and the Catacomb 
phase on the Steppes. Kritsova-Grakqva 8 uses the cuff-armlets from 
MytiSfcensk to establish a synchronism between the Yaroslav group 
and UnStice; though the agreement is not exact, Danubian IV should 
be an upper limit for the Yaroslav group. 

The copper axes from the Yaroslav cemeteries approximate closely 
to those included in the hoards found at Seima and Galid 4 (Fig. 89). 
These presumably represent southern imports intercepted by the 
Fatyanovo population that must have controlled the fur trade so 
important in the first millennium B.C. But both hoards contain types 
that would be more appropriate to the srubno phase in the Pontic 
sequence. But by that time the CuvaS version of the Fatyanovo 
culture was developing into the fully metal-using AbaSevo culture. 

' ' 

170 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

Bader and other Russian prehistorians 1 in the 'thirties regarded the 
Fatyanovo culture as a development of the native culture of local 
hunter-fishers to exploit the new sources of food made available by 
the introduction of cereals and domestic stock. These were admittedly 
introduced from outside into the woodland zone of Central Russia. 




FIG. 89. The GaliS hoard, 1-4 (J). 



Anthropometric studies of the Fatyanovo populations by Trofimova* 
have subsequently shown that the cultivators and stock-breeders 
themselves must be immigrants; for the skulls, Europeoid or Medi- 
terranean, are in sharp contrast to those of the autochthonous hunter- 
fishers, which are Lapponoid. Briusov 8 proposes to derive the Moscow 
group at least from the Middle Dniepr culture. But, after all, the 
origin of the latter is not at all clear, and Briusov himself admits the 
possibility of a more western origin for the Yaroslav group. German 
and many other Western prehistorians, emphasizing and perhaps 
exaggerating -the similarities of the classic Fatyanovo pots to Saxo- 
Thuringian and Globular Amphorae, have thence deduced an invasion 
of Central Russia by warriors from Central Germany, Scandinavia, or 
Sammland. 4 But of course the Fatyanovo cultures are not mere trans- 
plantations of any one of the known western or southern Battle-axe 
cultures and "amphorae" are not necessarily derived from Saxo- 
Thuringia. The Fatyanovo battle-axes derive from East Poland. 6 



SA.. II, 30 ff.; Ill, 38 ; IGAIMK., 106, 100 ff. 

Sovietskaya Etnografiya (194$), 3. 7*1 (i93<>). 3. 37- 

OUrki, 94. 

E.g. Ayrftpaa. ESA. t VIII, 101-10. 

Sulimirksi, PPS., XXI, 118-22. 

171 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

ORIGIN AND SIGNIFICANCE OF THE BATTLE-AXE CULTURES 

The cultures of several peoples that in historical times spoke Indo- 
European languages could plausibly be derived from those described 
in the preceding pages. The list could be further enlarged if cord- 
ornamented sherds from Greece, Macedonia, and Thrace (pp. 71, 96), 
and battle-axgs from Troy and the Caucasus were accepted as evidence 
for kindred cultures in the Balkans and Anatolia. Hence, if the several 
cultures considered in this chapter be all provincial variants of one 
single culture, the latter could be identified with that of the hypothetical 
Indo-European parent stock, "Aryans" or "Wiros". 

Many prehistorians have in fact tried to derive all he distinct 
cultures from one primary culture whose expansion and local divergence 
should account for the emergence of the several distinct cultures that 
alone are presented in the archaeological record. By 1910 Kossinna 1 had 
argued that the postulated primary culture developed in Jutland 
through the acculturation of Maglemosians by Erteb011e immigrants 
and megalith-builders, and Aberg elaborated his thesis in igi8. 2 From 
Jutland the bearers of the resultant neolithic culture the Single Grave 
culture would have spread across Central Europe to the ^Egean and 
the Caucasus. 

Danish prehistorians, however, are unanimous in regarding the 
Single Grave culture as intrusive in Jutland. Even German pre- 
historians, since the "Versailles Diktat" detached South Jutland from 
the Reich, have preferred to transfer the cradle of the Single Grave and 
other Battle-axe cultures, and so of the Indo-Europeans, to the more 
thoroughly Germanic soil of Saxo-Thuringia! 3 There should be the 
focus from which the warriors radiated not only to the Balkans and 
the Ukraine but also to Sweden, Denmark, and Switzerland! 

On the contrary, near fifty years ago J. L. Myres suggested reversing 
Kossinna's migrations and deriving the Single Grave, Saxo-Thuringian, 
and other Battle-axe cultures from the Pontic steppes. Borkovskij 4 
pointed out how well the ovoid beakers from yamno graves could serve 
as prototypes for the Central and North European vases. Forssander 5 
inclined to think that the makers of Globular Amphorae (infra, p. 195), 
coming from the Caucasus and bringing with them the idea of the 
porthole cist, affected the development of the Central and North 

1 "Ursprung und Verbreitung der Urfinnen und Urindogermanen", Mannus, I -I I. 
1 Das nordische Kulturgebiet (1918). 

* Most recently by Killian, Die Haffkiistenkultur (Bonn, 1955), who relies, in addition 
to battle-axes, on the skeuomorphic pattern impressed or painted on amphorae. 

4 "Snurova keramika na Ukrajine," Obzor IX (1930), cf. PA. (1933). 

* Bootaxtkultur, 174, 213. 

172 



CULTURE TRANSMISSION OVER EURASIAN PLAIN? 

European cultures, which would still have been rooted in the Saxo- 
Thuringian. The discovery of Pontic hammer pins in a Danish passage 
grave of Northern IIIc and in more or less contemporary Corded Ware 
graves in Central Europe and Sammland, has provided some concrete, 
if by no means conclusive, evidence in favour of a Pontic origin. Still 
the Ochre Grave culture, the oldest concretely recognizable on the 
steppes, on the one hand does not exhibit even in germ all the dis- 
tinctive traits common to the Battle-axe cultures, and on the other 
hand contains elements not replicated in any of them. In a word, the 
Pontic steppes can offer a concrete ancestor for all no more than 
Jutland or Saxo-Thuringia. 

A satisfactory explanation of the distribution of our battle-axes, of 
cord-ornamented vases, and of amphorae decorated like Figs. 42 and 
84 in Central Europe, Central Russia, Greece, and the Troad, would 
be provided by Sulimirski's postulate of an early herding culture in 
the woodlands between the Vistula and the Upper Dniepr. The hypo- 
thetical cattle-breeders would, Sulimirski 1 suggests, have used wood- 
and-leather vessels that, translated into clay, assumed the form and 
decoration of the amphorae. They expanded first to Central Russia, 
the East Baltic, and the Eastern Balkans, but to Jutland and Saxo- 
Thuringia only after adopting the practice of barrow-burial from 
Ochre Grave pastoralists who had advanced as far west as the head- 
waters of the Vistula, if not farther (p. 158). The main defect of Suli- 
mirski's account is that the assumed East Polish-Byelo-russian culture 
is still not directly documented archaeologically. But, after all, such 
documentation will be hard to find (p. 148), and the presumptive 
cradle-land is virtually unexplored. 

Marxist prehistorians in the U.S.S.R. have rejected any explanation 
of the agreements between the several Battle-axe cultures in terms of 
migration or conquest. They would result from parallel or convergent 
developments of local societies in accordance with general laws of 
social-economic progress. In temperate Europe, with a neolithic equip- 
ment, pastoralism combined with hunting was the most productive 
rural economy, and with pastoralism are associated a patriarchal 
social organization, differentiation of status, and warfare. The Battle- 
axe cultures would represent "pastoral tribes separated out from the 
mass of agricultural barbarians". In a remarkable article Kritevskil 1 
showed how many of the features of the Battle-axe cultures of Danubian 
III even cord ornament on vases and ochre in graves were explicitly 
foreshadowed in Danubian cemeteries and settlements of the preceding 

i PPS., XXI (1955), 108 ff. 

''IndogermanskilvoprosarkheologifieskirazreSennyi", IGAIMK., 100(1933). 

173 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

period. Some such account has the incomparable advantage of economy; 
it makes minimal draughts on undemonstrable assumptions and un- 
documented entities. It is not incompatible with the belief that "the 
battle-axe" i.e. the copper translation of an antler axe (Fig. 87, 2-3) 
and "wheeled vehicles" concretely the idea of making wooden discs 
and mounting local sledges upon them were diffused. Only dogmatists 
need assume that the battle-axes were brandished by conquering 
hordes or that the waggons carried migrating tribes. Yet human agents 
were inevitably involved. In neither case do "traders" fit the bill. We 
might postulate behind the known Battle-axe and Steppe cultures, a 
loose continuum of scattered groups of herdsmen or indeed of hunter- 
fishers; for our tangible pastoral groups might have ariseft from the 
one-sided acculturation of savages, as well as from specialization 
among barbarians. Seasonal shifts of pasture or hunting expeditions 
would guarantee sufficient intercourse between the several groups for 
the transmission of ideas. Such transmission is established for the 
period of the fully differentiated Battle-axe and Steppe cultures. 
Perhaps it should be postulated earlier to explain the association of 
wheeled vehicles with chieftains' funerals and the spread of plough 
cultivation in Central Europe. 



174 



CHAPTER X 
THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

THE coveted amber of Jutland, whose magic virtue was appreciated 
as far away as Greece by the sixteenth century, attracted a commerce 
which . brought fresh ideas and foreign manufactures to Denmark. 
Thus stimulated, the local farmers developed an exceptionally rich 
culture on the fertile morainic soils left by the recent retreat of the 
ice-sheets. At the same time extensive peat bogs provide unusually 
favourable conditions for the preservation of relics and for the recon- 






FIG. 90. Northern flint axes arranged according to Montelius' typology. 
By permission of Trustees of British Museum. 

struction of the environment in which they were made and used. 
Finally, since the beginning of the nineteenth century Swedish, and 
still more Danish, antiquities have been systematically studied by 
successive generations of gifted investigators. By 1812 Thomsen had 
established the system of the Three Ages, still used by all prehistorians, 
and had divided the prehistoric period of the North into Stone, Bronze, 
and Iron Ages. By 1870 Worsaae had distinguished an Earlier and a Later 
Stone Age that subsequently became Mesolithic and Neolithic respec- 
tively. Finally, Montelius divided the Northern Neolithic Age into 
four periods Neolithic I, II, III, and IV based on the typology of 
flint axes (Fig. 90) and megalithic tombs. 

175 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



During the 19205 the existence of Montelius' Neolithic I as an inde- 
pendent period was seriously questioned; for it was then represented 
solely by flint axes with pointed butts, found without context. The 
remaining periods were designated by the names of the megalithic 
tombs by which Montelius had characterized them Dolmen (dyss, 
dos), Passage Grave (ganggrift, jcettestuer) , and Stone Cist (hdllkist) 
periods. But since 1945 Danish and Swedish prehistorians 1 have 
adopted a triple division into Early, Middle, and Late Neolithic (EN, 
MN, and LN), each subdivided. The subdivision of Early Neolithic was 
originally based on the typology of the funnel-beaker the most dis- 
tinctive vase in the dominant culture which is usually called after it, 
not at all euphoniously, the Funnel-Beaker culture (Tfichterbecher or 
Tragtbagre kultur abbreviated TRB culture). But the subdivision 
of Early Neolithic had in practice the effect of re-establishing in 
somewhat different form a pre-Dolmen phase equivalent to Montelius 1 
Neolithic I. Hence in the sequel his numeration will be retained albeit 
for the sake of brevity alone. Its correlation with other nomenclatures 
can be effected with the aid of the following table: 



Montelius 


TRB 


Tombs 


Flint Axes, etc. 


Northern Neolithic 

I A 
1 B 


Early Neolithic 
A 
B 

C 




Pointed-butted 


II 


Dolmens 


Thin-butted 


a 

III b 

c 

d 


Middle Neolithic 
I 
II 
III 
IV 


Passage Graves 


Thick-butted 


IV 


Late Neolithic 


Stone Cists 


Daggers 



Montelius 1 typological system had been worked out on the basis of 
closed finds from the West Baltic coasts and is still substantially valid 
there, though no one now supposes that Dolmen, Passage Grave, and 
Long Cist mark stages in a self-contained evolution. But his disciples 
and imitators have clumsily extended his system beyond the regions 
for which it was devised and have used it as a frame of reference into 
which cultural phenomena in Central Europe, South Russia, and even 
Turkestan must be fitted! From a fog of misconceptions and distortions 
they have evoked a "Nordic myth". The "Nordic" cultures, crystallized 

1 Cf. P. V. Glob, Danske Oldsager, II (Copenhagen, 1952). 
176 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

in Montelius' II, would have expanded in periods III and IV till they 
reached the Balkans, Anatolia, and the Caucasus. 1 These fantasies were 
never accepted in Denmark and have recently been emphatically 
rejected in Sweden and even Germany. An explicit refutation here is 
accordingly superfluous. None the less, it will be convenient to base 
our survey on the Danish and Swedish record which is incomparably 
more complete, though not necessarily longer or originally richer, than 
that from the Continent. 

THE EARLY NEOLITHIC PERIOD OF THE WEST BALTIC 

The first fanners to reach Denmark are represented by the bones of 
cows and sheep or goats and by sherds bearing impressions of one-corn, 
emmer, club, and dwarf wheats and of barley 8 found in several votive 
deposits, in certain "Erteb011e kitchen middens", and in one or two 
pure domestic sites, all of the Atlantic phase. In all cases the farmers' 
archaeological personality is expressed in flat-bottomed funnel-beakers 
and amphorae of Becker's A group. Troels-Smith 8 insists that these 
pots are made by the same technique of ring-building as the standard 
Erteb011e jars and lamps, though their walls are thinner, and are 
associated with the latter in many kitchen-middens. Hence he con- 
cludes that the Erteb011e culture of Late Atlantic times was in fact 
the culture of the A group of First Northern Neolithic farmers. 

Becker, 4 on the contrary, in 1954 described a pure assemblage of 
A types including flat clay discs or baking plates from a site that 
was not a normal kitchen-midden (Fig. 91). So he maintains the con- 
trast between intrusive neolithic farmers and survivors of the older 
mesolithic population of hunter-fishers. In 1956, therefore, it would be 
premature for an English author to try and define too precisely the 
economy and the stone industries of the earliest or A group of neolithic 
farmers recognized on Danish soil. So much at least is certain. 

About 2600 B.C. (according to a radio-carbon estimation) A farmers 
were cultivating cereals (including Triticum monococcum and the 
hexaploid club wheat Triticum compactum) and breeding domestic 
stock. The latter were not allowed to graze freely but were tethered 
by day and stalled at night, being fed during winter on leaves a small 
decline in elm pollen, coinciding with the farmers' appearance, has 
been attributed to the provision of winter fodder. 6 In the kitchen- 

1 E.g. N. Aberg in Dos nordische Kulturgebict, and Reinerth, Chronologic derjUngwn 
Steinxeit. 

1 Helbaek in Aarb0ger (1954), 202-4. 

8 Aarb0ger (1953), 5-62. Becker, Aarfoger (i954 published in 1956), 127-97. 

* Aarb0g*r (1953), 16-21. 

177 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

middens, bones of game and fish still predominate. A few polished 
flint celts with pointed butts (Fig. 90, i) are the only notable additions 
to the mesolithic stone industry, 

No graves attributable to phase A have been identified, but votive 
deposits in bogs give some indication of the current ideology. They 
include beside human and animal bones presumably from sacrifices 




FIG* 91, A-type funnel-beakers (bottom), amphora, "baking plate," etc. 

After Becker. 



amber beads, the magic value of the resin having been recognized 
even in Boreal times. 

Amphorae and funnel-beakers like the Danish A type have been 
found in North-Eastern Germany and Poland. 1 They may mean that 
the First Northern culture in its A form extended over a wide area 
of the wooded plain south of the Baltic. 

In Denmark these cultivators with their tethered stock were followed 
by other fanners with larger herds who burnt wide tracts of forest for 
pasture and plots and cultivated thereon emmer wheat and barley. 
A layer of ashes in the bogs, followed by a sharp decline in all tree 
pollen, marks the arrival of these B-group farmers. 2 Doubtless their 



1 Aarbegtr (i947) 205 ff.; (i934) l68 -9- 

1 Iversen, "Landnam i Danmarks Stenalder", 



178 



Dansk. GeoL Under sog., R. II, No. 66 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 



flocks and hards grazed freely in the clearings, but their masters cannot 
have remained very long at any one place since in time the forest 
regenerated. Nor did they drive out their precursors. At Havnelev 1 in 
Zealand a settlement of B farmers is marked by numerous rubbish 
pits. In them the bones of cows, sheep or goats, and pigs preponderate 
over those of game animals. Polished thin-butted axes were used side 
by side with the mesolithic flake axes. The blade tools were inferior to 
the Erteb011e types, but polygonal battle-axes of polished stone (Fig. 
92) were already in use. The funnel-beakers were sometimes decor- 






Fio. 92. Tongued club-head, Denmark, polygonal battle-axe, Jordanova (J), 
and flint axe of Eastern type (). 

ated with cord impressions below the rim (Fig. 79, 5), but were round- 
bottomed, as were the contemporary amphorae and collared flasks. 
But not far away on the shore at Strandegaard Erteb0Ue folk were still 
living almost exclusively by hunting, fishing, and collecting with a 
mesolithic equipment. 

Similarly at Siretorp in Scania* herding folk, using funnel-beakers 
adorned with cord impressions and sometimes exhibiting corn imprints, 
twice encamped on the same strip of sandy shore. Between the two 
periods of herder settlement, Erteb011e hunter-fishers had occupied 
the site. To the B farmers may be attributed a grave at Virring in 
Jutland, 8 large enough to contain only a single contracted adult skeleton, 
but no bones survived. 

1 Mathiassen, Aarbeger, 1940, 3-16. 

Bagge and Kjellmark, Stendlders Boplaisema (1939); but ci. Act* Arch., XXII 
(1951), 88 ff., where the first occupation is attributed to Northern II-E.N.C 

* Bnsndsted, Danmarks, I, 130, 338. 

179 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Pottery appropriate to the B group of First Northern farmer-herders 
has been found all over Denmark and right across Southern Sweden 
to the east coast. 1 On the Continent, B vases are not readily dis- 
tinguishable from those just attributed to the A group. 

In Northern Neolithic II Early Neolithic C the First Northern 
culture even in Denmark dissolves into several local sub-cultures. 
All are characterized by the same type-fossils funnel-beakers, collared 
flasks, amphorae, thin-butted flint axes, polygonal battle-axes, etc., 
but are mutually distinguished by divergences in pot forms and 
decoration and by burial rites. By this time, too, Denmark and Southern 
Sweden themselves form only quarters of a larger province eventually 
extending from the Vistula to the lower Rhine. 

Everywhere fanning provided the basis of life, but some Danish 
groups followed the practice of their A ancestors in animal husbandry 
while others may have grazed stock freely, as in the B phase. By 
judicious burning of scrub, using the ashes as fertilizers, substantial 
communities could live together for a generation or more. The village 
of Barkaer in Jutland 1 consisted of fifty-four one-roomed houses 
arranged on either side of an open space in two continuous rows, each 
85 m. long. 

The fanners still used thin-butted axes of flint with rectangular 
cross-section and mounted directly on wooden handles, but now also 
others of fine-grained rock, sometimes splayed at the blade. 8 Numerous 
weapons survive arrows, their shafts polished on stone straighteners 
like Fig. 113 and tipped with transverse flint heads, polygonal battle- 
axes, and tongued club-heads like Fig. 92. The stone celts and battle- 
axes with splayed blades evidently copy metal models. In fact, 
many minute scraps of copper were observed at Barkaer while a con- 
temporary earth-grave at Salten in Jutland 4 contained a bossed copper 
disc that can be exactly matched in the graves of Brze& Kujawski 
(p. 123). This import not only established an exact synchronism 
between Northern II (EN.C.) and early Danubian III, but also indicates 
the source of the metal, already known in Northern Neolithic II, 
albeit only as a luxury material. 

The pottery of Neolithic II (Fig. 93) is a development of that made 
in Neolithic I, but is now more often decorated with pits, ribs, or im- 
pressions of whipped cords so as to produce vertical patterns. Variations 
in techniques and pattern serve to distinguish three or four local 

* Florin, "Vr4-Kultu>n", KuUurkisioritha Studisr W&gnade N. Abwg (Stockholm, 

X9 fNA. (1949). 

Nordmaim, "Megalithic", fig. 63. 
A*rb*g*r (194?). 250-5. 

180 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

groups. 1 As charms and ornaments amber beads, sometimes decorated 
in the drill-technique inherited from Maglemose times and strung 
together in necklace3 of several strands kept apart by spacers, were 
worn. 

One classical method of disposal of the dead, or perhaps only of 
deceased chiefs, which gives its name to the whole period in Denmark, 




FIG. 93. Pottery from Danish dysser (J). 

was ceremonial burial in a megalithic dolmen or dyss. In its oldest 
form a dyss is a small chamber formed by four uprights supporting a 
single large capstone, and less than 6 ft. long by 2 ft. wide. 1 Such small 
chambers sound as if they were designed to contain a single corpse 
only; though as many as six skeletons 8 have been found in one, they 
cannot rank as collective tombs. Later, one end-stone is generally 
lower than the remaining uprights, leaving an aperture through which 
subsequent burials might be introduced after the completion of the 
tomb. A rare and archaic-looking variant of the dolmen is an enclosure 
of inward-tilted slabs not supporting a capstone, but converging, 4 
just as in Portugal. Small polygonal chambers with a rudimentary 
passage and rectangular chambers with more than two side-stones 
have also yielded relics of the kind described above and are accordingly 
classed as dysser by Danish authorities. Dolmens of all types were 
normally partially buried by mounds, sometimes round but often long 
and rectangular and demarcated by a peristalith of large boulders. 
The distribution of dolmens along the Danish coasts indicates a 

1 Ibid., 141 ff. t Aarb0g*r (1941), 63-8; (1947), 266. 

Nordmann, "Megalithic Culture", 26. Aarbtgtr (1936), x-8, 

181 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

population of accomplished seafarers. Indeed, both the basis of the 
new economy and the metal tools that were imitated in stone might 
have reached Denmark by sea. But no regular supplies of metal were 
obtained by this or any other route. The economy of the dolmen- 
builders is typically neolithic though they lived when societies in 
Central Europe or Britain were already in a Copper Age. 

But even in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein people, perhaps 
descendant of the B group herders, might be buried in non-megalithic 
earth graves accompanied by a typical "dolmen" equipment of thin- 
butted axes, collared flasks, etc. 1 In such burials one or rarely two 
corpses were laid extended on the ground surrounded by, a setting 
of boulders, as in Fig. 94, and sometimes covered with an elongated 




FIG. 94. Grave 28 at Jordanova. After Seger. 

mound (in contrast to "Battle-axe" burials, contracted in a pit under 
a round barrow). 

THE DANISH PASSAGE GRAVES 

In Northern III about the time of the last marine transgression new 
influences affected both the architecture of the megalithic tombs and 
their furniture. The spacious passage graves that partly replaced the 
dolmens were used as collective sepulchres by clans for several genera- 
tions; for they may contain as many as a hundred skeletons 2 and 
pottery of several styles the succession of which serves as a basis for 
the subdivision of the period. But owing presumably to the need for 
fresh land as old plots became exhausted, the settlements were shifted 

1 Forssander (1935-36), 2 ff.; NNU., X (1936), 22 f.; Aarb0gtr (1936), 15; (i947) 
141 ff.; Brondsted, Danmarks, I, 162, 344. 
* Nordmann, "Megalithic Culture", 28. 

182 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

more often and yield as a rule pottery of only one stylistic phase. 1 
A settlement of the first phase at Tr01debjerg on Langdand* consisted 
of several apsidal huts, 13 to 18 ft. long, and a continuous row of 
rectangular buildings with a total length of 71 m. Two of these were 
certainly houses, each about 28 m. long and apparently subdivided so 
that one end was occupied by humans, the other by cattle. The gabled 
roof, about n ft. high, sloped down to the ground on one side and on 
the other rested on a wall only 6 ft. high. (Obviously these houses have 
nothing to do with the ^Egean and Balkan megaron type but derive 
directly from the Barkaer form.) They could accommodate a household 
larger than the "natural family" i.e. a clan whose deceased members 
might rest in the spacious passage grave. 

Hunting was now relatively unimportant. Hexaploid wheat in 
addition to one-corn, emmer, and flax were certainly cultivated, but, 
as in England, wheat was far more popular than barley. 

Specialization in industry is attested by the existence of communities 
of flint-miners and by specialized tools such as gouges for the carpenters. 
Trade was sufficiently developed to secure for the Passage Grave 
builders a certain number of metal took and ornaments. A hoard found 
in Bygholm in Jutland 8 and dating from the very beginning of the 
period, comprised four flat axes, a dagger with an imitation midrib on 
one face, like Fig. 132, 5, and two arm-cylinders. A distribution map 
of copper axes in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein suggests that they 
were imported by sea, though most of them must have come from 
Hungary. 4 Halberds have a similar distribution to axes and certainly 
were brought by sea from Ireland. 5 Amber was presumably the prin- 
cipal export bartered for metal and was very likely worked locally to 
form necklaces. Beads reached Brittany, Central France, and the 
Iberian Peninsula, and, as we saw, were common throughout Central 
Europe in Unfitician times. In exchange the Danes obtained hammer- 
headed pins of Pontic type by phase III. But the supplies obtained by 
such barter were quite insufficient to allow metal even to compete 
with stone and bone. Even the ornaments imported are mostly inferred 
from bone imitations made locally. 

The emergence of Battle-axe folk during the period (p. 161), com- 
bined with the increased competition for land as the population grew, 
intensified militarism. The outstanding weapons are stone double- 

Mathiassen, Acta Arch., XV, 88; cf. Becker, ib.. XXV, 50-66. 
Winther, Tnldebjtrg (Rudk0bing), 1935, and Tillaeg, 1938. 
Nordmann, "Megalithic Culture , 131, fig. 60. 

Foruander, Ostskandinavisckt, 10, 51, etc., Kersten, Zur Alter** nordiscken Bro***- 
, 7*. 9& 

Arck., LXXXVI (1936), 277. 
Aarbtgtr (1929), 204. 

183 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

axes, imitating JBgean metal models transmitted up the Danube 
thoroughfare (Fig. 95, 4), flint daggers, disc-shaped mace-heads of 
Danubian origin and transverse flint arrow-heads. 

The earlier pots, including funnel-necked beakers, are decorated with 
patterns executed with whipped or braided cords and arranged vertic- 
ally or in panels, thus carrying on the Early Neolithic traditions. 1 Still 
in the settlement of Tr01debjerg the distinctive innovations of deeply 
cut or stamped incisions in what Sophus Muller called "the grand 




FIG. 95- Pottery (f , J), double-axe (J), and arrow-head (J) from Danish 
Passage Graves. 

style" and even cardial decoration (p. 353) already appear and with 
them new Danubian forms the pedestalled bowl and the socketed 
ladle. 2 In a later settlement, like Blandebjerg, 8 phase Illb, the tech- 
nique of deep incision is completely dominant and is used to form 
basketry patterns on angular vases, inspired by basket models (Fig. 
95, i) and derived from North- West Germany or the early Walternien- 

1 I follow the division established on the basis of settlement finds by Mathiassen in 
Acia Arch.. XV (1944)* 89-97* rather than that of Eckholm, Real., IX, 42; cf. now Lffl 
Kaelas, Fv. (1951). 35*-7- 

* These ceramic types, though proper to Danubian II in Hungary and Moravia, may 
have readied Denmark indirectly from the Upper Elbe-Oder region and, if so, would not 
justify a synchronism between Northern Ilia and Danubian II as suggested by 
Schwabedessin, Off a. XII (i953) 58-64; cf., Miloji<5, Ger mania, XXXIII (1955), 401-4. 

Winther, Blandtbjerg (Rudkebing, 1940). 

184 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

burg group of Central Germany. Next in IIIc the profiles are rounded 
off (Fig. 95, 2) and rouletted lines, presumably derived from the Bell- 
beakers (p. 227), replace the cardial technique in shading. Finally, in 
phase Hid the shapes are further simplified while simple incision or 
stab-and-drag lines were preferred to rouletted ones for the sparing 
decoration. Jhis, however, includes oculi motives (Fig. 95, 3), recalling 
the Copper Age of Almeria. 

Of the domestic pots, 50 per cent were decorated in Ilia at Tr01de- 
bjerg, but the percentage had fallen to 4 per cent at Lind0 in Hid. 
Still, at all times some vessels were ornamented with pits in the native 
Erteb011e tradition, indicating how large a proportion of the old popu- 
lation was absorbed in the new farming societies. 1 Yet of course un- 
absorbed groups of food-gatherers survived. 

As in Early Neolithic times, a non-megalithic branch of the First 
Northern 1 culture survived in the succeeding period. But among the 
better-known Megalith-builders, soon after the beginning of Northern 
III, 1 came in the practice of collective burial in a megalithic passage 
grave. The latter cannot be regarded as an independent development 
from the dyss such tombs were still used as Montelius' disciples 
have contended, but reflects fresh influence from the West, explicitly 
imitating the corbelled tholos of the Atlantic coasts (p. 215). The 
earliest passage graves, standing closest to the models, are polygonal 
chambers sometimes with a cell attached, entered through a long 
passage and covered with a circular mound. In later versions the 
chamber is elongated at right angles to the passage. Passage graves 
served of course as family vaults. Some contain as many as a hundred 
skeletons. But in others the earlier interments with their gear had been 
removed and reburied outside the vault to make room for subsequent 
burials. Votive offerings continued to be deposited in bogs during 
Northern III, and by this phase, if not before, there is evidence fora 
cult of the axe. But at no time did the manufacture of female figurines 
in any durable material form part of First Northern ideological-activity. 

In Middle Neolithic II or III a new group of warlike herdsmen, the 
Battle-Axe folk, had invaded Jutland (p. 159), while kindred groups 
occupied the Danish islands. Then bands of hunter-fishers 4 from the 
Scandinavian peninsula began crossing the Belts to win raw flint which 
they traded far into Sweden and Norway. They were armed with heavy 

1 Pomander, "Gropornerad Megalithkeramik", Arsbtr&ttols* (1930-31), 10-30. 

Becker, Act* Arch.. XXV (1954), 22-5. 

Kaelas, Fv. (1951), 352-7; Bagge and Kaelas, Ada Arc*., XXII (1951)* "*; 
Becker. Acta Arch.. XXV 55-66; Berg, "Klintebakken". Medd. L**f*l**ds Mus. 
(Rudkebing, 1951). 

4 Becker, Amrbiftr (1930), 155-251. 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

has revealed in Denmark and more hunting in the Continental than in 
the Peninsular provinces. In the South province, positive evidence for 
cultivation with the aid of an ox-drawn plough is provided by a clay 
model of a pair of yoked oxen from Kreznica Jara near Lublin. 1 But it 
cannot be proved that plough cultivation was an original trait and not 
a secondary borrowing from, for instance, Baden neighbours. Horse 
bones have been reported from many settlements but may have 
belonged to game animals* since wild horses had roamed the North 
European plain since Pre-Boreal times (p. 9). Centrally perforated 
clay discs,? about 4 cm. in diameter, may represent model wheels rather 
than spindle whorls, but no vehicles survive. 

Hunters used arrows, armed normally with transverse heads but 
occasionally also with lozenge-shaped points, and doubtless clubs. 
Flint was preferred for axes, but in the East and South provinces these 
do not have the rectangular cross-section favoured in the North and 
West, but resemble Fig. 92, 3. The material was extensively traded 
from Riigen, and in Galicia banded flint was won by regular mining, 4 
while the village on Gawroniec Hill can properly be described as an 
axe-factory. 5 

Though a trade in flint had been thus early organized, the organiza- 
tion did not extend to the distribution of metal, which, though known, 
was very little used. So, too, amber ornaments were occasionally worn, 
but only in quantities that could have been obtained from local moraines 
supplemented by irregular barter. Warlike behaviour is abundantly 
attested by stone battle-axes, usually of the polygonal type and always 
with symmetrically splayed blades in contrast to the drooping blades 
of Battle-Axe cultures. 6 

In pottery, divergent modifications in the form and decoration of 
the ubiquitous funnel-beakers, collared flasks, and amphorae illustrate 
divergence of taste between local groups and influences from other 
societies. So in the South group the attachment of strap handles or 
nipple feet to flasks and beakers, and still more the flanged character 
of the handles (Fig. 96, i), 7 might have been suggested by Baden. 
Basketry ornament, popular in the West group, might be inspired by 
Rossen or by the basketry vessels of an hypothetical pre-existing 

Z Otchlani Wiektw, XVIII (1949), 184; WA., XVII, 120. 

WA., XVII (1950), 228; cf. Germanenerbe* IV (1939), 240; Hanar, Das Pferd, 34-7. 

WA., XVII, pi. XXXV, i. 

WA., VII, 53-4; Krukowski, Krzcmionki Opatowshic (Warsiawa, 1939). Dawna 
Kultura, IV (Wroclaw, 1955) 2O 4- 

WA., XVII, 143. 

Jazdrzewski, "Kultura Puhardw Lejkowatych w Polsce" (Bibliothelta Pr*kist. t 2 
(Poznan, 1936), 365-8. 
T Cf. also WA., XVII, pis. XXXVII-XLI. 

187 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

hunter-fisher population. But, as in Denmark, fruitstands and socketed 
ladles must be derived ultimately from Danubian II. 

In the ideological domain, votive deposits in bogs are reported at 
least from the East group. Female figurines were nowhere manu- 
factured, but figures of animals were sometimes modelled in day in 
the South group, as in the Baden cultural province. The characteristic 
burial rite everywhere was to inter a single corpse extended in an earth 
grave i.e. on the ground surface surrounded by a kerb of boulders. 1 




FIG. 96. Furniture of a grave at Zastow (j), and collared flask from grave at 

Nalenczow (). 

But, save in the South group, some persons perhaps only "chiefs' 1 
were interred in stone or perhaps wooden chambers under long or 
round barrows. In the East group the Kuyavish graves of Western 
Poland 2 must have been wedge-shaped mounds, up to 80 m. in length, 
bordered with stone kerbs and containing the burial near the broader 
east end (Fig. 97). West of the Oder, 8 trapeze-shaped mounds of more 
modest dimensions enclose a cist of slabs without entrance passage 
(such are termed long dolmens). In the West group 4 long oval or 
rectangular mounds bordered with large boulders covered at first 
closed chambers and later chambers as long as the barrow generally, 
provided with a short entrance passage in the middle of one long side, 
and popularly termed Huns' Beds. These North- West German and 
Dutch passage graves were collective tombs, presumably inspired by 

1 Jazdrzewski, op. oil.; for Holland, van Giffen in Drenthe (1943), 435. 

* W. Chmielewski, "Zagadanie Grobowcow Kujawskich" (Biblioieha Mug. Arched., 
2), L6dz, 1952. He regards them as collective tombs, but the maximum number of 
interments recorded was ten and the skeletons were not buried together in a single 
chamber. 

* Sprockhoff, Megalithkultur, 25-31. 

4 Ibid., 59 ff.; van Giffen, Hunebedden. 

188 




FIG. 97. Kuyavish grave, Swicrczyn. After Kodowski. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

the same ideology as their Danish-Swedish counterparts under round 
barrows. They contain, like the latter, fruitstands and socketed 
ladles, decorated with basketry patterns, but also collared flasks 
similarly decorated. 

Thus in the West group contradictory chronological conclusions 
could be drawn from the tomb types and their furniture. On the 
typology established for the North group, the collective tombs, the 
basketry ornament on the pottery, and the fruitstands and socketed 
ladles would be MN., the collared flasks EN. 1 Did the innovations 
reach North-West Germany and Holland from the Atlantic coasts 
and the Danubian province before they reached Denmark and Sweden? 
That would be a priori likely. But still farther south in Westfalia and 
Hesse collared flasks appear in long cists with porthole entries identical 
with those of the Paris basin (p. 312) and of Sweden in LN. times. 2 
Now the slabs of the cist at Ziischen, Hesse, are carved and the carvings 
seem to include representations of ox-carts. 8 On the other hand, 
among the sparse ceramic finds, two tombs are said to have yielded 
minute sherds of Rossen pottery. 4 These sherds, if really part of the 
tomb furniture, would accord with the collared flasks in making these 
West German long cists EN. in terms of the Northern sequence. But 
then they would be a whole period earlier than the LN. Swedish tombs 
of identical plan! 

Now, since in 1910 Kossinna purported to explain the distribution of 
funnel-beakers, collared flasks, and amphorae on the Continent as the 
result of an expansion of Ur-Indogermanen from Denmark, it has been 
tacitly assumed that the Continental cultures characterized by these 
vases are later than their nearest Danish analogues of Northern II 
(EN.C). Such a relation may still hold good for the West group. But 
the imported disc from a Neolithic II grave at Salten (p. 180) now 
proves that the South group was by then already established between 
the Warta and the Oder. So there is no longer any reason to doubt 
that the long barrows covering dolmen-like chambers and earth graves 
furnished with funnel-beakers, collared flasks, and amphorae in Poland 
and North-Eastern Germany were in fact substantially contemporary 
with the Danish dolmens and earth graves of EN.C. In this case the 
analogues to Early Neolithic A-B vases, found twice under long 
barrows between the Vistula and the Elbe, may be as old as the 

1 The flint celts too are thin-butted, but diverge from the Danish forms, Sprockhofif, 
NNU., TV (1930), 36. 

* Sprockhotf, Megalithkultw, 59 f.; cf. Westfalen, XIX (1934), *5<>-7- 

Mannus, XXV (i933) 131-2; Kuhn, Die Fehbilder Ewropas (1952), 153-4. 

Sancmeister, Die Ghckenbecher . , . (Die Jungsteinteit in Nordmainischen Hessen, 
III), Melsingen, 1951, p. 73 and n. 246. 

190 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

Danish specimens. Thus, though best known from the West Baltic 
coasts, the First Northern culture in its earliest manifestations may 
already have occupied the whole area from the North Sea to the 
Upper Oder, from the Vistula to the Elbe. 'The origin of the First 
Northern culture" thus means the origin of this widespread complex. 

Outside this region no single culture is known that exhibits all the 
distinctive traits ceramic forms, battle-axes, arrow-heads, burial 
rites, bog offerings enumerated above. On the other hand, survivals 
of mesolithic Forest culture traditions (transverse arrow-heads, tranchet 
axes, antler axes, extended burials, etc.) are conspicuous in the First 
Northern neolithic culture. Since even in Boreal times the Forest culture 
must have spread more widely on the Continent than the surviving 
bone tools can show, and a local invention of pottery cannot be excluded, 
the archaeological content of the First Northern culture could be 
explained as an autochthonous development of that vigorous and 
adaptable culture save for the cereals and domestic stock. The question 
of its origin would then be reduced to this: Whence did the Forest-folk 
acquire these and learn the arts of cultivating and breeding them? 

Of course, pottery might provide some clue. Hinsch 1 has convincingly 
stated the case for deriving First Northern pottery from the Western 
neolithic. Becker, 2 too, would admit Western or more precisely 
Michelsberg inspiration in his B-group vases. Troels-Smith, 8 how- 
ever, insists that the rural economy as well as the pottery of the A 
group agrees with that of the Michelsberg and Cortaillod cultures. 
Vogt, 4 on the contrary, has contended that Michelsberg itself is not 
a Western culture but an offshoot of the First Northern. His thesis has 
been substantially strengthened by the subsequent publication 6 of 
baking plates, distinctive of the Michelsberg culture, as an integral 
element in the First Northern from its earliest, A, phase. Indeed, the 
striking similarity of British and Breton long barrows (p. 325), for 
which no satisfying explanation has yet been found in South-Western 
Europe, to Kuyavish graves and long dolmens 6 might provide an argu- 
ment for admitting at least a First Northern element even in the Wind- 
mill Hill and Armorican Early Neolithic cultures. Still, the First 
Northern is not an offshoot of any known Western culture. 

That is not to say it could not spring from some earlier and less- 
specialized assemblage from which such Western cultures as Windmill 

Universittts Oldsahsamling Arbok (Oslo, 1 951-53), 140-60* 
Aarb0ger (1947). 2O *- 
(1953). 61. 
rch., XXI 



Acta Arch., XXIV (1953), 174-86. 

Aarbtger (1954)* 

Antiquity, XXIII (1949), 130-5; **?$ XXI. 96-101, 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Hill and Michelsberg might also have arisen. Or it could be argued 
that on the now submerged coasts of the North Sea representatives 
of the Forest culture's coastal variant learned fanning from pioneer 
Western immigrants. That too, however, makes excessive draughts 
on the unknown, since neither the Mesolithic coastal culture nor that 
of the Western pioneers is tangibly represented in the existing archaeo- 
logical record. 

On the other hand, First Danubian farmers had demonstrably 
spread right to the Baltic coasts between the Oder and the Vistula 
and, west of the Elbe, had advanced into territories later occupied by 
First Northern farmers. 1 In Denmark itself, while no Danubian settle- 
ments occur, stone implements of Danubian type have been* found, 
some on Erteb0Ue sites.* The First Northern long barrows could well 
be regarded as durable imitations of the external appearance of a 
Danubian I long house. 8 Finally, the Triticum monococcum, demon- 
strably cultivated in Northern IA could hardly have reached Northern 
Europe save through the Danubian province. East of the Oder 
admittedly rather hypothetical Forest hunter-fishers could have 
learned from the pioneer Danubian outposts to breed stock and till 
the soil. 

Still, it remains possible that predominantly pastoral tribes without 
pottery, with no specialized kit of stone tools nor ideology expressed 
in funerary monuments or figurines of clay, pushed in through Vol- 
hynia from the south-east. But for such an invasion there is of course 
no positive evidence. 

MIDDLE NEOLITHIC NORTHERN CULTURES ON THE CONTINENT 

During what corresponds to Northern Middle Neolithic, the West, 
South, and East groups of First Northern cultures in contact with 
surviving mesolithic groups and remnants of the Rossen, Jordanova, 
and Michelsberg cultures dissolved into a multiplicity of local groups, 
known mainly from grave-finds and distinguished primarily by ceramic 
peculiarities. 

In the West group the Elbe-Weser culture carried on the traditions 
of burial in Huns' Beds and earth graves and of basketry vases. But 
Bell and S beakers found even in Huns' Beds illustrate the increasing 
dominance of Beaker and Battle-axe folk over the First Northern 
elements, and also the late survival of the culture in Danubian III. 

1 Potxatz NNV. t XV (1941), quoted by Miloj&c, Ckro*., 97. 

* Glob, Act* Arch.. X (1939). *3*-9. 

* Sprockhoff, Megalithkuttvr, 10, emphasizes the similarity of such a long barrow to 
a "house with low-pitched gabled roof . 

192 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

A gold armlet with expanded terminals from an earth grave at Himmels- 
pforten near Stade 1 should in fact belong to Danubian IV. 

The Watternienburg-Bernburg culture* developed on the Lower 
Saale and in Havelland out of the local branch of First Northern, 
termed the Baalburg culture, 8 through the so-called Salzmunder 
culture of MN.i. 4 The angular vases, distinctive of Walternienburg x, 
obviously copy basketry models (Fig. 98), but in subsequent phases 
the basketry origin seems to have been forgotten. Pottery of this sort 
is found in simple pit-graves, grouped in small cemeteries, in mega- 




i 2 

FIG. 98. i, Walternienburg vases, 2, Latdorf drum, and Baalburg jug. 

lithic cists or galleries, in Huns' Beds with lateral passage and in cists 
of thin slabs. Axe-heads were made by preference of Wida shale from 
the South Hartz; the rest of the Walternienburg equipment seems to be 
derived indiscriminately from various Northern and foreign cultures. 
It includes double-axes of Passage Grave type, amber beads, crutch- 
headed pins, perhaps derived from the Pontic hammer-pins, and metal 
ornaments of UnStician type or bone copies of such. The culture, 
while beginning in Northern period III, lasts therefore well into 
Danubian IV. 
In part of the areas formerly occupied by the East and South groups 

1 NNU., vii, 50; x (1936), 22. 

1 Childe, Danube, 133-9; Sprockhoff. Megalitkkultur, 106-16. 

Grimm, Mannus, XXIX (193?). x86 * . r ^. r ^ rmanv ^ 

* /ST., XXIX (1938), 20 ff. For the culture sequence m CeatraTGennuty, .** 
Mildenberger, Studie* turn MitUldeutschen Neolitkittum (Leipag. X95x); Behrens, JM . 
(1953). 105; Fischer, Festschr. d. JWw-Gwit. Zentralm*s**ms t III (Maini, 1953). *75- 

193 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



emerged the culture typified by and named after the Globular Amphora. 1 
The type-vase, Hke the other vessels habitually associated with it, is 
dearly a copy of leather models and is always decorated in a very 
distinctive manner round the neck, with fillets hanging over the 
shoulder (Fig. 99), The characteristic vases are accompanied by small 
trapeze-shaped axes and chisels of flint, frequently of the banded 
variety mined in Galitia, transverse and tanged arrow-heads, bored 






FIG. 99. Bone girdle-clasp, Podolia (}), and globular amphorae, Saxo-Thuringia 

and Podolia (i). 

teeth and boars' tusks, amber beads and, east of the Oder, ornate bone 
girdle-clasps. Antler axes, double-axes of stone, flint knives and other 
articles were occasionally borrowed from contemporary groups. Ring- 
pendants of bone and other ornaments characteristic of the Scan- 
dinavian long cists, and bronze rings and spirals demonstrate the sur- 
vival of the culture during period IV. 

The makers of these vases might be interred, extended, in simple 
trench graves forming cemeteries of not more than twelve graves, 
cremated, or buried, generally squatting, in collective tombs, containing 
as a rule not more than seven corpses and generally less. The collective 

1 Sprockhoff . MegatitMnatur, 120-30; Mark-Brandenburg, 108; JST., XXVIII (1938). 

194 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

tombs are sometimes megalithic cists or large cists made of thin slabs. 
The latter are often divided into two compartments, sometimes by a 
porthole slab. 

The principal concentration of Globular Amphorae is in the Saale- 
Elbe region and Havelland, but they extend northward to Rugen, 
southward into Bohemia, and eastward through Galicia into Volhynia 
and Podolia. In Bohemia 1 Globular Amphorae are sometimes found on 
hilltops in fortified settlements, but even in Volhynia and Podolia they 
are normally found alone in characteristic slab-cists, subdivided and 
containing up to six skeletons. 2 Even the pottery from the cists, divided 
by porthole slabs, at Novosvobodnaya in the Kuban valley (p. 153), 
is reminiscent of the Globular Amphorae. 

Evidently these vases were made by swine-breeders who roamed 
about in small groups far and wide, presumably mainly as hunters and 
swineherds, but doubtless engaging in casual robbery and trade. They 
were thus agents in the distribution of amber, Galician flint, and even 
metal trinkets, but developed no specialized industries of their own 
that we can recognize. 

In Holstein a Globular Amphora was associated with pottery of 
Northern Neolithic Hid or even IVa, 8 while in Kuyavish graves 
Globular Amphorae represent the latest intrusions. An oft-quoted report 
of the association of a Globular Amphora with Danubian Ib pottery 
at Klein Rietz is quite unreliable and intrinsically improbable. 4 In the 
Danubian sequence they cannot be earlier than period III; the Bohemian 
sites that have yielded specimens belong at earliest to the Baden 
culture. 

Kossinna derived the Globular Amphorae from those of the Danish 
dolmens and made them the symbols of his second wave of Indo- 
Germanic expansion from the West Baltic coasts. The culture they 
typify is still considered by all German writers "Nordic" and is now 
supposed to have developed between Elbe and Oder and thence spread 
eastward. But, if so, why did it not spread westward too? Forssander,* 
on the contrary, suggested that the culture arose somewhere in the 
Pontic zone and that its authors introduced into Northern Europe 
not only Galician banded flint but also porthole cists, such as we have 
in fact met in Novosvobodnaya; presumably the idea then spread from 
Central Germany both to Sweden and to the Paris basin. In fact, it is 
not easy to derive the culture simply from the First Northern, but it 
remains essentially a culture of the woodland zone and its outposts in 

1 Stock?, BoMme prihist., 128; Proc. Amev. Pkilos. So*., LXXXI (1932), 3o, 
1 Levitskfl, Antropolgiya, II (Kiev, 1928); Ztpiski V$*-Ukr<*in$kogo Arkh. Komitotu, I 
(Kiev, 1931); Briusov, Olerki, 220*3. 

Offa, XII (1953). 8-9. * Germania, XXXIII (1955), 239. * Boetaxtkultw, 174. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Volhynia are separated by a huge tract of steppe, bare of comparable 
finds, from the Caucasian group of porthole cists. 

Sometimes associated with Globular Amphorae are curious tubular 
pots like Fig. 98, 2 (top), often embellished with crosses and other 
symbolic figures and generally interpreted on the strength of good 
ethnographic parallels as drums. Most come from the Elbe valley in 
Saxo-Thuringia and Bohemia, but they are not peculiar to, any one 
culture; the jug from Latdorf is a Baalburg type and some Moravian 
drums 1 were found in a Baden context. 

We must accordingly imagine numbers of small groups, each dis- 
tinguished by peculiarities in pottery and sometimes also in burial 
rites or equipment, wandering about the North European plain simul- 
taneously. Especially in Central Germany, groups adhering respectively 
to Walternienburg, Globular Amphorae and Battle-axe traditions must 
have been not only contemporary but also in close spatial contact. 
And they must have encountered also Danubian peasants making 
stroke-ornamented ware and others making Jordanova pots to say 
nothing of makers of collared flasks and miscellaneous megalith- 
builders. It is not surprising that such groups frequently interchanged 
ideas perhaps they intermarried; the wonder is that they retained 
the individuality of their ceramic traditions so long. The number of 
distinct types of pottery tends to give a quite exaggerated idea of the 
density of population and the duration of Northern Neolithic III. 
Actually the several kinds of vases must have been made by relatively 
small and nomadic groups, several of which must have been living 
side by side. It is only by trying to arrange all groups in a sequence, 
which may really be valid at one particular site, that period III becomes 
inordinately inflated. But that it overlaps with Danubian IV may be 
once more demonstrated by the metal trinkets associated with Globular 
Amphorae and Walternienburg vases. 2 

THE NORTHERN LATE NEOLITHIC PERIOD 

During the fourth period of the Northern Stone Age the sharp contrast 
between Megalith-builders and Battle-axe folk began to break down in 
Denmark and Southern Sweden. Though each party still retained its 
traditional burial practices, there is little difference between the furni- 
ture of the Long Stone Cists, collective tombs that carry on the mega- 
lithic tradition, and that of the Upper (Separate) Graves of the Battle- 
axe population. But it is the culture of the latter that is dominant. 
The area of settlement remains unaltered, but the population has 



* AR. t VI (1954). 652-8. 

* B6hm, Die aUere B 



*rongezeit in der Mark-Brandenburg, 32. 

196 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

perhaps increased: in Vastergotland there are 4266 relics belonging to 
period IV, as against 3106 from the preceding period. 1 These figures 
further indicate that the Stone Cist period can hardly have been 
shorter than that of the Passage Graves. But the general economy 
remained unaltered. The importance of agriculture may be inferred 
from the number of flint sickles, curved in imitation of metal models. 





FIG. 100. Flint daggers (Denmark, J) and porthole cists (Sweden) 
types of Montelius' IV. 

But weapons are still the most prominent relics. The flint axes now 
regularly imitate metal axes with a splayed blade; but the faces are 
seldom polished; indeed, polished flint axes made in period III were 
sometimes flaked all over for use in period IV. Battle-axes were still 
used, but are less shapely and less metallic. The classical weapon was 
the dagger, at first lanceolate in form but culminating before the end 
of the period in the famous fish-tailed form (Fig, ioo). 8 The arrow- 
heads are hollow-based rather as in the Copper Age of Iberia. 

1 Forssander, Ostskandinavische, 162. 
8 Ibid., 118, fig. 23; Brondsted, Danmarks, I, fig. 251. 
197 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The fish-tailed flint daggers certainly copy the bronze-hilted daggers 
of Central Europe. The models for these and other weapons were indeed 
imported from time to time. A certain number of bronzes from Italy, 
Central Europe, and Britain have survived from this period, stray or 
in hoards. And before the period ended smiths may have been producing 
for a local market in Schleswig-Holstein and even Southern Sweden. 1 
To obtain metal for rearmament the northerners had to rely chiefly 
on the export of amber. Every scrap of the precious gum was reserved 
for foreign trade, so it could no longer be used locally for charms. In 
the tombs the place of amber beads is taken by long pendants of slate, 
ring-pendants of stone or bone, and a few metal trinkets of UfiStician 
type. 1 But for all their sacrifices the Northerners' equipment and 
economy remained essentially neolithic throughout period IV. 

The practice of collective burial persisted, alongside burial in separate 
graves in the mass of the barrow. But the passage grave gave place 
to the long stone cist or gallery grave generally sunk in the ground. 
These are not, as Montelius thought, the result of a degeneration of the 
passage grave.* One group might be treated as an evolution of the 
dolmen, but even so that evolution must have been inspired by new 
ideas from outside the Northern province. A group of Swedish cists, 
built of thin slabs and often subdivided by a porthole slab, must be 
derived from the Paris basin, presumably through the Westfalian 
group mentioned on p. 190. Even the splay-footed pot, characteristic 
of the French Horgen culture (p. 313), was reproduced in a variant 
in Sweden and Denmark. 4 These new ideas must have been introduced 
by immigrant families joining the established communities. But the 
normal pottery of the period is represented by flower-pot forms imi- 
tating wooden models and decorated with rouletted zig-zag ribbons 
(Fig. 83, bottom left) perhaps derived from the Oder Battle-axe culture. 

Imitations of Unfetician pins and UnStician gold ornaments associated 
with even the early flint daggers show that the fourth period of the 
Northern Stone Age did not even begin till the Early Bronze Age was 
well established in Central Europe and in Britain. Though metal- 
workers and traders were spreading northward, the Northern Stone 
Age outlasted Danubian IV. In Denmark and Scandinavia the Bronze 
Age proper begins first in the Middle Bronze Age of Hungary and 
Britain. 1 Till that date metal was too scarce for bronze weapons to be 

1 Forwander, 95 i, 116 ff.; Kersten, Nordiscktn Bronuuit, 98; Broholm, Danmarks 
Bnm*eald*r, 2 (1944), 30 ff. 

* Nordmann, "Mftgalithir Culture", 44. 

9 Pomander, Oftskandinavische, 114, 140, 156; Brondited, Danmarks, 290. 
AsA. t XL (1938), 14. 

* Foratander, O$tskandinavi$che t 176, 196; Kersten, N or dischen Bronze z tit t 100. 

198 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

buried with even the richest chief. And one of the earlier graves fur- 
nished with products of the local Northern bronze industry (at lies- 
buttel in Schleswig-Holstein) contained an imported spear-head of a 
type characteristic of Middle Bronze Age 2 in Britain, 1 while British 
palstaves of the same typological age are included in contemporary 
Danish hoards. 1 If the preceding phase of the British Bronze Age be 
correctly dated to the fifteenth century by the fayence beads then 
imported (p. 339), Northern Neolithic IV must have lasted till 1400 B.C. 
in the sense that till then metal weapons were not normally deposited 
in native- graves in Denmark, Southern Sweden, and the adjacent 
parts of North Germany. A segmented fayence head was, however, 
found in a grave of Bronze Age form in North Jutland.* 

THE SAALE-WARTA BRONZE AGE 

Round the salt deposits and ore lodes of the Saale and Elbe, and along 
the trade-route leading thence to the East Baltic amber coast, a peculiar 
version of the Un6tician culture had arisen by the beginning of Northern 
period IV. Metal had been brought thither in the time of the Jordanova 
culture and weapons already by the Beaker-folk in Danubian III. 
These or some other unidentified prospectors may have begun the 
exploitation of the ores of Vogtland and exported their winnings as 
ingots in the form of the sacred double-axe. 4 For double-axes with a 
shaft-hole too small to take a real shaft are concentrated in that region 
and strung out thence across Switzerland to Central France. At the 
same time, connections with the Pontic zone to the east are attested 
by the hammer-pins mentioned on p. 165. In the sequel Unfitician 
fanners had spread down the Elbe and the Oder to the Saale and Warta. 5 
Their poor graves contain a few Unfitician ornaments but not the 
oldest forms such as knot-headed pins but their pots with provincial 
conservatism preserved the pouched form that had gone out of fashion 
in Czechoslovakia after the earliest phase of Danubian IV. 

The local bronze industry was based on the same UnStitian tradition, 
but it was fertilized by the importation of Britannico-Hibernian manu- 
factures 6 and very likely by the immigration of Irish craftsmen. Its 
products were exported to the still neolithic North and raw amber 

Kersten, Zwr Alttren nordiscken Br<nw*eit, 65. 

Broholm, Danmarhs BrotuMlder, i, 224; M8i. 

Ada Arch., XXV, 241. 

Hawkes. BSA., XXXVII, 144-51. 

PZ., XX (1929), 128 ff. 

E.g. Irish axes from Dieskau and Leubtagen, Arck., LXXXVI. 303; PPS,, IV, 
272 ff. Note that the Irish axe from Dieskan is rich in tin, the other "brontes" from th 
hoard contain none! JMV. t XXXIV (1950), 00 ff. 

199 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

obtained in exchange. Some of this was re-exported in the raw state 
to England, there to be worked up into amber cups and crescentic 
necklaces. Local chieftains succeeded in concentrating the profits 
derived from this commerce and thus accumulated capital for the 
industry's further development. Their rich burials under imposing 
barrows present a striking contrast to the flat graves of Ungtician 




FIG. 1 01, Section of Leubingen barrow. 

farmers and confer a distinctive character upon the Bronze Age of the 
province quite reminiscent of the Kuban. 

At Leubingen, 1 for instance, an old man and a young girl had been 
interred in a lean-to chamber of stone slabs and oak beams (Fig. 101) 
enclosed by a circular fosse 20 m. in diameter, and furnished with 
bronze rounded-heeled daggers, gold pins and lock-rings of Ungtician 
types, a halberd derived from the Irish series, a massive gold bracelet, 
and a perforated stone axe (or ploughshare). 

Even richer burials were discovered in a barrow cemetery at Leki 



n ci also JST.. VI (Hdmsdorf); I 

(Baalberg), and perhaps Kiittiau, Silesia (Gftit-jfriJ., 84-9), and Anderiingen. Hanover 
Jb. PrwMus. Hannover, 1907-08, 242-4, and Arch., LXXXVI, 225. 

2OO 



THE NORTHERN CULTURES 

Male in Poznania during 1953.1 A wooden chamber built in a shaft 
grave at the centre of a barrow, 30 m. in diameter, had contained the 
remains of a man and a woman. The former was accompanied by a 
bronze-shafted halberd like Fig. 102, I, a flat knife-dagger, a flat 
Ungtician axe, a knot-headed pin of poor bronze, and two gold lock- 
rings, the woman by only two bronze bracelets. A secondary grave on 





FIG. 102. i, Bronze-shafted halberd (t), 2, halberd-blade from 
Leu bin gen barrow (J). 

the periphery contained a bronze-hilted dagger of Elbe-Oder type, an 
axe, a Bohemian eyelet pin and three gold lock-rings. Horses, oxen, 
pigs, and sheep were represented, in that order of frequency, among 
the remains of funerary feasts under the barrow. 

Such richly furnished barrow burials must belong to chieftains who 
had won economic power as well as authority by taking toll on the 
trade that traversed their territories. They established no kingdoms 
guaranteeing order and security beyond the narrow limits of tribal 

1 Kowiariska-Piaszykowa and Kuraatowski, "Kurhan Kultury Unietyckiej", FonUs 
Arckmol. Posnanitnsts, IV (Poraan, 1954), 1-34 (with analyses of bronees, and English 
re* s u me"). 

201 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

domains. A large number of merchants' hoards of bronzes and amber 
beads vividly illustrate the dangers to which traders and perambulating 
metal-workers were exposed between these local realms. 

These hoards, together with the grave goods just mentioned, show 
how by blending varied foreign traditions in producing for their warlike 
patrons local craftsmen had created a variety of original types 1 
halberds, modelled on late Irish types, but decorated with grooves 
and triangles and ultimately mounted on bronze shafts (Fig. 102, i), 
curious narrow "double-axes", daggers with bronze hilts, cast in one 
piece with the blades either oval in imitation of daggers like Fig. 70, 
or flat like the gold-studded Anglo-Armorican weapons, 2 and what may 
be clumsy imitations of the elegant crescentic axes of the Kiflgs of Ur. 8 
Their products were exported to North Germany and across Poland to 
Sammland. 4 Thence and from Denmark came in exchange amber 
beads to be used in turn for barter with England, Bohemia, Hungary, 
and Italy. 

Though definitely Early Bronze Age, the graves and hoards contain- 
ing these products need not be early within Danubian IV. As compared 
with Britain, the actual imports establish synchronisms only with 
phase II of our Early Bronze Age. In Central European terminology 
graves and hoards containing true Middle Bronze Age Reinecke B-C 
types are practically non-existent in just those parts of Central 
Germany and Poland where the chieftains' graves occur 5 ; there the 
archaeological record seems to recommence with the Lusacian culture 
generally attributed to Danubian VI! That might suggest that the 
Saale-Warta culture occupies part of Danubian V too. 6 On the other 
hand, in Southern England and in Brittany we shall witness the abrupt 
emergence of richly furnished barrow graves whose furniture, though 
still Early Bronze age, exhibits specially close affinities with, if not 
derivation from, that of the Saale-Warta chieftains' tombs, 7 and the 
English graves at least seem fairly well dated by JEgean connections 
between 1600 and 1400 B.C. 

1 Childe, Danube, 242-4. 

* GMMe-Fest., 93, and PZ., XVI, 205; cf. p. 335 below. 

1 PZ., XXXIV (1949-50), 238, Taf. 15, i; cf. Childc, NLMAE., fig. 91; Jahn in 
JM V.. XXXV (1951). 65-70. J 

4 See lor halberds O'Riordain's map, Arch., LXXXVI, 277, and for narrow double- 
axes, Storm's Die Bronxezeit im Osibaltikum (Berlin, 1936), 32. 

1 Cf. Childe, Danube, 313. 

One bronze-shafted halberd of Saale-Warta type is said to have been found with 
a socketed celt, Mannus, XIII (1923), 42-55. 

7 So the characteristic Wessex and Armorican daggers seem to be derived from the 
Elbe-Oder type, the Anglo-Armorican gold-studded hilts were copied in the Saale 
region, Wessex amber pendants copy bronze-hilted halberds. 

202 



CHAPTER XI 
SURVIVALS OF THE FOREST CULTURE 

THE circumpolar zone of Eurasia, extending from the Norwegian coasts 
across the Baltic and the North European plain far into Siberia, offered 
no propitious soil to neolithic cultivators, but was rich in game, wild 
fowl, fish, nuts and berries such as mesolithic Forest-folk had pursued 
or collected round the North Sea and the western Baltic in Boreal 
times. By then the Forest-folk had perfected an efficient equipment for 
the exploitation of these natural resources. They continued to use a 
similar equipment long after farmers had colonized Denmark and 
Southern Sweden; for the coniferous forests or taiga to the north con- 
stituted a botanical environment very similar to that of Britain and 
Denmark in the Boreal phase. In it much of the Maglemose culture 
survived. Now, the survival of equipment implies also continuity of 
tradition prescribing its manufacture and uses. And continuity of 
tradition means in turn some continuity of population too. However 
much immigration or invasion have modified its genetic constitution, 
cultural traditions have been preserved locally for eight or nine 
thousand years (cf. p. 14). 

But continuity of culture is not equivalent to immutability. In fact, 
the environment was neither static nor uniform. Cultures were modified 
to take advantage of new opportunities, were differentiated to exploit 
local resources, and were enriched by inventions and borrowings. Nor 
was the population of the European taiga zone homogeneous; by Sub- 
Boreal times Mongoloid, Lapponoid, Europeoid and hybrid types are 
represented in the graves. 

Throughout the period here considered the Forest-folk remained 
food-gatherers. All indeed possessed domestic dogs which were some- 
times fed on fish, 1 but nowhere were animals bred for food save in 
Eastern Sweden, where the hunter-fishers, perhaps inspired by the 
example of the B group herders (p. 178), kept pigs of native stock. On 
the Norwegian coasts, round the Baltic and along the shores of the 
White Sea the pursuit of aquatic mammals provided an important 
element in the food supply and evoked a specialized equipment of 
harpoons, ice-picks, and blubber-axes, while fishing was universally a 
major economic activity. Hence the most permanent settlements were 

1 E.g. at Panfilovo in Central Russia, IGAIMK., 106 (1935)* I2 5- 

203 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



dose to the coast or along the shores of lakes and rivers. Even these 
the so-called Dwelling-places (Bopladser) seem mere encampments 
where not more than ten households congregated temporarily. Large 
cemeteries of 49 graves on Gotland 1 and of 150 on Deer Island in Lake 
Onega* do not necessarily imply large and permanent villages. 

But despite their comparatively nomadic mode of life, all the hunter- 
fishers save those in Northern Norway made pots from Sub-Boreal 
times on, and these help to define local and chronological groups. From 
Sweden to Siberia indeed all pots were manufactured by the same 
technique of ring-building, 8 all taper downward to a rounded base 
and all may be decorated with horizontal rows of pits, frequently 
combined with zones of comb-impressions. 4 The whole ceramic family 
is therefore termed "pit-comb ware". But west of the Baltic most 






FIG. 103. i, F.II pit-comb vase from Karelia ($); 2, vase of East Swedish style from 
Aland Islands (}); 3. flint figures from Volosovo (fV). 

vases have a concave neck separated from the conical body by a 
shoulder, while farther east neckless ovoid vessels predominate. Within 
these branches variations in the technique and arrangement of 
the decoration demarcate stylistic groups and phases. In Sweden 5 
and Finland 6 four consecutive styles can be arranged in chronological 
order by the relations of the coastal dwelling-places on which typical 
sherds occur to the receding shore of the Litorina Sea; for the land here 
was still rising, so that the higher a camp is above the present strand 
the older it should be. The Swedish scheme can be correlated with the 

1 M. Stenberger, Das Grab/eld von Vasterbjers auf Gotland (Stockholm, 1943). 

1 SA, t VI (1940), 46-62; cf. Gerasimov, Litsa, 296-320; physically the population was 
mixed Europeoid and Mongoloid. 

1 The techniques have been admirably described by Voyevodskil, SA.,l (1935), 51-78* 

4 Made at first with the curved and notched edge of a fiat pebble, later with short- 
toothed bone combs figured by Voyevodskil, loc. cit. 

* Bagge, Ada Arch., XXII (1951), 56-88. 
Ayr&paa, Acia Arch., I, 165-90, 205 ff.; he discusses correlations with Sweden in 

2O4 



SURVIVALS OF THE FOREST CULTURE 

subdivisions of the Northern Neolithic indicated in the last chapter 
and less precisely with the Finnish. An extension of the latter to North 
and Central Russia has been attempted by Finnish prehistorians, 
while Gurina 1 has outlined a roughly parallel sequence based on observa- 
tions round Lake Onega and the White Sea. But other Russian 
authorities 2 reject such generalizations and deny the extension of 




FIG. 104. Ncwtvet (i) and Suomusjftrvi (2) celts (|), and (3) polished chisel and adse (i). 

pit-comb ware to the Urals altogether. 1 Nevertheless, we shall apply 
the Finnish scheme to the whole region, using the expressions F.I, 
F.II, F.III, and F.IV to denote similar styles and to indicate relative 
positions in local sequences rather than contemporaneity throughout 
the zone, and assigning to F.O assemblages not associated with pottery 
that are probably pre-ceramic. 

1 MIA.. XX (1951), 77-140. * Kg. FOBS, MIA., XXIX (1952); Briusov, O&rAt. 
* Wrongly since good comb-ware is cited In SAT., LVTI (1950), 5-22. 

205 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



F.O then denotes the Suomusjarvi culture, characterized by rough 
stone adzes (Fig. 104, 2) and slate points 1 that in Finland appear in 
Atlantic contexts and do recur in the Urals, and assemblages of Magle- 
mosian types in North- West Russia similarly dated by Russian pollen- 
analysts. 8 F.I pots, decorated with broad zones, sometimes of whipped- 
cord impressions, are reported from the Baltic coasts to Lake Onega 
and the White Sea and from one site in the Upper Dniepr basin. 8 F.II 
would be well represented also in Central Russia and up to the Urals 



FIG. 105. Eastern Maglemosian types (J); 1-4, Esthonia, after Clark; 5, Ukraine; 
6, leister from Ural peat bogs (J). 

if it include stylized representations of aquatic birds. 4 (Fig. 103, i.) 
Subsequently local divergences are too great to allow of correlations 
presumably owing to the rise of Battle-axe cultures on the Baltic 
coasts and in Central Russia. But pit-comb ware of F.IV styles was 
still being made by hunter-fishers when a few socketed celts of Late 
Bronze Age types and even iron were reaching Finland and Northern 
Russia. 

For fishing, leisters with bone prongs (Fig. 105, 6) more or less like 
the Maglemosian, were in use throughout our period from Norway 

1 Also transverse arrow heads; SM., LIV (1947-48), x-x8; LVII (1950), 9. 
Lower V*tye (Foss, MIA.. XXIX), Pogostiiee, i (ibid.. XX, 46); cf. Briusov, 
Octrki, 28-31. 

Mapped by Gurina, MIA., XX, 95- 

MIA., XX (1951), no, Gurina's group 3; SM., LX (1953), 33-44 F.IIIl 

206 



SURVIVALS OF THE FOREST CULTURE 

to Siberia. Fish-hooks of the Boreal Pernau type (Fig. 105, 5) survived 
too in North Russia and even on the Desna, but by the Sub-Boreal 
were supplemented throughout the zone by composite implements 
with a notched shank of stone or bone and a separate barb. 1 But net- 
fishing was at least equally important. 8 

Of the Maglemosian hunting-equipment, slotted bone points survived 
everywhere, conical bone arrow-heads* and the type of Fig. 105, 3 as 
far as the Urals and from F.O to F.IV. Flint tips for arrows and darts 




FIG. 106. 1-3 Slate knives and dart-head, Sweden (J), 4-5 stone mace-heads. Finland 
(}), and 6 slate pendant (}). 

with little invasive retouch on the bulbar surface, occurring in F.O 
and F.I sites may be derived from the Swiderian and were copied in 
slate. Rare transverse arrow-heads 4 , found with the oldest F.I 
pottery in Finland and on early sites along the Oka, could be derived 
from the Ukraine as well as from the West Baltic. Bifacially trimmed 
arrow-heads, generally leaf-shaped, appear first in F.II and in F.III 
were translated into slate, as were older flint and bone types with a 
triangular or rhomboid cross-section (Fig. 106, 3). Rhomboid dub- 

1 SA. t III, toi; V, 44; cf. dark, Ant. /., XXVIII (1928), 67-8. 

1 Imprints of nets are often found on pit-comb wmre, IGAIMK., 106, tig. 

! Stf* Jttf mnd *$* b y Foit ' * " XXIX OWk 46; cf. TCIM.. XXIX. 108 f. 
4 FM. t LXII, 30-3; firiuaov, Oterki, 5 8, 69. 

207 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

heads like Fig. 106, 4, current from Norway to the Urals and the Lower 
Volga, 1 may be descended from Maglemosian spiked weapons. 

For woodworking, antler wedges* and socketed bone chisels remained 
in use in Norway as in North Central Russia, but in the north were 
supplemented by more efficient adzes, gouges, and chisels of polished 
stone (Fig. 104, 3); in Central Russia such tools of polished stone are 
not apparently found before the rise of the Fatyanovo culture. So too 
the Maglemosian boars 1 tusk knife survived in Norway, Sweden, and 
Central Russia, 8 but was translated into slate in the north, giving 
rise to forms like Fig. 106, i. 

For land transport the man-pulled sleighs of Boreal age were supple- 
mented by dog sleighs, represented by runners found Irom Sweden 
to the Urals and dated in Finland as early as F.II. 4 A still heavier 
sledge, suited for reindeer traction, is attributed to "the transition from 
the Stone to the Bronze Age" in Finland. Skis too are attested in 
Finland and Sweden. 6 For use on water, the skin boats, inferred for 
the Maglemosian, are actually depicted in a Norwegian rock engrav- 
ing, while paddles of the Maglemosian type have been dug up from 
Ural peat. 

Each little group of hunter-fishers could be self-sufficing, but this 
economic independence did not exclude interchanges of goods and 
materials. Indeed, the seasonal hunting trips, imposed by their pre- 
datory mode of subsistance, might well be combined with inter- 
communal barter and easily grow into trading expeditions. So Russian 
flint was largely imported into Finland during F.II, but was ousted 
by Scandinavian flint in F.III. 7 Chisels like Fig. 104, 3, were manu- 
factured east of the Baltic, but were imported into Sweden. 8 Forest 
folk had discovered the amber deposits of Sammland and carved it in 
their own naturalistic style, but exported it to Norway, Central 
Germany, Finland, and Central Russia. 9 Becker 10 has convincingly 
attributed to Forest hunter-fishers the surprisingly wide distribution 
of South Swedish or Danish flint attested by regular hoards of celts 
from Northern Scandinavia while Clark 11 has envisaged an export of 
dried cod from Norway in return. 

1 Aflio, Woknplatzfundc, 29, 33; SGAIMK. (1931)* No. 6, 7, found with contracted 
skeleton in an "ochre grave". 

Veretye and Kubenino, MIA .. XXIX; Lyalovo, near Moscow, RAZ. t XIV (1923). 37. 
8 Fv. (1924), 298; RAZ., XTV, loc. tit. ' J/ 
4 SM., LVI (1949), 1-26. 

SM., XLI, i-io. 

dark, Preh. Europe, 283, pL IV, b. 
7 Act* Arch., I, 2x0. 

Real., VI, 222. 

tower, Din orttt*** SttnMder, 185; Real., i. 436; IGAIMK., 106, 132. 

w Aarbiger (1950). 155-245- u Prtk. Europe 88, 256. 

208 



SURVIVALS OF THE FOREST CULTURE 

The ideology, as far as it is expressed in the archaeological record, was 
as uniform as the economy on which it reposed, So the dead were 
always buried extended, often accompanied by lumps of red ochre 
or sprinkled with that colouring matter, either on camp sites or in 
distinct cemeteries. 1 The latter are usually very small, 8 to 22 inter- 
ments, but those at Vasterbjers on Gotland comprised 49 graves, 
on Deer Island in Lake Onega over ISO. 2 In the latter cemetery five 
bodies had been interred standing erect in deep pits and accompanied 
by an exceptional profusion of hunting weapons of flint and bone (all 
of types appropriate to F.O.I) and personal ornaments. They must 
belong to chiefs and reveal distinctions in rank within hunter-fisher 
societies. 

At least east of the Baltic human figures, some explicitly male, 
were carved in bone or wood and later modelled in clay. 8 The ideological 
purpose they doubtless served was probably not the same as that 
fulfilled by the familiar female statuettes made by neolithic peasants, 
and the style is quite different. In Norway elks and reindeer were 
engraved on rocks in a style as realistic as the Magdalenian. 4 In Sweden 
and North Russia 5 figures of animals, birds and men and even ritual 
scenes were pecked out on ice-smoothed surfaces in a far more con- 
ventional manner. Beasts and birds were carved realistically in bone, 
stone, and wood by all the Forest hunter-fisher tribes, but curious little 
flint sculptures 6 are concentrated rather in Eastern Russia from the 
Oka to the White Sea. 

The authors of these relatively uniform cultures did not constitute 
a racially homogeneous population. Most of the skulls from sites in 
North and Central Russia are described as Lapponoid, some as Euro- 
peoid, Mongoloid or hybrid, 7 and even on Gotland one skull has been 
diagnosed as Mongoloid. 

The most economical account of the hunter-fisher cultures just 
surveyed would be to treat them all as derived by divergent adaptation 
from the North Sea West Baltic Maglemosian of the Boreal phase. 

1 North Russian burials are described and listed by Gerasimov, Vostanovlenie litsa po 
terepu (Trudy Inst. Etnografiya, XXVIII), Moscow, 1955, 328-65. Stenberger, Das 
Graofeld . . .; the cemetery should be Northern III, D, or F.III. 

1 SA., VI (1940), 46-62; Ravdonikas dates the cemetery to F.III or IV, but Briuaov 
(Olerki, 108) to the Atlantic phase, i.e. F.O.I See also Gerasimov, op. tit. 

1 Foss, MIA., XXIX, 35 ff.; Ayrapfta, SM.. XLVIII (1941), 82-119. Save perhaps 
for the bone figurine from Deer I., all seem late. 

4 B0e, Felsemeichnungen in wesilichen Norwegen (Bergen, 1932). 

* Ravdonikas, Les Gravures rupestres des boras du lac Onega et de la M*r Blanche 
Trudy Inst. Etnografiya), Moscow, 1936, 1938. 

Zamiatnin, <r Miniatiurnye kremnevye skulptury", SA., X (1948); Hausler, Wiss 
Zts. d. Martin-Luther Universitat, Halle-Wittenberg, HI (1954). 767-82. 

f Briusov, Ottrki, 35-6; KS. Inst. Etnografiya, XVIII (i953* 55-^5: Gemsiinov. 
Vostanovltnie litsa (1955), 296-395. 

209 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The anthropological data would suffice to exclude such an over- 
simplification. Becker 1 , without of course denying its Maglemosian 
constituents, regards the culture symbolized by the pit-comb ware of 
Scandinavia as introduced there immediately from beyond the Baltic. 
Russian prehistorians deny vehemently all dependence of the Central 
Russian, Uralian, and Siberian aspects on the Baltic cultures. Accord- 
ing to Briusov, 2 the Urals would have been colonized in early post- 
glacial times from the Aral-Caspian basin, Central Russia and the East 
Baltic from the Pontic region; the classical cultures distinguished by 
pit-comb ware would have crystalized in the Oka-Upper Volga and 
Upper Dniepr basins. His account involves rather heavy draughts on 
ignorance. The early cultures of the North Pontic zone aifd Trans- 
caspia are still very ill-defined. The chronological relations of assem- 
blages from the Ural peat bogs, from sand-dune sites in the Oka- Volga 
basin, and even from the White Sea-Onega-Ladoga belt to those 
collected round the Baltic are quite ambiguous. Few pollen-diagrams 3 
have been published, and their interpretation in terms of the West 
Baltic zonation remains disputable. 

Types proper to the Boreal phase round the Baltic do indeed occur 
in the Ural bogs, but their context is unknown. They might theoretic- 
ally have spread westward rather than eastward, but without inde- 
pendent evidence of date no final decision is justified. So, too, ovoid 
pots, similar in technique to the Swedish and Finnish, are found both 
in Siberia 4 and across the Pontic steppes to the Caucasus. 6 The coarse 
ware, associated with Tripolye pottery at all stages, is technically 
akin to pit-comb ware. Whipped-cord patterns that might have 
inspired Finnish styles I and II 6 were at some time very popular in 
the Ukraine and Dniepr basin. But the relative antiquity of all these 
phenomena is uncertain. The apparent brevity of culture sequences 
round the Urals, in Central Russia, and in the Ukraine gives the West 
Baltic a semblance of priority. But that brevity is partly due to de- 
ficiencies of exploration and of publication and, in so far as archaeo- 
logical events are occasioned by climatic changes or land movements, 
to the greater stability of the continental environment. 

The archaeological data here summarized do prove that the hunter- 
fisher populations of the taiga zone, however sparse, constituted a 
continuum for cultural transmissions all through the circumpolar zone 

1 Aarbegtr (1950), 251. 

1 O&rto, 30-40, 164-74, 147-49; Ayrftpaa, too, seems to favour a south-east origin 
for pitxomb ware, FM., LXII, 32. TGIM., XXIX (1956), 70. 

4 E.g. M IA. t XVIII. 169 ff.; but some pots in addition to pits bear net impressions. 

* Hanar, Kauhasiens, pi XXIX. 

A. Rosenberg, Kulturstrfimungcn in Euvopa zur Steinuit (Copenhagen, 1931). 

210 



SURVIVALS OF THE FOREST CULTURE 

of Eurasia and between it and the parklands and steppes to the south. 
They prove too that this was not a one-way traffic, but they give no 
measure of the relative importance of contributions from the efcst, the 
south, and the west respectively. The technique of bifacial retouch on 
flint flakes and blades is more likely to have reached the north from 
the south-east than from the south-west; the contemporary apprecia- 
tion of amber must have been diffused in the opposite direction. The 
heavier bow introduced into Denmark by the pit-comb traders may 
have been of the composite type attested in Siberia by the Serovo 
stage 1 and ancestral to the Turko-Mongolian type, but even the 
Maglemosian bows had been re-inforced with sinews. The transmission 
through the food-gathering cultures of the taiga of Asiatic contributions 
to European civilization is in fact better attested in Sub-Boreal than 
in Boreal times, but still eludes precise evaluation. 

The cultural continuum thus constituted was disrupted by the 
arrival of warlike farmers and herdsmen of the Boat Axe and Fat- 
yanovo cultures. The former occupied the East Baltic coastlands, but 
beyond a frontier, sharply defined in Finland, 8 left undisturbed the 
old hunter-fishers. These preserved intact the old ceramic tradition 
of pit-comb ware, though they sometimes used asbestos as temper 
for the pots, and continued to rely on stone implements and weapons 




FIG. 107. Knives and axe from Seima hoard: i, (J); 2, (t); 3 (detail of 2), (i); 4-5, (4). 

with the addition of local imitations of boat axes even when a few 
imported socketed axes of Swedish Malar and East Russian Ananino 
types 8 proclaim that the Final Bronze Age had already been reached 
in Denmark and Southern Sweden. So too in Central Russia the Fat- 
yanovo warriors did not replace the older population of the Volga 
valley. Camp sites, yielding pottery made in conformity with the old 

1 Okladnikov, MIA., XVIII (1950), 220. 

1 SM., LIX (1952), 6-24. ESA. t XI (1937). *6-3; MIA.. XX (1951), 

211 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

prescriptions, though now sometimes decorated with textile impressions, 
illustrate the survival of a predominantly neolithic hunter-fisher 
population when socketed celts and other metal types represented in 
the hoard from Seima (on the Oka west of Gorki) 1 were filtering in 
from the Late Bronze Age cultures of the srubno phase to the south and 
east. The realistic elk's head of the Seima knife-handle (Fig. 107, 2-3) 
has indeed analogues in Siberian and Chinese bronze-work, 1 but 
springs from the naturalistic art of the Eurasiatic hunter-fishers and 
can be closely matched not only on stone battle-axes that have turned 
up from Norway to the Urals 8 but also on the bone dagger from the 
Deer Island cemetery on Lake Onega. But such belated survivals of 
the Stone Age lie outside the scope of this book. * 

1 Tallgren, "Ett viktigt fornfynd", FM. (1915), 73 ff. f and ESA. t II (1926). 137, 
remains the best publication of this "hoard". 
* Childe, Ins*. Arch.. AR. t X (1954), "-25. 
> Clark, Northern Europe, 186; SM., XXXV (1928), 36-43. 

For further details consult in additions to works mentioned in the footnotes: 

on Norway: "Vistefundet", Stavanger Museums Arsheft, 1907; Gjessing, Norges 
StevAlder (Oslo, 1945). 

on Latvia: Balodis, Det dldsta Lettland (Uppsala, 1940). 

on Estonia: Moora, Die Vorzeit Estiands (Tartu, 1932). 

on Finland: Aflio, Steinxeitliche Wohnplatzfunde in Finland (Helsinki, 1909). 

on the whole region: Gjessing, "The Circum-Polar Stone Age", Ada Arctica, II (Copen- 
hagen, 1944)- 



212 



CHAPTER XII 

MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 
MEGALITHIC TOMBS 

THE diffusion of Oriental culture in Western Europe must have been 
effected in part by maritime intercourse. And evidence of such inter- 
course is supposedly afforded by the architecture of groups of tombs 
spread significantly along the coasts of the Mediterranean and the 
Atlantic and along terrestrial routes joining these coasts. Judged by 
their contents, the tombs in question do not belong to a single culture 
and were not therefore erected and used by a single people. But archi- 
tectural details recur with such regularity at so many distinct places 
that a general survey of the main types at this stage will save repetition. 

The most intriguing tombs of the series, which consequently received 
the first attention from archaeologists, are built of extravagantly large 
stones. They are therefore termed "megalithic". But as the same plans 
are followed in tombs built in dry masonry with small stones and in 
others excavated in the ground (rock-cut tombs) the application of the 
term to the whole series is misleading. In Portugal, 1 for instance, 
beehive chambers entered through a low, narrow passage were exca- 
vated in hillsides where the soft limestone facilitated digging. Where 
the subsoil was shallow and the rock hard, the same plan was repro- 
duced above ground in dry-stone masonry roofed by corbelling if the 
local sandstone or schists broke naturally into convenient slabs. Where 
the rock is more refractory, like granite, large blocks set on end, 
orthostats, supporting large capstones or lintels form the framework for 
chamber and passage. And tombs constructed by all three methods 
often contain the same furniture. 

Many authorities 2 therefore contend that in such regions the method 
of construction is conditioned by local geology alone. That thesis will 
be adopted in the sequel with the reservation that it is not universally 
applicable. "Rock-cut" tombs could easily have been excavated in 
the chalk of the English Downs, but in fact the burial chambers here 

1 V. Correia, "El Neolitico dc Pavia", Mem. CIPP., XXVII (1921). 63 .; cf. Forde. 
Am. Aptkr., XXXII (1930), 41. 

* Elliot Smith, "The Evolution of the Rock-cut Tomb and Dolmen", in Essays and 
Studies presented to Sir William Ridgeway (Cambridge, 1913), was a pioneer in this 
interpretation. 

213 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



were always built above ground. At Antequera and other cemeteries 
in Southern Spain (p. 274), orthostatic and corbelled tombs of differ- 
ent plans stand side by side. In such instances the method of con- 
struction must have been dictated exclusively by the traditional 
prejudices of the tombs' builders. In a preliminary survey, however, 
it is community of plan that is most significant. 

Among a bewildering variety of local deviations it is convenient to 
distinguish two main types Passage Graves consisting of a chamber 
entered by a distinct passage, lower and narrower than the chamber 





FIG. 1 08. Rock-cut tomb, Castelluccio, and corbelled tomb, 
Los Millares. 

proper; and Long Cists (Gallery Graves) in which the chamber itself is 
long and narrow and entered directly through a portal without any 
preceding passage. But if this conventional distinction be rigidly main- 
tained, it leads to quite arbitrary classifications. A tomb like Fig. 153 
is on plan as much a Gallery Grave as Fig. 109, but by its furniture 
and method of construction it belongs to the same group as Fig. 152. 
Long Cists may be covered by long or round barrows and so may 
Passage Graves. No complex of relics is peculiar to one type rather than 
the other save that the SOM culture (p. 312) is regularly associated 
with Long Cists of the Paris type. Hence even in Western Europe the 
facts do not authorize us to postulate the diffusion of two distinct 
versions of the "megalithic idea". 1 
The Passage Grave is the most widely distributed type, being com- 

* Cf. Daniel, PPS. t VII (1941), 1-49. 
214 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 

mon throughout the East Mediterranean area, in Sicily, Sardinia, 
Southern Spain, Portugal, Brittany, Central Ireland, Northern Scot- 
land, Denmark, South Sweden, and Holland. Cellular annexes open 
off the main chamber in the rock-hewn tombs of the East Mediter- 
ranean, Sardinia, and the Balearic Islands and in some corbelled 
tombs in Southern Spain, Portugal, Ireland, and Scotland, in a few 
orthostatic tombs in Brittany and Denmark. Roughly circular chambers 
characterize the corbelled tombs of Crete and the Cyclades, the earlier 
rock-hewn tombs of Sicily, and many South Spanish, Portuguese, 
Breton, Irish, and Scottish sepultures and the oldest Danish ones. A 
corbelled passage grave of circular plan is often called a tholos (Figs. 44 
and 108). 

In rock-cut tombs the passage is often a descending ramp. Where 
the ground surface is nearly level it may be reduced to a stepped shaft, 
producing the pit-cave (Fig. 25, 2) already encountered in Greece and 
South Russia and to meet us again in Sicily. If the chamber is cut in 
the face of a cliff, the passage may be abbreviated to a mere doorway 
as often in Sicily (Fig. 108). A well-marked variety of passage grave, 
built with large orthostats, has been termed an undifferentiated passage 
grave because the passage gradually expands towards the chamber 
which is generally bottle-shaped. Near Aries and in the Balearic Isles 
the rock-hewn chambers are themselves long and narrow and not 
preceded by any length of passage though cellular annexes sometimes 
open off the chamber (Fig. 109). In Menorca the same type is repro- 
duced above ground in dry-stone masonry in so-called navetas. 

The long stone cist or gallery reproduces this Balearic plan in ortho- 
static masonry. In Sardinia the orthostats support dry-stone walling 
corbelled in to a barrel vault. But in the classic form represented in 
the Paris basin, Brittany and Jersey, Belgium, Western and Central 
Germany, and Sweden the uprights support the lintels, and the long 
narrow rectangular chamber is preceded by a short porch as wide as 
the chamber. Most cists of the Paris type are subterranean, being built 
in an excavated trench. Variants on the long cist occur in South Italy, 
Sardinia, Northern Spain, France, Britain, Denmark, and Holland. 
On the slopes of the Pyrenees, in Northern Ireland, and South- West 
Scotland gallery graves are divided into a series of intercommunicating 
compartments by low, transverse slabs, termed septal stones, sometimes 
combined with upright portals; such tombs are known as segmented 
cists (Fig. no). 

Dolmen is a term applied sometimes to any megalithic tomb, but 
generally only to small rectangular or polygonal chambers without 
entrance passage, formed of three to six megalithic uprights. Even 

215 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

when thus restricted, the name obscures the genetic and functional 
variety of the monuments to which it is applied. Some "dolmens", for 




10 



20 50 



FIG. 109. Rock-cut tomb, Mallorca, and naveta, Menorca. 

instance in Sardinia 1 and in the Cotswolds,* appear to be just the most 
stubborn remains of more complex monuments destroyed by culti- 

Antiquity, XIII, 376. 

Crawford, Lo* Barrows ofike CotswMs, 21; Daniel, Antiquity, XI (1937), 183-200. 

2l6 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER.FOLK 

vators or road-builders. Some are dosed chambers, not collective 
tombs. Others are obviously just abbreviated gallery graves. 1 To 
avoid confusion we have used the Danish name dyss (plural dysser ) for 
dolmens which are xtiarked by furniture as well as structure as a distinct 
type. But even the classical dyss, as defined on p. 181, might be regarded 
as a segmented cist abbreviated to one compartment only. 

The portal of the tomb was treated with special care, and one form 
termed the porthole slab must be mentioned here. A round or sub- 
rectangular aperture, 45 to 80 cm. (i ft. 6 in. to 2 ft. 8 in.) across is 




FIG. no. Segmented cist in horned cairn, North Ireland, and Giants' 
Tomb, Sardinia. 

cut out in a slab or in the proximal edges of two juxtaposed slabs 
which closes the entrance to chamber or passage (Figs. 81 and 100). 
Porthole slabs were a regular feature in Caucasian "dolmens" and 
occur even in the Indian ones. They form the portals to megalithic 
cists and rock-cut tombs in Sicily, to the gallery graves of Sardinia, to 
corbelled and other passage graves in Southern Spain,* to long cists 
of the Paris type not only in the Seine valley, but also in Brittany, 
Jersey, Central Germany, and Sweden; they were even incorporated in 
the megalithic temples of Malta.* A porthole stone often enhances the 
resemblance of a built tomb's doorway to the entry into a natural 

1 For instance Adam's Grave near Dunoon is just a segmented cist reduced to a 
cringle segment. 

Studi*n t I (1938), 147-35. * Ank. t LXVIH, 166. 

217 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

or artificial cave. The desire to emphasize the similarity has in fact 
been suggested as an explanation for the porthole stone's origin. 1 But 
a porthole slab was employed to form the portal of a tomb cut in 
friable rock at Monte Salia, 2 and the device does not always simulate 
a cave mouth at all realistically. 

Built chamber tombs, when not erected in an artificial excavation, 
were probably always put underground artificially by burial in a 
mound or cairn. The latter was always carefully constructed and was 
often, if not always, supported by a built masonry revetment wall, 
or by a peristalith of large uprights. Masonry revetments are well 
illustrated in the Balearic navetas, in some Almerian round cairns, and 
in the long cairns of the Cotswolds and Northern Scotland. But it is 
doubtful whether these finely built walls were intended to be seen 
in Britain, since the faces were masked deliberately by an "extra 
revetment" 8 of slabs piled obliquely. 

The passage or portal of a chamber tomb often gives on to a fore- 
court so carefully planned that it must have played an essential part 
in funerary ritual. Semicircular forecourts cut in the rock precede 
some Sicilian tombs, and are delimited by built walls in front of Sar- 
dinian gallery graves and North Scottish passage graves and by ortho- 
stats in front of tholoi at Los Millares in Almeria and Barro in Portugal 
and of North Irish and South-West Scottish segmented cists 4 (Figs. 108 
and no). In England the forecourts are more often cuspidal in plan, 
as are those connected with one or two Mycenaean, Danish, Swedish, 
and Armorican passage graves. 6 More careful examinations of the 
environs of chamber tombs or of the barrows covering them will 
certainly reveal the presence of forecourts in other regions. Despite 
their careful construction, the forecourts in Great Britain are generally 
found filled up with earth and rubble. This filling may be deliberate. 
In any case the entrances to tombs have usually been intentionally 
blocked up and hidden. That need not mean, as Hemp 6 has inferred, 
that the numerous skeletons found in such tombs had all been laid 
to rest simultaneously, after which the vault was finally sealed up. 
The initiated could always rediscover the entrance and remove the 
blocking, as happened at Mycenae (p. 82). Irrefutable evidence of the 

1 Kendrick, Axe Age, 48. 
1 BP., XUII, 17, fig. 6. 
Arch., LXXXVI, 132; PPS., IV (1938), 201. 



., , . 

* * X Y I ? 75' *"*<>***> I. 7J ** Sc. (1920), 304; Corrda, "Pavia", 72; Childe, 
Prehistory of Scotland, 26, 33. Vestiges of such a forecourt can be seen in Balearic 
navetas (CIPMO., 26), and with timber revetment in English unchambered long-barrows 
(P* 3*5 below). 



(P* 3*5 below). 

Nordmann, Megalitkic, figs. 36-9. 

Arch. Comb. (1927), 13, 17. 

2l8 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 

use of tombs for successive interments is forthcoming from one or 
two graves in Scotland, Brittany, and Denmark, 1 as at Mycenae. 

The distribution of chamber tombs is presumably due to the spread 
of some religious idea expressed in funerary ritual. Save in Egypt, they 
seem everywhere to have served as collective sepulchres or family 
vaults. A family likeness between the skeletons buried in the same 
tomb has been reported in England and Denmark* as at Mycenae, and 
the features noted in Crete (p. 23: fires kindled in the chamber, con- 
fusion of bones) are repeated almost universally. Collective burial 
alone can hardly represent the unifying idea, since collective burial in 
natural caves was practised even in mesolithic Palestine (p. 23). It 
has indeed been suggested that the tombs were just copies of cave 
ossuaries, 8 and Wheeler 4 describes the erection of megalithic tombs as 
"the mass production of artificial caves" by populations accustomed 
to collective burial in natural ones. But in Scotland and elsewhere 
perfectly good natural caves were neglected; collective burial comes 
in simultaneously with megalithic sepulchral architecture. But mega- 
lithic tombs were not always used as communal ossuaries. The finest 
tholoi, the Mycenaean, were designed for a single chieftain and perhaps 
his spouse. The most elaborate rock-cut tombs of the Maine contain 
only a few skeletons, the rest a hundred or so. Moreover, burial practices 
were far from uniform. While inhumation, generally in the contracted 
attitude, was everywhere the normal practice, cases of cremation have 
been reported from many South Spanish, South French, Armorican, 
and British tombs and are conclusively attested in Northern Ireland. 

It is in fact only detailed agreements in seemingly arbitrary peculi- 
arities of plan and in accessories, such as porthole slabs and forecourts, 
that justify the interpretation of megalithic tombs as evidences of the 
diffusion of ideas. The grave goods afford little support for this inter- 
pretation. They are characterized at first by purely local idiosyncrasies 
and would suggest to the typologist differences in date. In Egypt, 
Cyprus, and the ^Egean even the earliest tombs contain a relative 
abundance of metal objects, and such are not uncommon even in the 
first Sicilian and Sardinian vaults. Moreover, in all these regions 
chamber tombs continued to be built and used even in the Iron Age. 
In Portugal, as in Malta, some megalithic tombs seem to be genuinely 
pre-metallic, but in most tombs in the Iberian Peninsula and South 
France, too, despite numerous stone tools, the grave goods are explicitly 
Copper Age, while during the Bronze Age collective burial in chamber 

1 Childe. Scotland, 43; Nordmann, Megalithic, 28. 

1 PPS., IV, 147; Aarbtger (1915), 319; Nordmann, Megalitkic, 30. 

1 Hemp, in PPS., I (1935), no. 

* In Eyre, European Civilitaiio*, II, 182. 

219 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

tombs went out of fashion. In Brittany metal is exceptional in chamber 
tombs. In Great Britain and the rest of North- Western Europe such 
tombs contain an exclusively neolithic furniture and in general went 
out of use as bronze became available. 

This disparity has been used to support the thesis that megalithic 
tombs, invented in the extreme north or in Portugal in a fabulously 
ancient Stone Age, were carried thence to reach South Spain in the 
Copper Age and the ^Egean in a still later Bronze Age. In reality the 
quantity of metal from the tombs is no criterion of their absolute age. 
In North Europe we have proved conclusively that at least the later 
"Stone Age" passage graves and long cists were in use during the full 
Bronze Age or Danubian period IV in Central Europe and thftt none 
of the dysser even need be appreciably older than period III. On the 
short chronology outlined on p. 339 megalith building in Denmark 
should begin about 2500 B.C., or several centuries later than the Early 
Minoan and Cycladic tombs, to say nothing of the Egyptian. 

The extreme rarity of metal and indeed of other imported objects 
in the megalithic tombs of Northern and North- Western Europe seems 
an almost fatal objection to the theory that the idea of building such 
tombs was diffused by "prospectors" or "Children of the Sun" 1 setting 
out from Egypt or some other East Mediterranean centre to settle in 
regions where ores or precious stones, valued for magical qualities as 
givers of life, were to be found. There is a general, but far from exact, 
correlation between the distribution of such substances (for instance, 
copper in the Iberian Peninsula, the Pyrenees, Sardinia, Ireland, 
Galloway, and the Crinan district, tin in Galicia and Cornwall, gold 
in Brittany, Ireland, and the Strath of Kildonan, pearls in Orkney, 
amber in Jutland, etc.) and foci of megalithic architecture. The tomb 
furnitures afford surprisingly little evidence for the exploitation of 
these resources (no Scottish copper, gold, or pearls have been found in 
a local megalith) and none whatever of Egyptian or ^Egean imports 
obtained in exchange for their exportation. Yet such products would 
be expected in the graves of merchant princes enjoying such prestige 
that they could persuade local savages laboriously, if rather barbar- 
ously, to copy for them the sepultures appropriate to their rank at 
home, and inspired also with the desire for securing their own immor- 
tality by necklaces of pearls and gold beads. 

The rarity or complete absence of imports from megalithic tombs 
is furthermore a serious obstacle to their correlation with any inde- 
pendent sequence of cultures by which their relative or absolute age 
might be determined. Once in Sicily, very frequently in Sardinia, the 

1 Perry, Th* Growth of Civilisation. 
220 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 

Iberian Peninsula, South France, and Brittany, occasionally in Scot- 
land and even Denmark, Bell-beakers or their derivatives are found 
in megalithic tombs of almost every form. From individual tombs in 
Brittany, Spain, Scotland, and Denmark 1 it has been proved con- 
clusively that the Beakers were associated only with the later inter- 
ments in the tombs concerned. The Beaker-folk cannot therefore have 
been the vehicles in the original diffusion of the "megalithic idea", nor 
can their expansion, which reached the Danube basin late in period HI, 
fix the relative age of the earlier chamber tombs. 

Gallery graves in Central France, Brittany, and Jersey and even 
in the Balearic Islands and Southern Sweden regularly contain relics 
of the Horgen culture (p. 198). Indeed, it may be said that Horgen folk 
diffused the Paris type of long cist to Brittany and across Germany to 
Sweden. In Central Europe the Horgen culture too seems to belong to 
a late phase of period III, and lasts into IV. But megalithic tombs are 
not attached to the best-dated Horgen settlements, and the long cist 
may be a secondary accretion in their culture. 

In default of better founded chronologies, a resort to typology is 
tempting. In Scandinavia the sequence, dyss (dolmen), passage grave, 
long stone cist really seems to hold good, though it is no longer regarded, 
as it was by Montelius, as a self-contained process of evolution and 
degeneration. Similar sequences have been applied by Leeds, Ober- 
maier, and Bosch-Gimpera* to the Iberian Peninsula, and by Mackenzie 
to Sardinia. 8 Bosch-Gimpera, by labelling some ruinous tombs in 
Northern Portugal "dolmens", traces their development into ortho- 
static passage graves, rock-cut tombs, and lastly tholoi. But of the 
Iberian Peninsula Forde could write 4 quite justly, "small passage 
dolmens have a poorer, but not earlier furniture and represent a pro- 
vincial degradation typical of peripheral areas". In the sequel, however, 
it has been established that some orthostatic passage graves are really 
earlier than any tholoi in Portugal, while the still unpublished furniture 
is said to confirm the yet higher antiquity of "small dolmens", con- 
taining it would seem only a single burial. Mackenzie's "dolmens" in 
Sardinia prove on closer examination to be just badly ruined Giants' 
Grave. 6 Only in Denmark is the priority in time of the simplest types 
proved by grave goods. But even in Denmark out of hundreds of dysser 
only 57 are dated by their contents to Northern II; a very large 

1 L'Anthr., XLIII (1933), 248; Cbilde, Scotland, 43; Nordmann, "Megalithic", 122; 
Leisner, MegalithgrAber, 554. 

Arch., LXX, 215 ff.; T 'E1 Dolmen de Matarubilla" (CIPP., 26); R*al. t X, 358; 
Rev. Antkr., XL (1930), 244 ff.; Prtkistoire, II (1933), 189 f. 

1 BSR., V (1910), 87-137; VI, 127-70. 

Am. Antkr.. XXXII, 16. * Antiquity, XIII (1939), 376-7. 

221 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



proportion must have been built, like the passage graves, during 
period HL* 

No new typology need be attempted here. The architectural agree- 
ments cited reveal the megalithic province as a cultural continuum. 
Within that continuum culture grows in every aspect poorer as we 
pass westward and northward from the East Mediterranean to Scotland 
and Denmark. We see the same sort of cultural zoning that has been 
disclosed in the Danubian corridor and on the Eurasiatic plain. 

BEAKER TRADERS 

TtaJB^^ agency iji opening up communications, 

establishing commercial relations, and diffusing the practice of metal- 







FIG. in. Beaker pottery: i, (J) and 2 (I), Palmella, Portugal; 3, La 
Halliade, South France (}); 4, Villafrati, Sicily (}). 



have already mentioned their activities in Central Europe, 
and tEey will meet us so frequently in the West that a brief characteriza- 
tion becomes convenient at this point. 

1 Brendsted, Danmarks, 198, 345. 
222 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 

i Beaker-folk can be recognized not only by their economic activities 
but also by the distinctive armament, ornaments, and above all 
pottery, associated together everywhere in their graves,/ Indefed, the 
inevitable drinking-cup, which gives a name to its users, may be more 
than a readily recognized diagnostic symptom; it symbolizes beer as 
one source of their influence, as a vodka flask or a gin bottle would 
disclose an instrument of European domination in Siberia and Africa 
respectively. Millet grains 1 were in fact found in a beaker in Portugal. 

The Beaker-folk are known principally from graves which never 
form large cemeteries. When their pottery and other relics are found 
in settlements, they are normally mixed, save perhaps in Central 
Spain, with remains distinctive of other groups./Thus Beaker-folk 
appear as bands of armed merchants who engaged in trading copper, 
gold, amber, callais, and similar scarce substances which are frequently 
found in their graves.^ The bands included smiths the mould for 
casting a West European dagger was found in a Moravian Beaker 
grave 2 and women who everywhere fashioned the distinctive vases 
with scrupulous attention to traditional details of form and ornament. 
They roved from the Moroccan coasts 8 and Sicily to the North Sea 
coasts, andjrom Portugal and Brittany to the Tisza and the Vistula. 4 / 
/Sometimes they settled down,! by preference in regions of natural 
wealth or at the junctions of important routes. ^At times they obtained 
economic and political authority over established communities of 
different cultures, formed hybrid groups with these, and even led them 
on farther wanderirigs/the Beaker groups that invaded Britain give 
indications of composite^ origin.) 

A detailed study of Beaker pottery does not disclose a single and 
irreversible expansion. It suggests an early uniformity so remarkable 
as to be hardly explicable merely by the rapidity of a migration and the 
conservatism of the migrants followed by the emergence of distinct 
local groups, but the maintenance of intercourse between some of these 
at least. The "classical" or "Pan-European" beaker (Fig HI, 3-4),* 
made of relatively fine grit-tempered ware coated with a burnished 

1 CIA A., 1930 (Portugal), 356. 

1 Casopis vlastenickiho spolku museijniho v Olomouci, XLJ (1929), T, li; Forssander, 
Ostskand. Nor den, 70. 

Germania, XXXIII (1955), 13-22. 

4 General review in A. del Castillo, La Culivra del Vaso campaniforma (Barcelona, 
1928). and "Cronologia de la cultura del vaso campaniforme", Arqvivo EspaM d* 
Archeologia, LIII (i943) 388-435; (i944). i-*7; add for Belgium, Marien, Bui. Mustos 
roy. d'Avt et d'Hist. (Brussels, 1948), 16-48; for Poland, Zurowski, Wiad. Arch.. XI 
(1932), 116-56; for Central Germany, Neumann, PZ. t XX (1929), 35 ff.; for North 
Germany, NNU., tl (1928), 25 ff.; X, 20; for Holland, Bunch, Outk. Med. t XIV (1933), 
39-122. 

* Savory, Revista Guimarfot, LX (1950), 363 ff. 

223 



DAWN OP EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

slip that is liable to peel off and brick red to black in colour, is decorated 
with zones of "rouletted " hatchings, alternating with plain zones. The 
"rouletted" decoration is executed with a comb with very short teeth, 
separated by extremely narrow interstices and probably with a curved 
edge. It yields a practically continuous "hyphenated line" of round or, 
more often, rectangular dots, separated by low septa. The horizontal 
zones may be combined with a radial decoration on the base. 

This classic Pan-European style is represented in nearly every 
region 1 reached by the Beaker-folk, though it grows less common and 
characteristic as one goes eastward from the Rhine-Brenner line. But 
wherever Beaker-folk settled down at all, local styles grew up. These 
are presumably in general later and specialized variants on th origin- 
ally common theme. On the other hand, an Iberic style using sharply 
incised or stamped lines (well represented at Ciempozuelos and Pal- 
mella) (Fig. in, 1-2) is possibly older than the classic style. 8 Be that 
as it may, some local or derivative styles have such a wide distribution 
that they must denote secondary intercourse if the dispersion of the 
rouletted style be ascribed to a primary expansion. For instance, 
beakers decorated by a cord, wrapped spirally round the vase, occur 
in Northern Holland, Scotland, Brittany, and South France. 8 

In the Iberian Peninsula, South France, and Central Europe beakers 
are often associated in graves with shallow hemispherical bowls decor- 
ated in the same technique but more often with patterns radiating 
from the base (Fig. in, 2). 

lA distinctive weapon associated everywhere with the Beaker com- 
plex is the tanged West European knife-dagger (Fig. 113, 2). The tang 
may be flanged; the hilt, never riyeted to the blade, was hollowed at 
the base in the Egyptian manner explained on p. 130. Flint copies 
were frequently made as substitutes at least for funerary use. But 
Beaker-folk were primarily bowmen. Arrows were normally tipped 
with tanged-and-barbed flint heads in Western Europe, with hollow- 
based heads in Holland, Central Europe, and Upper Italy. In Central 
Europe (including Italy and Poland), Holland, and Great Britain, 
rarely also in Brittany, but only once certainly in Spain, 4 the Beaker 
archer wore a concave plaque of stone perforated at the four corners 

i E.g. Castillo, pis. VII, 4 (Andalusia); L, 2 (Portugal); LXI (Castellon); LXXVI, 

1 (Catalonia); LXXXIV (Galicia); XCIV (Hautes Pyrenees); CIII (Brittany); CXIX, 

2 (Sicily); CXXIII (Po valley); CL, 7 (Bohemia); CLII, 8 (Moravia); CLXXXII, 2 
(Middle Rhine). 

1 Nordmann, "Megalithic", 100; Adas y Mem., XIV (1935), Noticiario, 5; Bosch- 
Gimpera, Man, XL (1940), 2; but the stratigraphy of Spmaen on which the latter relies 
does not, as published, afford any clue as to the relations between my "classic" and 
"grand" styles; Savory, he. cit. t 169. 

Childe, Scotland, 83; PCBI., 93. 

4 Corona d'Estudis dedica a sus Martins (Madrid, 1941), 128. 

224 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 

as a wrist-guard for protection against the recoil of the bow-string 
(Fig. 112). In South France, Brittany, and Bohemia 1 thin strips of 
gold-leaf (Fig. 113, 4), similarly perforated for the same purpose. Thick 




FIG. 112. Beaker, wrist-guard, and associated vases, Silesia. 
After Seger (J). 





Fio. 



. 113. West European dagger (Bohemia) and flint copy (Silesia); arrow-straightener 
(Wiltshire); gold-leaf from wrist-guard and copper awl, Bohemia (|). 

1 Mat., 1881, 552; Cazalis de Fondouce, Les Allies couvtrUs d* Provence; L'Anikr 
XLIV, 507; Childe, Danube, 191, 193. 

P 225 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

day plaques of the same plan! but flat and also perforated at the comers, 
are found on Beaker sites in Portugal and Spain and may also have 
been used as wrist-guards. Stone arrow-straighteners, 1 used by Beaker- 
folk in Bohemia and Poland and also in Sardinia, do not seem to be 
an original part of their equipment since in Central Europe they appear 
in pre-Beaker times, in Britain only in the early Middle Bronze Age, 
well after the Beaker invasions were over. 

A distinctive element of the Beaker-folk's costume was a button, of 
stone, bone, amber, or jet with V perforations. 

In Northern Sicily, Sardinia, the Iberian Peninsula, South France 
and Brittany, and the Channel Islands, Beakers and their normal 
associated armaments are found, generally accompanied fcy relics 
distinctive of other cultures, in collective sepulchres natural caves, 2 
rock-cut tombs, 8 tholoi, 4 orthostatic passage graves, 5 gallery graves, 6 
and segmented cists. 7 In no case, however, do they demonstrably 
accompany the primary interments, while in isolated instances they 
were proved to be secondary (p. 327). Beaker-folk had sometimes 
obtained admission to the families or clans entitled to burial in such 
sepulchres, but arrived only after the tombs were erected. In North 
Italy and throughout Central Europe, Beaker-folk were interred 
individually and strictly contracted, in simple trench graves. 

These form cemeteries comprising in Moravia as many as thirty 
graves, 8 but normally considerably less, as if the communities settled 
in one place were small. But the Beaker-folk must have settled down 
and multiplied in Central Europe, since the total numbers of Beaker 
burials recorded from Bohemia is about 300, from Saxo-Thuringia I03, 9 
and from the small province of Veluwe in Holland I50. 10 [ Settled in 
Central Europe, the Beaker-folk formed hybrid cultures through con- 
tact with other groups^ n Moravia some adopted cremation and 
burial under barrows perhaps from Battle-axe folk. From these in the 
Rhineland, Holland, and North Germany Beaker-folk adopted barrow- 
burial, battle-axes, and some elements even in ceramic decoration, 
including presumably the use of cord impressions. Jn fact the contact 

PA., XXXIX (1933), 5<>-3; cf. pp. 102, 106. 

E.g. Villafrati in Sicily, commonly in the caves of Monges, near Narbonne, in 
Central and Northern Spain and in Portugal. 

E.g. Anghelu Ruju, Sardinia; Palmel&and Alapraia (Portugal). 
E.g. at Los Millares and other Almerian sites, and in Var. 
E.g. in Brittany and Portugal. 
E.g. in Brittany and in the Paris basin. 
Puig Rodo (Catalonia) and La Halliade (Hautes Pyrenees). 

Cnilde, Danube, 192; cf. Mannus, XXXI (1939). 467 ff., for a cemetery of twenty- 
four graves in Swabia. 
PZ., XX, 45- 
" Oudh. Med. (1933), 120. 

226 



MEGALITH BUILDERS AND BEAKER-FOLK 

produced a hybrid population with a composite culture and art. At 
least the B2 and C groups of Beaker invaders in Britain are offshoots 
of such a hybrid. 

The people buried, with Bell-beakers at Ciempozuelos, near Madrid 1 
and almost invariably in Central Europe and Britain, are round-headed, 
and brachycranial skulls are found in nearly every collective tomb 
that yields Bell-beakers, even in regions so dominantly Mediterranean 
as Sardinia and Sicily. In Germany, 2 though not representing a strictly 
homogeneous population, skulls from Beaker cemeteries regularly 
comprise a novel racial type, better known in the Iberian Peninsula 
and ultimately of East Mediterranean stock. In this instance, there- 
fore, it looks as if culture and race coincided and one might legitimately 
speak of a Beaker race. Even in Central Europe Beaker skulls had 
been trephined. 

Both in form and decoration Bell-beakers of the classic style and 
the associated bowls look like copies of esparto-grass vessels such as 
are made in the Sudan to-day. 8 Beaker-like vases decorated with zones 
of incision which might be clay translations of such basketry vessels 
occur in Egypt in the early "Tasian" phase of culture. 4 Potsherds found 
in a still undatable settlement on the western edge of the Nile valley 
at Armant and in a "neolithic" context in the Sudan and Africa Minor 6 
show roulette decoration, though rather coarser than that on classical 
beakers, while typical beakers have been found in a cave on the 
Moroccan coast. 6 A hollow-based hilt like that regularly attached to 
West European daggers was attached to flint and copper blades on the 
Nile in Predynastic times. 7 Hollow-based arrow-heads were character- 
istic of the "neolithic" Fayum and of Early Predynastic Egypt. There 
is accordingly some evidence for an African element in the Beaker 
culture. Still most authorities hold that the culture as we know it took 
form in Andalusia or on the lower Tagus, 8 though plausible typological 
arguments favour a North- West German origin. 

The Beaker-folk's expansion, from whatever cradle it started, was 
presumably rapid. It thus constitutes a convenient chronological 
horizon in several otherwise separated areas. But the number of beakers 
and the variety of their decorations in each area imply that such vases 

Bol. JR. Acad. Madrid, LXXI, 22 ff. 

Gerhardt, Die Glockenbecherleute in Mittel- und West-Deutschland (Stuttgart, 1953). 
Schuchhardt, PZ., I (1909). 43- 

Childe, NLMAE., 34, fig. 10; cf. pi. XVIIIb for Mesopotamian analogies. 
Mond and Myres, Cemeteries of Armani, 268 ff., Arkell, Early Khartoum, pi. 89; 
Vaufrey, Inst. Pal. Hum., Mem., 20 (1939). 7 2 ff - 
Ger mania, XXXIII (1955). 13-22. 
Childe, NLMAE., 98, fig. 39. 

Castillo, op. cit., Bosch-Gimpera, Real., X, 356; PPS. t XXIX. 95 3- 

227 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

must have been in fashion for several generations. It is therefore a 
grave error to treat all beakers as contemporary. 1 Such vases mark 
rather a substantial period of time, not everywhere of equal duration. 
In Central Europe beakers go back to period III. On the other hand, in 
Moravia, Bohemia, and even on the Rhine, beakers 8 are associated in 
graves with round-heeled riveted daggers typical of period IV and in 
Austria 8 with mature Unfitician forms. A beaker, with exact parallels 
in Bohemia and in Sardinia too, reached Denmark, in Neolithic IIIc. 
And the bronzes of period IV are often decorated with patterns that 
recur on beakers. In other words, beakers remained in fashion into 
period IV in Central Europe and the Beaker and Ungtician cultures 
overlap. Beakers do not denote a point in time. But the Beaker cultures 
are everywhere on the same economic plane. Judged by form and 
decoration, most British and Central European Beakers seem to be 
later than the "classic type", those from the edge of the Beaker terri- 
tory Scotland and Poland looking particularly late. 

1 Forssander, Ostskand. Nordcn, 37; Childe, Am. Anthr., XXXIX (1937), * 

* Childe, Danube, 190; Forssander, Ostskand. Norden, 72; Mannus, XXXI, 478, fig. 17. 

PZ., XXV. 137. 



228 



CHAPTER XIII 
FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

SPREADING westward by sea, the neolithic economy would be expected 
to reach the Apennine Peninsula next after Greece. This expectation 
is justified by quite early settlements in Apulia, in Sicily and on the 
adjacent ^olian Islands, and along the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea. 
But ecologically Italy is less uniform than Greece. In the south and 
on the Tyrrhenian coasts a rural economy that had worked in the 
Levant would still serve. It would need drastic adjustments to meet 
the more continental conditions that reign on the northern slopes of 
the Apennine chain. In fact, the two sides of the Peninsula enjoyed 
very different fortunes in the neolithic phase, but during the Bronze 
Age a remarkable degree of uniformity was attained. 

The general outlines of Italian prehistory were sketched last century 
by Pigorini and Orsi and summarized for English readers by Peet. 1 
After fifty years of stagnation they have been corrected and filled in 
largely as a result of stratigraphical excavations by Bernabo Brea in 
Liguria, on the ^Eolian Islands, and in Sicily. His division 2 of the Italian 
Neolithic into Lower, Middle, and Upper will be followed in the sequel. 

THE NEOLITHIC COLONIZATION OF SOUTH ITALY AND SICILY 

In the south and in Liguria the record begins with settlements char- 
acterized best by rough-looking but well-fired vases of quite sophisti- 
cated shapes that agree very closely both in technique, form, and 
ornament with the "barbottine" ware of Starievo, that we have 
encountered all over the Balkan peninsula. That their makers came 
by sea is dear from the coastwise distribution of the sites and the 
occupation of small islands in the Tremiti and ^Eolian archipelagoes. 
It must have been the rich deposits of obsidian that attracted early 
neolithic voyagers to the ^Eolian Islands; for fertile though they be, 
water supplies are totally lacking. In fact, the volcanic glass was 
extensively exported and used in neolithic villages all over the main- 
land and Sicily* These first settlers might have come direct from the 

1 The Stone and Bronze Ages in Italy and Sicily (Oxford, 1909)- No equally compre- 
hensive survey has superseded this work save for Sicily, where Bernabo Brea, 'La 
Sicilia prehistoric*", Ampunas, XV-XVI (1954), has replaced Onri's system, 

1 Bernabo Brea, Gli Scavi nella Cavern* deUe Arene Candid* , II (Bordighera, 1956) 
(cited AC., II), 155-292. 

229 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Balkans, but the occurrence, together with simple rustication, of 
patterns executed with the edge of a shell (generally Cardium) and 
in particular the so-called rocker motive might suggest a parallel but 
independent movement from the Levant where this motive was 
popular on neolithic pottery. Still, "rocker patterns", executed with 
a notched stamp if not a shell edge, occur on "neolithic" pottery in 
the Urals, in the Sudan, and widely in North Africa, and cannot all 
be plausibly traced to a single origin! This distinctive pottery is found 
only exceptionally 1 unmixed with other styles. Hence the Lower 
Neolithic culture, introduced by these maritime colonists, cannot be 
further defined. In Sicily it developed directly into the Stentinello 
culture. This takes its name from a village on the shore just north of 
Syracuse, but is represented at similar sites at Matrensa and Megara 
Hyblaea. All three villages lie near the coast on level ground, but were 
girt with rock-cut ditches and internal ramparts of some kind. At 
Matrensa the ditch was interrupted by frequent causeways as in 
English and Rhenish neolithic camps. On these sites, as elsewhere in 
Sicily and at Castellaro on Lipari, the rough-looking rusticated pottery 
is associated with a very fine local ware characterized by the use of a 
greater variety of stamps, more diversified motives, their composition 
to form well-ordered patterns (in contrast to the casually scattered 
finger-tip or cardial impressions of the "rough ware"), and an equal 
diversity of shapes; the latter include simple round-bottomed types 
such as are attributed to the "Western Neolithic" in Chapter XV, and 
also sophisticated vessels with, for instance, ring handles rising above 
the rims. 

The economy evidently was based on cultivation, stock-breeding, 
hunting, fishing, and collecting, but no weapons survive save sling- 
bullets. Blade tools of local flint or of obsidian from Lipari include 
neither bifacially worked nor geometric types. Ground stone celts were 
rare. 

The only burial attributable to the Stentinello culture is that of a 
skeleton in a round pit lined with slabs on edge. Nor do female figurines 
survive to attest a fertility cult of the Asiatic-Balkan type. A few clay 
animal heads may be ritual or merely ornamental. 

While the Stentinello culture was still flourishing in Sicily, the 
Middle Neolithic phase in Apulia had already been initiated with the 
advent or development of a distinct culture which will here be called 
the Molfetta culture, characterized by painted pottery. It is known 
from numerous ditched enclosures, revealed by air photographs, 2 of 

1 Perhaps at Coppa Nevigata, MA.. XIX (1909), 340-5; cf. AC., II, 162-6. 
1 Bradford, in Antiquity, XX (1946), 191; XXIII, 60-5; XXIV, 86-8. 

230 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

which only a few have been excavated. 1 The enclosures can, from the 
plans alone, be classified as villages and homesteads. The former cover 
very large areas often subdivided into an inner enclosure, containing 
within its ditch smaller round enclosures and representing the inhabited 
area, and a larger outer space, presumably fields or pastures. The 
inner enclosures, of which there may be 100 in one village, measure 
60 to 50 feet across and must be farmyards, like Irish raths, each 
corresponding to one household. Homesteads too may be divided up 
into an infield or yard of about an acre in area and a larger demesne 
outside it. Bradford from air-photographs alone has identified over 200 
villages and homesteads in an area of less than 1500 square miles. So 
the neolithic population must have been quite dense even if not all 
sites were Middle Neolithic. 

The population was engaged in breeding cows, pigs, sheep, and 
allegedly buffaloes, 2 while sickle-teeth and saddle querns 8 demon- 
strated the cultivation of cereals which were stored in the numerous 
pits that are found within the farmyards. Again the sling is the sole 
weapon attested. Obsidian was imported from the ^olian Islands. 
Ground stone celts were supplemented by roughly flaked chopping- 
tools. The pottery 4 comprises on the one hand hard-fired burnished 
ware, generally red and often decorated with rectilinear patterns 
scratched after firing, and on the other light-coloured fabrics painted 
with designs in red, or red and black. Some vases show a nose and two 
eyes, just below the rim, as in the Trapeza ware of Crete. 6 Similar 
painted vases may illustrate the spread of the Molfetta culture to the 
^Eolian Islands, Ischia, and Capri, 6 but on Sicily it is represented only 
by stray painted vases (Fig. 114, 3) found on Stentinello sites. On 
Lipari 7 some of these vases are provided with vertical subcutaneous 
handles, foreshadowing a device already encountered in Central Europe 
in the Baden complex, and to meet us shortly in the Rinaldone culture 
of Central Italy. And the painted ware is associated with black bur- 
nished vases, some provided with broad ribbon handles as in Early 
Neolithic Greece. These black vessels are sometimes crusted after 
firing with red or black colours 01 incised with maeanders or less often 
spirals in a manner that really recalls Dimini and Balkan-Danubian 
styles. 

BP., XLIV (1924), 107-21; MA,, XX, 238 ff. 
BP., XLV, 92. 

But on Lipari the querns are saucer- or even trough-shaped. 
Stevenson, PPS., XIII ('347). 88-92. 

Rellini, La piu antica Ceramica dipinta in Italia (Rome, 1935)* 56-62. 
Rellini, op. cit. The style of painting represented on Capri, Lipari, and Sicily diverges 
substantially from the Apulian. 

Bernabo Brea, APL., Ill (1952); BP.. n.s., X (1956), 18-24. 

231 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

The Molfetta culture is usually supposed to have been introduced 
into Apulia from the Balkan peninsula. But except for the maeander 
and spiral patterns on Lipari no decisive parallels can at present be 
found on that side of the Adriatic. 

THE LATER NEOLITHIC PHASES 

A second division of the Middle Neolithic (M.N.II) is conveniently 
defined on the mainland and on the ^Eolian Islands by the "fine 
painted ware" classically represented at Serra d'Alto near Matera. 
The walls and ditches of the enclosures had been allowed to col- 
lapse or fill up, 1 but the sites were still inhabited or used a$ burying- 
grounds. Much of the old culture persisted, but ceramic forms and 




FIG. 114. Middle Neolithic painted pottery: 1-2, black on buff, Serra d'Alto ware, M.N.II; 
3, red and black on buff, Megara Hyblaea (J). 

decorations are quite novel. The vases, including on Lipari 2 rare 
square-mouthed vessels, are painted, but only in warm black, and with 
stumpy spirals or maeanders and step, ladder, or windmill motives 
(Fig. 114, 1-2). One vase from Apulia stood on model human feet. 
Long horizontal tubular handles, perforated axially, are quite dis- 
tinctive; they might be surmounted by conventionalized heads of 
bulls or rams. 

The dead were buried flexed in pits lined with stones and provided 
with a special niche for the feet. 3 Rare clay stamps or piniaderc* long 

1 E.g., at Molfetta, MA., XX, 251-58; Mosso mistook the ruined wall for a street! 

* BP. (1956), 25-8. 

* MA, t XX, 255-8; Rellini, Ceramica, 67; Mayer, Matera und Molfetta, Leipzig 
(1924), 20-30. r 6 

* Mayer, MaUra, 67, pi. IX. 19; BP. (1956), 27; analogies to the Italian piniadere 
come from early ^gean levels at G5zlu Kale (Tarsus) in Cilicia, ATA., XLU (1038) 
39 -and from Neolithic Byblos. t *a /. 

232 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

and narrow in plan in contrast to the ^Egean-Balkan forms, may 
belong to the ideological equipment, but clay figurines are missing save 
on Lipari. 

The Serra d'Alto culture, like its predecessor, is generally considered 
to be intrusive in Apulia and of Balkan origin. Similar painted pottery 
has in fact been found in the cave of Khirospilia on Levkas, and the 
pintadere could be derived from Balkan clay stamps. But no exact 
counterpart to the culture has been identified outside Italy. Now 
Puglisi 1 has recently reported Mycenaean sherds associated with typical 
"fine painted ware" in the Caverna di Erba in the heel of Italy. If his 
observations be confirmed, the whole culture sequence in South Italy, 
Sicily, and Malta will have to be drastically curtailed. But on the 
acropolis of Lipari Serra d'Alto pottery is stratified well below the 
layer containing abundant L.M.I imported vases, while Diana and other 
groups, distinguished mainly by typology, should be intercalated 
before this horizon. 

In the Late Neolithic phase, more sharply distinguished in the 
village of Diana on Lipari than on the mainland, painted wares went 
out of fashion to give place to highly burnished red vases. These still 
retained the horizontal tubular handles of Serra d'Alto which, at first 
of exaggerated length and expanding towards the ends like trumpet- 
lugs, subsequently degenerated into unpierced ridges. But by this 
time fresh impulses were reaching the province. At Diana on Lipari 
occur a few bifacially trimmed hollow-based arrow-heads and even 
metal slag. 2 On the mainland at Bellavista near Taranto 8 polished vases 
with Diana handles but also spouts were found in a small cemetery 
of rock-cut collective tombs. 



THE TRANSITION TO A BRONZE AGE 

The phenomena just mentioned herald the transition to a new division 
of the archaeological record traditionally termed Chalcolithic, most 
clearly documented in Sicily. There the Serra d'Alto culture had been 
represented only by a few t ypical vases found as far west as Palermo. 4 
Vases of Diana style are more widespread and occur even on Stentinello 
sites, though perhaps in intrusive graves. But in the chalcolithic 
cultures of Sicily the Stentinello tradition seems to be blended with, 
or transformed by, fresh foreign impulses. 
So in the San Cono culture 5 we find both single interments in stone- 

1 Riv. Sc. Pr., VIII (1953). 86-93- 

* BP. (1956), 31. B.P., XXXII (1906), 36-48. 

LLV, 113. BP., XXV (1898), 53; XXXIV (1908), 119; XLV, 62. 

233 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

lined pit graves, as at Molfetta, and at least one rock-cut pit-cave, 
used however for a single interment. The pottery is dark-faced, some- 
times incised and incrusted with red or white colour, but occasionally 
painted in bright red before firing. Small polished celts, hitherto rare, 
are now common, and bifacially trimmed arrow-heads appear, as at 
Diana. Metal is practically unrepresented, but obsidian was freely 
imported and rough celts, some sharpened with a tranchet blow, were 
manufactured in regular factories on the slopes of the Iblean Moun- 
tains and systematically distributed. 1 From this culture developed in 
North- Western Sicily that termed Conco d'Oro,* known mainly from 
small groups of pit-cave tombs each containing one, or exceptionally 
two corpses; sometimes two chambers open off a single shafti Hollow- 
based arrow-heads, stone beads, and an axe-amulet are among the 
grave goods, and a variety of pots. Besides self-coloured wares decor- 
ated by incision or rarely with white paint, clear buff ware was manu- 
factured and covered all over with a dark slip that might be used as a 
ground for designs in white paint. Cups and mugs are provided with 
good handles, some nosed; "salt-cellars 1 ' paired bowls linked by a 
high loop handle were conspicuous. The tomb type, the pot forms 
and the dark-slipped pale ware vaguely suggest East Mediterranean 
influence. On the other hand, a Bell-beaker, imported from Sardinia 
or Spain, was found in a sepulchral cave at Villafrati, and another 
Beaker, perhaps a local imitation, came from a Conco d'Oro tomb at 
Carini.* The Conco d'Oro culture lasted until the Casteluccio culture 
was established in South-Eastern Sicily, and Late Minoan I pottery 
was reaching the ^Eolian Islands in the fifteenth century. 4 

By then the Serraferlicchio 5 pottery style of Southern Sicily had 
developed and disappeared. The vases, red surfaced and painted in 
black, include handled mugs, amphorae, and spouted jugs that look 
vaguely ^Bgean though the patterns can be best matched in the 
"Neolithic" of Acarnania. On the ^Eolian Islands 8 the period is 
represented by the village of Piana Conte, where imported vases of 
Serraferlicchio style were found together with local vases provided 
with vertical subcutaneous string-holes or horizontal tunnel-handles. 

THE SICILIAN BRONZE AGE 

The foreign influences foreshadowed in these rather nebulous tran- 
sitional cultures culminate in the rise of the Castelluccio culture, 

1 Ampurias (1954)* 158-60. MA., XL (1944), i-i?o. 

* Annales de Giol. et PaUontol. (Palermo, 1900), No. 28. 

* APL., Ill, 85-7; BP. (1956), 31- 

Ariat in MA., XXXVI (1937), 695-838. 

Ampuwu (1954)* 1^1-2; APL., Ill (1952), 78-9. 

234 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

Orsi's Siculan I, in South-Eastern Sicily. Now actual JEgean imports 
supplement ceramic and architectural analogies and provide an his- 
torically dated horizon not only for the environs of Syracuse but for 
Malta and the Moli&n Islands too. 

In Eastern Sicily, as on the ^Eolian Islands, the lowland coastal 
villages had been replaced by little townships planted on naturally 
defensible hilltops or promontories and well fortified. The walled areas 
were still small; in two cases the estimate given is one hectare or 2 J acres. 
But large cemeteries of collective tombs imply a substantial population 
settled in one place for several generations; 32 tombs have been actually 
examined at Castelluccio, 20 at Syracuse, n at Monte Salia, and each 
tomb contained from 50 to 200 corpses. 1 The population, of course, 
still depended primarily on farming the bones of horses are now 
reported in addition to those of food animals but produced a surplus 
to support craftsmen and traders. 

Flint was still systematically mined at Monte Tabuto by expert 
miners who were presumably specialists. Metal was imported and 
apparently worked locally into simple flat axes (known only by a 
couple of miniatures made for funerary purposes), triangular riveted 
daggers and ornaments such as spectacle-spirals, and tubes of coiled 
wire. However, metal was so rare that polished stone axes and roughly 
flaked picks were still made and used even for carving the tombs. 
Stone beads were manufactured for the first time. 

Foreign trade is explicitly disclosed by bossed bone plaques (Fig. 115) 
found in several tombs, 2 in the ruins of Troy II, in a Middle Helladic 
layer at Lerna (p. 77), and in the "neolithic" temple of Hal Tarxien in 




FIG. 115. Bossed bone plaque, Castelluccio. After Evans (J). 

Malta. Its effects may also be recognized in a bone pommel 8 of the 
same type as the Trojan pommel shown in Fig. 21, 3, in a Middle Helladic 
matt-painted cup from tomb V at Monte Salia, and in numerous axe- 
amulets, but some alleged "amber" beads may be made of a local resin. 
Pottery remained a domestic industry, but the forms of the hand- 
made vases hour-glass tankards, high-handled mugs (Fig, 116, 4-5) 
and pedestalled bowls with handles joining bowl and stem are quite 

1 von Dunn, Italische Gr fiber kunde, 71-9. 

Antiquity, XXX (1956), 80-94. * BP - XLIII, pL II. 6. 

235 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

alien to the Stentinello tradition. They may be plain or painted in 
black on a reddish ground with geometric designs. On some vases from 
Vallelunga the black is outlined in white, giving somewhat the effect 
of Dimini ware. 

The dead were now buried in rock-cut tombs of East Mediterranean 
style (Fig. 108). The chambers are generally more or less circular in 
plan and may be preceded by a smaller ante-chamber. When cut in a 




FIG. 1 1 6. 



Early Apennine Copper and Early Bronze Age pottery: 1-2, pit 
3. "dolmen" of Bisceglie; 4-5, Castelluccio ware (J). 



>cave, Otranto; 



vertical cliff face, the entrance is normally a small window-like aperture, 
rebated to receive the blocking stone. The blocking stone in one tomb 
at Castelluccio was carved with spirals in low relief; the entrance to 
the inner chamber of another tomb in the same cemetery was closed 
by two carved slabs, which, combined (Fig. 117), produce the effect 
of the funerary goddess carved on many megalithic tombs in France 
and on the stele from Troy I mentioned on p. 40. The tombs often 
open on to a semi-circular porch or forecourt cut in the rock, the walls 
of which were in at least one case carved with pilasters. 1 In some late 

1 von Duhn, pis. 4, 18; 6, 22 and 7, 23; BP. t XVIII, 75; Not. Sc. (1920), 304; Ausonia, 
1.7- 

236 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

tombs at Monteracello the vault had been reproduced above ground 
in a rectangular cist (2*05 m. by 1*2 m. square) framed with four large 
slabs on edge in one of which a square window had been cut out, con- 
verting it into a sort of porthole slab. 1 The disused galleries of flint- 
mines were also used as burial-places. All these tombs served as family 
vaults in which numerous skeletons were deposited, sometimes seated 
as if at a feast. Ritual objects from domestic sites include clay horns, 2 




FIG. 117. View'into chamber tomb, Castelluccio. 

used perhaps against the evil eye. Such horns had, however, been used 
already at Serraferlicchio and in contemporary sites on the ^Eolian 
Islands. 

In a general way the Castelluccio culture, economy, and funerary 
ritual might be attributed to a further extension of the causes that 
occasioned the rise and westward expansion of Early Helladic culture 
in Greece. But the sepulchral architecture has more analogies to the 
West than to the East. The pottery, despite Early Helladic parallels 
(e.g. to the tankards of Fig. 116, 2), has been more aptly compared by 
Bernabo Brea 8 to Anatolian wares particularly the Cappadocian 
current at the time of the Assyrian colony at Kul-tepe between 1950 
and 1850 B.C. The bossed bone plaques may be just versions of the gold 
ornaments from the earlier Royal Tombs of Alaca, but find their 
closest analogues in Troy and Middle Helladic Lerna (p. 44). The 

1 BP. t XXIV, 202. 

1 MA., XVIII, 643; BP., XXXVI, pi. 12. Ampurias (1954). W**- 

237 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

matt-painted cup from Monte Salia unambiguously attests contact 
with Middle Helladic Greece, probably after rather than before 1600 B.C. 
More precise limits can be deduced from vEgean imports on the ^Eolian 
Islands, 

The islands had now become points of trans-shipment for coastwise 
trade between the ^Egean and the West or lairs for pirates who preyed 
thereon. In contrast to the earlier open villages, settlements of the 
Early Bronze Age Capo Graziano culture (so-called after a site on that 
promontory of Filicudi) are located on naturally defensible sites or 
fortified. 1 That on the acropolis of Lipari comprises over ten oval 
huts with stone wall bases and internal diameters between 3-2 x 3-0 m. 
and 4-5x3-1 m. which are grouped round a much larger ovsfl building 
in an inner enclosure that seems a sanctuary rather than a chieftain's 
palace. Though the culture is termed Bronze Age, no metal survives 
collective tombs that might have contained some had been pillaged 
long ago and obsidian was still quarried and worked. But a relative 
abundance of Minoan and Mycenaean vases attest frequent contacts 
with the JSgean. Most sherds are L.H.I-II, only a tiny handful might 
be L.H.IIIa. Hence the Capo Graziano villages flourished mainly 
between 1500 and 1400 B.C. Only a couple of sherds of Castelluccio 
ware have been recognized on the ^Eolian Island sites. On the other 
hand, the earliest Bronze Age pottery of Malta is related to native 
Capo Graziano ware, while imported specimens of the latter have been 
reported from Conco d'Oro tombs at Villafrati. 2 

Hence in North-Western Sicily the Conco d'Oro culture must have 
lasted till 1500 B.C. Only thereafter was it replaced by the Castel- 
luccio culture* By 1400 B.C. in South-Eastern Sicily the latter culture 
had been replaced by that now named after a cemetery at Thapsos 
Orsi's Sicilian II. 

By then Sicilian economy had been transformed into one of full 
Middle Bronze Age type by the incorporation of the island into the 
^Egean commercial system. Late HeUadic III pottery, 8 gold rings, 
bronze vessels, mirrors, rapiers, 4 and fayence beads were imported 
from Greece. gean influence was so strong that Evans 6 suspected 
a Cretan colonization of the island under a Minoan prince. 

But basically the Thapsos culture was rooted in the native traditions 
of the island. Pottery was not industrialized. The hand-made grey 
vases, though unpainted and decorated in a novel style, preserve many 

1 BP. (1956), 43-52- 

1 Not in the tame tomb as the Beaker, though with the same local variety of pottery. 
1 Fullest list by Levi in Paoli Orsi a cura dell'Archivio Storico per Calabria (Rome, 
1935): <* BP. (1936-37). 57 ff- 
* Evans, Arch., LIX, 1906, 108 fi. P. of M ., I, 3. 

238 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

Castelluccio forms. Large cemeteries of rock-cut tombs carry on equally 
old traditions. But though the cemeteries comprise far more tombs, 
each chamber contained far fewer corpses, serving as the burying- 
place of a single family, as at Mycenae. 

Ischia, 1 the ^Eolian Islands, and the adjacent promontory of Milazzo 
in Sicily were also now incorporated in the orbit of Mycenaean trade, 
but not in the Thapsos culture. They seem rather to be frontier posts 
between the ^Egean and the Continental-West European commercial 
systems. The cemetery of Milazzo 2 consists not of chamber tombs 
but of pithos burials; these reproduce the practice of Argaric Spain, 
of Anatolia, and of Middle Helladic but not Mycenaean Greece. The 
grave goods include amber, imported from the Baltic, and fayence 
from the ^Egean. On the acropolis of Lipari and in the natural fortress 
of Milazzesi on Panarea 8 imported Mycenaean vases and Thapsos 
pottery turn up in villages of oval, or exceptionally rectilinear, houses, 
built on stone foundations 23 survive at Milazzesi. Native vases, 
inscribed with characters derived from the first Minoan linear (A) 
script, show how deeply ^Egean influence had penetrated the islands' 
culture. Associated are ritual objects of clay, almost identical in form 
and size with the anchor ornaments so popular in Greece and Thrace 
in the Early ^Egean period nearly a millennium earlier. A hoard of 
imported beads found on Salina contains more segmented fayence 
beads than have been found in the whole of Britain! But side by side 
with these ^Egean and Sicilian elements are sherds of early Apennine 
ware. They indicate strong influence, if not some actual colonization, 
from the Italian mainland as early as 1350 B.C. Thereafter the ^Eolian 
Islands were annexed to the mainland province of the Apennine 
culture, doubtless as a consequence of the invasion by Ausonians, of 
which Diodorus has preserved a tradition. 

An extension of this current to Sicily may be inferred from an 
urnfield at Milazzo 4 ; the cremation rite is that proper to the mature 
Bronze Age of peninsular Italy; the funerary vases are of Apennine 
type. But one at least is decorated in the old Thapsos style. Thus the 
cremationists should have arrived at latest about 1150, which would 
agree strikingly with the traditional dates given for the arrival of the 
Sicels by Hellanikos and Thucydides! But in South-Eastern Sicily the 
old tradition of inhumation in chamber tombs was maintained in the 
cultures of Pantalica and Cassabili 5 (both were included by Oisi and 

Buchner, BP., n.s., I (1936-37), 65. 

Ampurias (1954). 184; BP. (1956), $*>~7- 

APL. t III, 71-4, 80; BP. (1956), 53-63. 

At a different place to the pithos cemetery; Ampurias (1954)* 203-5; BP. (1956), 78. 

Ampwits (1934). 3-5. 

339 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Peet in Sicilian II). But here too ceramic styles have changed, Mycenaean 
imparts have ceased, the settlements and cemeteries have been trans- 
ferred from the coastal plains to more defensible fastnesses farther 
inland. Some of the metal-work is still based on Mycenaean traditions 





I 2 

FIG. 118. Knife and razor, Pantalica (J). 

(shaft-hole axes, knives like Fig. 118, i). Razors and fibulae conform 
to Continental types. By the Late Bronze Age even Sicily was domin- 
ated by the traditions of Temperate Europe. 

THE EARLY METAL AGES IN SOUTH ITALY 

In tells 1 and caves* strata containing plain burnished leather-coloured 
pots of Apennine types seem to be immediately superimposed on those 
yielding Serra d'Alto ware, and the local Apennine culture they typify 
lasted, through a period when Mycenaean pottery was imported, into 
the Iron Age. The Mycenaean levels should correspond to the Thapsos 
phase in Sicily and to the Middle Bronze Age of Upper Italy. Earlier 
phases may be represented in some sepulchral caves, 8 chamber tombs, 4 
and "dolmens".' 

The latter are either passage graves with a chamber, no wider than 
the passage, or long cists, one actually a segmented cist. 6 One was 
provided with a porthole slab, placed however in one side instead of at 
the end. 7 Of the furniture, a few amber beads and a cup with an axe- 
handle (Fig. 116, 3) survive. Identical cups will meet us in Liguria, 
South France, and Catalonia associated in the latter regions with a 
late phase of the local megalithic culture. So it looks as if the South 
Italian dolmens were an offshoot of the South French megalithic 
culture. Puglisi 8 suggested that it was brought through Corsica and 

1 E.g., Punto del Tonne, Taranto, Safiund in Dragma Martino P. Ntisson (Skrifter 
Svendc. Instt), Rome, 1939, 458 ff. 

Riv. Sc. Pre., VIII (1953). *M3- 

BP. t XXI (1905). 153; Qaagliati, La Puglia preistorica (Trani, 1936); MA. t XXVI 
(1921), 494- 

4 LAAA., II, 80; BP., XLIV, 116; ib., n.s. (1938), 42; Riv. Sc. Pr*., V (1950), 126; 
von Duhn, 72-4. 

Gervasio, I Dolmen (Ban, 1913). 

Ib., p. 63. Ib., p. 68. Riv. Antr. t LXI (1954). i-Ji- 

240 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

Sardinia by pastoral groups, who, landing in Tuscany, would have 
helped to develop the Apennine culture which they brought with them 
by land routes to the southern extremity of the peninsula. 

But some interments in chamber tombs and natural caves may be 
earlier, for some of these contain Diana ware (p. 233) or vases with 
striking parallels in Thessaly III. 1 The chamber tombs themselves 
might denote ^Egean influence as in Sicily and equally early. 

If so, similar funerary practices should reveal the same influence in 
Central Italy too. After all, in historical times the first Greek colony 
in the West was planted at Cumae near Naples, not in Sicily nor the 
heel of Italy. A cemetery of pit-cave tombs at Paestum (Gaudo) near 
Salerno* might represent a precursor a millennium earlier. Most 
chambers contain only one, or at most two, flexed skeletons, but some 
were genuine collective tombs with 17 or even 26 corpses, while occa- 
sionally two chambers open off a single pit. The funerary pottery, 
monochrome, generally black, rarely ornamented with incised designs, 
includes some very ^Egean-looking forms, notably askoi and pyxides 
with string-hole lids, while "salt-cellars," globular vases with strap 
handles, and some other types could be paralleled in the Conco d'Oro 
(p. 234) as well as in Apulia. Transverse arrow-heads were found in 
one tomb, but bifacially trimmed tanged arrow-heads and lance-heads 
and a single copper dagger with prominent mid-rib are types proper 
to the Rinaldon<e culture farther north. Of thirteen skulls examined, 
five were brachycranial, three long-headed. 

Trade from such a "colony" might have promoted the rise in Central 
Italy of the Rinaldone culture, first distinguished from the North 
Italian Remedello culture by Laviosa-Zambotti in 1939.* It is repre- 
sented by burials in pit-caves or natural grottoes in Latium 4 and 
Tuscany.* There are tin lodes in Tuscany and there a sepulchral cave 
in Monte Bradoni contained two V-bored buttons of metallic tin, a 
dagger like Fig. 121, a t of Early Minoan affinities and brachycranial 
skeletons. Kite-shaped or triangular daggers and flat, or exceptionally 
hammer-flanged, axes recur in other Rinaldone tombs. But while the 
tomb form and the metal gear may be of JEgean inspiration, other 
items in Rinaldone equipment are not. Bifacially trimmed daggers and 

1 Stevenson, PPS., XIII, 197. 

! *'* J& 1 / (W*). 49, 257; H, 284-92. 

St. Et. t XIII (1939), 58. 

4 A sepulchral cave at Sasso near Civitavecchia containing a hundred skeletons (one 
with trepanned skull), ding bullets but no arrow-heads is assigned by the excavator 
(BP., VIII (1953). 43-* : Riv ' <*'****> XLI ( X 954). 4-5<>) to "Middle Neolithic", but a 
cup with elongated handle would seem more appropriate to an Upper Neo. or even 
Apennine context, 

To Feet's list add BP.. XL, 53; XLIII, 97; . VIII (1951), 109; Atti i,. Con. Pnk. 
Mtd. (Firenie, 1950), 334-4; Riv. Sc. Pr., V (1950), iaa; VI, 3, 151. 

241 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

tanged arrow-heads of flint are common to all the "chalcolithic" 
cultures of the peninsula. Stone battle-axes with symmetrically splayed 
blades must be connected with the "polygonal" weapons of Northern 
Neolithic II or their copper prototypes of Danubian III. In the pottery, 
which is dark-faced, burnished but undecorated, the most distinctive 
form is a bottle provided with no handles but vertical subcutaneous 
string-holes like those of the Danubian III Baden culture or of M.N.I 
on Lipaii But at Punta degli Stretti (Grosseto) 1 good Rinaldone types 
seem associated with an axe-handle cup like Fig. 116, 3. 

Thus if southern and western influences travelled northward along 
the Tiber- Arno corridor, it provided a channel also for cultures, adapted 
to the Temperate zone, to spread south, and in the Apeniftne peninsula 
these proved the more viable. 

The Apennine culture that succeeds Rinaldone in Central Italy and 
that had reached the Tyrrhenian coasts and South Italy by Mycenaean 
times is still known almost exclusively by its highly characteristic 
pottery. This has indeed been found in some semi-megalithic tombs 
under round cairns in Tuscany which, resembling the late passage 
graves of the Gausses d 1 Aude, might provide the required link between 
South France and the South Italian "dolmens". 2 But these tombs had 
been re-used in Etruscan times and robbed of any non-ceramic grave 
goods. Most of the pottery comes from hilltop settlements, much eroded, 
and from caves used for collective inhumations over a long period. 1 The 
distinctive monochrome burnished pottery is characterized by an 
exuberant development of bizarre handles (cf. Figs. 116, 1-3, and 119), 
all inspired by wooden models. Some vases are decorated with incised 
punctured ribbons forming spirals and meanders, as at Butmir and 
Vinia, or with excised ornament imitating the chip-carving of wood, as 
in the West Alpine Vutedol culture. Such metal-work as is associated is 
all based on North Italian and Central European traditions, but is more 
appropriate to the Middle and Late Bronze Age. 

No doubt the amber trade across the Brenner went on to Greece, 
either along the Adriatic or across Italy by the Arno and the Tiber. But 
the inhospitable Italian coasts of the Adriatic offered no convenient 
halting-places to merchantmen, while the rough herdsmen and farmers 
of Central Italy do not seem to have benefited by any transit trade. 
Many Apennine sites yield so many stone tools as to look quite neolithic. 4 

1 ArcMvioptr A*rop. ed Etoog., XLII (1912), 263; BP., XXXVIII (1923), 132. 

* Pugliai, Riv. Antrop., LXI, 1-22. 

Especially Belleverde (Cetoma), Not. Sc. (1933). 5<> *; St. EL, X (1936), 330-8; XII, 
227 fi.; and Manacore (Gargano), BSR., XIX (1951). 23-38; XXI, 1-31. 

* According to Bcrnabo Brea, AC. t II, 259, BeUeverde does in fact go back to the 
Rl 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

Metal types, proper to Danubian IV, are very rare in Italy south of the 
Pg basin. A single hoard from Montemerano near Grosseto comprising 
halberds and a dagger with triple midrib 1 is the sole link with an equally 
isolated cist grave furnished with a flat axe, a bronze-hilted dagger and 
perhaps a halberd at Parco di Monaci near Matera. The funerary caves 
of Central Italy do indeed contain amber beads, but associated with 
daggers, swords, winged axes, fibulae and other types not known before 
Danubian V. By then the M.N.II settlement at Punto del Tonno* near 
Tarentum had grown into a Bronze Age village the prolonged occupation 
of which converted the site into a regular tell. Here were found a winged 




FIG. 119. Apenninc vase-handles (f), and bronzes (i) from Punto del Tonno (winged 
axe, razor, Peschiera dagger, angled sickle). 

axe, a North Italian flanged sickle, a Peschiera dagger (Fig. 119), a 
razor, and a fibula like Fig. 122, together with Apennine handles. Im- 
ported Late Mycenaean pottery and figurines are said to have been 
found at a higher level, while the winged axe is the closest known 
parallel to that made at Mycenae by an immigrant Italian smith about 
1250 B.C. (p. 83). So a mature phase of the Apennine culture and the 
closing phase of Danubian V (Reinecke D) had alike been reached by 
1250 B.C. By that time the whole peninsula was dominated by cultures 
of Continental European type while Central European traditions of 
metallurgy ruled to its southern extremity. 

* BP., XXVI (1900), T.I., but cf., ib., HA. (1938), 64. 

1 Sftflund, Dra^ma Martino P. Nilsson, 458 ff.; Not. Sc. (2900), 440-64. 

343 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



NEOLITHIC CULTURES IN NORTHERN ITALY 

In the third natural zone of the peninsula a culture sequence, based on 
stratigraphical observations, is available only in Liguria, thanks to 
fresh excavations in the cave of Arene Candide conducted by L. 
Bernabo Brea since 1939.* It is not applicable to the whole of Upper 
Italy; for Liguria belongs still to the Mediterranean zone and was in 
historical times a backward and provincial area. And so in this cave 
stone axes were plentiful right up to the last occupation layer, where 
the pottery is appropriate to the fourth or fifth century B.C. Still the 
succession provides the only available standard. Twenty-eight separate 
layers containing pottery could be distinguished above a deep deposit 
of palaeolithic and mesolithic occupations. The nineteen lowest have 
been grouped together to represent three main periods termed 
respectively Lower, Middle, and Upper Neolithic by the excavator, 
while the topmost eight contain ChaJcolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, 
and Roman remains. 

The first neolithic occupants of this cave, and of many others in the 
coastal zone of Italy and France, were a branch of those maritime 
colonists who landed also on Sicily and in South Italy. Continued 
contact with that area is illustrated at Arene Candide by obsidian from 
Lipari. But some fusion with the local mesolithic population probably 
took place in Liguria. 

In the Middle Neolithic layers (24-17) this old tradition is blended 
with Danubian II and Western elements. The former are exemplified 
by socketed ladles, clay stamps or pintadere, female figurines, moulded 
in two parts and then stuck together, and the selection of Spondylus 
shells for bracelets. Microliths, plain potsherds, 1 arc-pendants (like 
Fig. 147),* and others made from hares' phalanges 4 may rank as 
Western dements since they occur in the "Cortaillod culture" of South 
France. Finally, obsidian and sherds painted in M.N.I style from 
Lipari* prove continued relations with the south and synchronize the 
Ligurian with the South Italian sequence. Middle Neolithic pottery in 
Liguria was generally smooth, dark-faced, and decorated, if at all, with 
scratched lines. The most distinctive form is the square-mouthed vase 
(Fig. 120, 2) which was equally popular in the Po basin and was some- 



i Gli Scavi neU* Cawma deUe Are** Candide, Bordighwa, I (1946), II, 

Eacalon de Fonton "Les stratigraphies du nfelithique", Bull. Must* d'Antkropohgto 
prthistoriqu* d* Monaco, II (1955); 245*52. 

Rio. Si. Ug. t XV (X949), 28; ?C. t II, 218. 

Pernod in M.N. layers 21, 23, ind 24, but also in L.N. layers 25 and 27, AC.. II. 65; 
cf. Vogt, CISPP.> 3 (Zurich, 1950), 33- 

AC., II. 91-5- 

244 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

times reproduced on Lipari in a M.N.I context. Among the scratched 
patterns are "Danubian" spirals. 

The dead were buried individually and contracted in little stone cists 
within the cave. These closely resemble the Chamblandes cists of the 
Upper Rh6ne valley and might be linked therewith by similar graves in 
the Aosta valley. 1 They would then disclose movements of persons, 
perhaps herdsmen with their flocks, across the Alps in Middle Neolithic 





FIG. 120. i, Vase from lake-dwelling at Polada (J); 2, Square-mouthed 
neolithic pot from Arene Candida (J). 

times and help to confirm a synchronism between Swiss Lower Neolithic 
and ligurian Middle Neolithic. 

In the Upper Neolithic of Arene Candide (layers 13-9) figurines, 
pintadere, and decorated pots have disappeared. The layers are charac- 
terized by plain Western pottery more akin to the Chassean of South 
France than to the Lagozzian of Lombardy; for pan-pipe handles are 
common as in France. In the immediately succeeding layers appear 
cups with axe-handles that we have classed as Early Metal Age in South 
Italy. Even the Upper Neolithic in Liguria is perhaps equivalent to 
the Chalcolithic of Central Italy and the Po valley. 

In the more continental environment of the Po valley and the Alpine 
foothills neolithic culture is less well defined and certainly less homo- 
geneous than on the Tyrrhenian coasts. The Lagozzian of the Lombard 
lake-dwellings is, judged by its pottery, certainly "Western", but not 
identical with the Cortaillod culture of the Swiss lake-dwellings nor yet 
with the Upper Neolithic of Arene Candide, 2 while microlithic flints 
indicate a survival of mesolithic traditions. In Emilia, south of the 
Po, the late F. Malvolti* established a succession of three cultures 

1 sp. t XLIII, no* 

* Antler sleeves and other types in bone and horn, so prominent in the Swiss Use- 
dwellings, are totally absent from the Lagozzian collections in the museums of Como 
and Varese, and pan-pipe lugs are equally missing; cf. Sibrium, II, Centro di Studi 
Preistorid (Varese, 1955), 99. 

1 Appunti per **** cronohgia rtfotitw neo-en*olitico emtti&*o t Centro Emiliano di 
Studi preistorici (Modena, 1953); <* * **. XVII (1943). 3*W * (1952), 13-38. 

345 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Fiorano, Cfaiozza, and Pescalc. But these are little more than ceramic 
styles, though in the second . obsidian and square-mouthed vases 1 
suggest relations with Liguria and a quasi-synchronism with the Middle 
Neolithic there. 

THE BRONZE AGE IN UPPER ITALY 

The archaeological record becomes coherent only in the "jEneolithic 
Period" of Italian terminology and discloses the Remedello culture 
fully formed in the Po valley. Extensive cemeteries 2 of contracted or 
flexed skeletons 117 at Remedello (Brescia), 41 at Cumarola, 36 at 
Fontanella sometimes arranged in regular rows, reveal substantial 




a bed 

FIG. 121. Copper daggers and flint copies, Remedello (J). 

communities occupying the same site for several generations. Metal- 
lurgical industry and rudimentary trade were now combined with 
farming, hunting, and fishing. The copper-smiths produced flat axes, 
some with notched butts or low-hammered flanges (as at Thermi), 
daggers of two types (Fig. 121), and occasional halberds. The one type 
of dagger with a tang to which the hilt was attached by rivets with a 
conical head is clearly a derivative of the Early Minoan group. The 
other form, kite-shaped, was hafted in the Egyptian manner with a 
hollow-based hilt held in place by several small rivets (cf. p. 130). 

Despite the contemporary exploitation of Tuscan tin suggested by 
the tanged dagger from Monte Bradoni (p. 241), trade was not regular 
enough to supply the Remedello smiths with material for bronze, and 
even copper was relatively scarce. So polished stone axes were still 

1 Found also in a cemetery of contracted burials at Quincano near Verona. 
1 Cf. recent lists, Aberg, Ckronologie, iii, 8, and van Dunn in Real., s.v. Italien. 

346 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

used, and tanged, riveted kite-shaped and unriveted West European 
daggers were each copied locally in flint (Fig. 121). Axes were hafted 
with the aid of antler sleeves perforated with square-cut holes for the 
shaft. Still even silver was obtained, perhaps from Sardinia. But the 
forms produced by the silver-smith suggest more far-flung intercourse. 
A hammer pin from Remedello itself resembles, but rather remotely, 
Pototicyamno types. A gorget from a tomb at Villafranca near Verona 1 
recalls the Irish lunulae, but also may be compared to a copper gorget 
from a tomb dated to period III-IV at Velvar in Bohemia. Finally, 
stone battle-axes, sometimes with knobbed butts, 1 could be treated 
as a reflex of intercourse with the copper-miners of Upper Austria. 
And there, in the lake-dwellings of the Mondsee and Attersee, have 
been found rhomboid daggers of Remedello type and stone axes with 
notched butt, mistaken by Pittioni* for prototypes of the copper 
specimens, but really just copies thereof. 

Nevertheless, the bulk of Copper Age relics are native products. 
Transverse arrow-heads are presumably mesolithic survivals, but the 
commoner tanged arrow-heads splendidly worked on both faces have 
nothing in common with earlier industries nor yet with those of South 
Italy nor the Danube valley. The pottery included vessels with rudi- 
mentary thumb-grip or nose-bridge handles in a tradition common to 
all the mountain lands north of the Mediterranean from Macedonia 
to Spain (Fig. 120). The skeletons from Remedello comprise Mediter- 
ranean long-heads and a minority of round-heads. 

Whatever its background, the Remedello culture owes its character 
partly to a northward extension of intercourse with the ^Egean, moti- 
vated by the tin lodes of Tuscany and attested there, as in the Po 
valley, by daggers of Early Minoan type. At the same time contribu- 
tions by the Bell-beaker folk must be admitted. Bell-beakers were 
found in three graves in the Province of Brescia, once with a character- 
istic West European dagger, and stray sherds of the same ware are 
reported from Remedello itself. 4 The Bell-beaker folk may have intro- 
duced from the west the halberd and perhaps the gorget and assisted 
in opening up intercourse with the Danube valley. The battle-axes 
may well be contributions from Central Europe, perhaps even from 
farther east, but hardly suffice to prove an intrusion of Battle-axe folk. 
The daggers of Early Minoan type provide a vague upper limit, some- 
where about 2300 B.C., for the beginning of the Remedello culture. 
Since amber and fayence beads are missing from the graves, the 

1 BP. t LXI. 9 f.; Pomander, Osiskandinaviscke, fig. zo. 

BP.. XLI (1913). pi. I- 

MAGW. t LXI (1931). 74-8o; p. 299 below. 

* Relation to cemetery uncertain, Castillo, Campamform*. 133. 

247 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

cemeteries had presumably gone out of use before the regular trade 
between Mycenae and Bohemia was established about 1600 B.C. So, too, 
Danubian IV bronze types are missing from the Remedello cemeteries. 
The Beaker graves do indeed establish a connection with period III 
in the Danubian sequence, but no one knows whether they belong to 
the beginning or the end of the long period represented by the Reme- 
dello cemeteries. 

The Bronze Age begins with the extension to Upper Italy of the 
Danubian commercial system. Types of period IV flanged axes like 
Fig. 69, 3, round-heeled and bronze-hilted daggers, ingot torques and 
even a few UnStician eyelet pins are not uncommon. Some, like the 
pins, must have been imported from beyond the Alps. Many were 
made locally by itinerant or resident smiths who worked in populous 
settlements lake-dwellings on the shores of the eastern lakes, marsh 
villages like Lagazzi south of the Po, the celebrated terremare on the 
southern margin of the marshy plain and caves on the Apennine 
foothills. 

The eastern lake-dwellings, among which Polada 1 is taken as the 
type site, though Ledro 8 and Barche de Solferino 8 have been better 
explored, may like Lagazzi 4 have been founded before the terremare. 
They have yielded pottery carrying on the older Remedello tradition, 
hollow-based flint arrow-heads, arrow-shaft straighteners, a few wrist- 
guards and buttons with V perforation going back before period IV, 
but only a few later bronzes appropriate to period V. The terremare, on 
the contrary, are genuine tells sites of villages occupied for many 
generations from which come Middle and Late Bronze Age relics and 
only a few distinctive of period IV. All alike were fanning villages. 
Their fields were certainly tilled with the plough; the oldest dated 
European plough, made entirely of wood, comes from Ledro, while 
ploughs drawn by two or four oxen are depicted in rock-engravings 
high up in the Alps round Monte Bigo. 5 The cereals 6 were reaped with 
angled sickles of wood armed with flint teeth; the type is illustrated 
by a complete specimen from Solferino and was literally translated 
into metal in the Middle Bronze Age (Fig. 119, 5). In addition to cows, 
pigs, sheep, and goats, the terremaricoU but probably not the earlier 
lake-villagers kept horses and controlled them with bits furnished 

1 Laviosa Zambotti, St. Et. t XIII, 50 ff.; BP. (1940), 120 ff. 
1 BP., (1940) 69-79. 

Battalia, ''La palafitta di Lago di Ledro", Mem. del Museo di Storia Natural* detta 
Venetia Tridentana, VII (Trento, 1943). 

BP., XVII (1891), i-i*. 

Bicknell, Rock Engravings in the Maritime Alps (Bordighera). 

At Ledro Triiicum monococcum and dicoccum, Hordeum hexastichon, Panicum 
miliwwm. 

248 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

with antler cheek-pieces. Carts with solid disc wheels may well have 
been drawn by oxen, but a model six-spoked wheel from Solferino and 
a complete wheel from Mercurago could have belonged to a horse- 
drawn chariot. The latter specimen, which may belong to period VI, 
illustrates the peculiar type later distinctive of Classical Greek country 
carts. 1 

The lake-village of Ledro covered only 5000 square metres; Lagazzi 
was a cluster of ten huts, probably round, but the terremarc* may cover 
from four to eighteen acres. The regular plans, popularized by Figorini, 
have been shown to be products of his imagination. We do not know 
the plans of the houses, nor even whether the villages were from the 
outset defended by a moat and casemate rampart; Saflund considers 
these defences additions made in the Late Bronze Age. 

The pottery throughout imitates wooden models such as have 
actually been preserved in all stages of manufacture at Ledro. In the 
Polada group, that carries on the Remedello tradition, relatively 
simple nose-bridge and elbow handles (Fig. 120, i) predominate and 
plainly give expression to a fashion detected all along the mountain 
zone from Northern Anatolia through Thrace and Macedonia to the 
Pyrenees. In the Lagazzian wares, derivable perhaps from the Lagoz- 
zian, 8 begins a fantastic elaboration of handles towards cornute types 
(Fig. 119, i) that culminates in the terremare and eventual!} 7 spread 
south to the heel of the peninsula. 

Moulds for casting Early Bronze Age types occur in many settle- 
ments, but may have been used by perambulating merchant-artificers 
who distributed metal-ware as a sideline of the amber trade across the 
Brenner; one such left in the cave of Farneto near Bologna the only 
surviving example of a mould for a flanged axe. Many hoards contain- 
ing ingot torques, daggers, and other Early Bronze Age types illustrate 
the travels of these merchants and the danger attendant thereon. 
Middle Bronze Age types are not thus represented in hoards as if some 
degree of security had been established throughout the Po-Adige basin 
by period V. Moulds and other metallurgical appliances are relatively 
common in the terremare and may well denote the workshops of resident 
smiths. The earlier metal types are mostly derivable from the Unfitician, 
as if the local bronze-smiths had been trained in the Danubian school. 
But halberds are more likely Iberian, and if so, imply the incorporation 
of Western traditions in the nascent North Italian school. To these must 
be added the development of the local Remedello tradition, inspired, as 

i Loriiner, JHS. t XXIII (1903), i3-5i* 
1 Sftflund, Le Terrcman (Rome, Svcnska Institut, X939) 
* Cf. Bcrnabo Brea, AC., II, 276. 
249 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

suggested above, by Early JBgean models. Fresh links with the Levant 
are not discernible. 

North Italian metallurgists had evolved original forms of axe and 
dagger even in the Early Bronze Age and developed these into original 
types in the succeeding phase. They are generally credited with several 
more pregnant inventions, in particular that of the safety-pin 1 (Fig. 
122) that was introduced into Greece in the thirteenth century and 



FIG. 122. Peschiera safety-pin (fibula) (J). * 

diffused in Central Europe chiefly in period VI, but this claim has been 
challenged on behalf of the Ungtitian culture! It was indisputably a 
North Italian craftsman who at this time found a patron at Mycenae 
itself (p. 83) for whom he cast medial winged axes. Other North Italian 
innovations are flanged sickles, double-edged razors, "Peschiera 
daggers" (double-edged knives with flanged handles) (Fig. 119, 3, 4, 
and 5) and cut-and-thnist swords. 2 

No graves attributable to the Early Bronze Age lake-dwellers nor to 
the terremaricoli are known. A Middle Bronze Age cemetery of extended 
skeletons accompanied by Central European rapiers at Povigliano near 
Verona* may be attributed to a group of invaders from beyond the Alps. 
The urnfields connected with some terremare are attributed by Saflund* 
to a fresh wave of conquerors who would have occupied and fortified 
the village sites only in the Late Bronze Age. Finally, the Apennine 
herdsmen continued to practise collective burial in natural caves. 

The ideology of some Bronze Age societies found expression in the 
celebrated rock-carvings round Monte Bigo near the 7OOO-ft. contour 
in the Maritime Alps. 5 They depict warriors, brandishing halberds, 
side by side with peaceful scenes of ploughing and other agricultural 
operations. To the same period, but to another group, might be 
attributed the statue menhirs of the Adige* depicting a male personage 
wearing a triangular dagger. They are stylistically allied to those of 
South France (p. 311). If they be inspired by a Western cult, its mother 

1 T. Sundwall, Die Were itattseher Fibeln (Stockholm, 1943). 

Sftflund, Le Tefremare, 137, n. i, considers that a sword, bearing the cartouche of 
Scti II who died in 1x98* te of terramara type. 

Monteliui, CPL. 200. 

St. Et., XII (1938), 18-22. 

Bicknell, PrMttoric Rock Engraving in the Italian Maritime Alps (Bordighera), 1913. 

M. O. Acanfora, "Le Statue antropomorfe deU'Alto Adige", Universita di Padova, 
Studi iMa Region* Trentino-AUo Adige (Bolzano, 1953). 

250 



FARMERS AND TRADERS IN ITALY AND SICILY 

goddess has been transformed into a warrior gdd. The transfiguration 
should reflect the conversion of a matriarchal social order into a 
patriarchal one. 

The rich and complex culture, formed by the convergence of diverse 
traditions in Upper Italy, dominated the whole peninsula and Sicily 
too before the end of the Bronze Age. Its manifestations at Punto del 
Tonno and on Lipari show that it must have matured in the Po valley 
by 1300 B.C. 



35* 



CHAPTER XIV 

ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS IN THE WESTERN 
MEDITERRANEAN 

IT is possible to sail coastwise from the ^Egean to Italy and Sicily 
without ever losing sight of land. Progress thence westward meant 
embarking on the pathless ocean without any guiding point in the 
heavens like the Pole Star by which a mariner might self his course. 1 
Sicily must have set a bound to regular intercourse between the ^Egean 
and the western world in so far as such intercourse depended on follow- 
ing the northern shores of the Mediterranean. Land routes across North 
Africa and even coastal routes along the inhospitable southern shores 
of the Mediterranean were of course available, however difficult they 
may have been. But they traversed territories so little explored archaeo- 
logically that the effect of communications along them can hardly be 
even inferred. We can therefore scarcely expect to find the West 
Mediterranean islands clearly revealed in the archaeological record as 
stepping-stones in the transmission of culture wholes from East to 
West, nor to be able adequately to assess the part they may have played 
in transmission from Africa northward. 

THE MEGALITHIC CIVILIZATION OF MALTA 

The barren little islands of Malta and Gozo are last remnants of a 
land-bridge from Africa to Europe and offer natural havens to mariners 
blown by mischance or groping their way deliberately westward from 
the East Mediterranean. They were unsuited to Old Stone Age hunters, 
and, save for a questionable Neandertaler, were uninhabited thereby. 
In the Holocene they supported a surprisingly dense population of 
farmers who developed a vigorous insular culture, 8 through two main 
periods. 8 

The most enduring and distinctive monuments of period I are mega- 
lithic "temples", built of really gigantic stones, and labyrinthine burial- 
vaults ingeniously carved out of the limestone with stone tools. And so 

1 L. Hogben, Science for the Citizen, 106. 

1 The beat collection of illustrations and plans of Maltese monuments and relics is 
L. M. Ugolini, Malta: Origin* detta Civilti Mediterranea (Rome, 1934), but the views 
expressed there are scarcely plausible. 

The culture sequence has been established on an objective basis by John Evans, 
PPS. t XIX (1953)* 45-89. 

252 



ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS 

to-day the most truly native monument of Maltese culture in the 
twentieth century A.D. is the village church of Musta, near Valetta, 
roofed with a dome larger than that of St. Paul's Cathedral. Like it, the 
neolithic temples .and tombs are eloquent of a devotion to immaterial 
ends which inspired the island farmers to produce a surplus above 
immediate needs. And they suggest how "circulation" of this surplus 
wealth was effected through unproductive works, that, just because 
they were unproductive, could be repeated again and again. 

Stratigraphical observations justify the division of period I into 
three phases, A, B, and C, distinguishable by pottery styles and temple 
plans. The first colonists who have left distinct traces in the archaeo- 
logical record and who presumably initiated this unproductive activity 
seem to have come from Sicily since they introduced a version of the 
Stentinello type of impressed pottery. The temples of period IA, built 
of undressed stones, possess a simple trefoil plan. This was elaborated 
in phase B by the addition of an extra apse and further complicated 
in the culminating phase C. By this phase the slabs had been beauti- 
fully dressed with stone mauls and sometimes pitted all over decor- 
atively. Some are carved in low relief with spirals or even processions 
of animals and men. 1 

Community of tradition between this temple architecture and the 
sepulchral architecture of West European collective tombs 2 is revealed 
in many details of plan and construction semicircular forecourts in 
front of shrines (Fig. 123); the deliberate use of enormous blocks; 




FIG. 123. Plan of "temples" at Mnaidra, Malta, Period 1C. 

1 Cf. T. Zammit, Prehistoric Malta; the Tarcsien Temples (Oxford, 1930), 
Noted first by Leeds, LAAA., IX (1922), 35 fi. 

253 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

porthole slabs as doorways; roofing of apses by corbelling 1 ; walls in 
which uprights set with their broad faces in line with the wall alternate 
with slabs projecting at right angles thereto 1 ; cup-marks on many 
stones. 

In fact, in the islands themselves chamber tombs were hewn in the 
rock to accommodate collective burials throughout period I, and even 
in phase A some replicate the trefoil plan of the temples. Most early 
tombs, however, were little more than rock-cut pits containing skeletons 
sprinkled with ochre. 8 But at Hal Salflieni near Valetta a vast and 
complicated hypogaeum had been carved in the living rock. Starting 
simply in phase A (to judge by the pottery), it was gradually enlarged 
till by phase B it already comprised many underground Fooms with 
several chambers opening off a central hall. In phase C it was further 
elaborated and decorated with spiralif orm paintings and skeuomorphic 
carvings. 

Cult objects from the temples of phase C include limestone statuettes 4 
a foot or more in height representing an obese female personage stand- 
ing, seated, or reclining on a couch and sometimes wearing a skirt 
recalling Minoan or Sumerian fashions, as well as betyls, bells, altars, 
and other models in stone. Most belong to phase C, but from a tomb of 
phase A2 near Zebbug* came a fragmentary statue menhir, comparable 
to those of South France and to the stele from Troy I. 

All these works were executed without the aid of metal tools; the 
culture of period I was in this sense neolithic. But flint was imported 
probably from Sicily by phase A and obsidian from Lipari in phase C 
at least. The flaked stone implements are of the simplest kind without 
bifacial working, and ground stone celts are extremely rare. Querns 
were made from Sicilian lava while pebbles of fine grained rock were 
imported for the manufacture of charms and ornaments. Among these, 
axe-amulets are very common, pendants in the form of doves and other 
shapes rare. Finally, a bossed bone plaque, identical with those from 
Castellucrio tombs and resembling those from Troy and Lerna, from 
the Tarxien temple is generally assigned to period 1C. As ornaments 
may be regarded hemispherical buttons with V perforation, found 
already in phase A, 6 beads of Spondylus shell and bone, and in phase C 
winged beads. 

1 T. Zamrait, The Neolithic Tempos of Hajar Kim and Mnaidra (Valetta, 1927), 
9 and 28. 

1 Ibid., 13; the resultant effect is that of the alternating buttresses and recesses that 
adorn the trades of early Egyptian mastabas and Sumerian temples; cf. Childe, 
NLMAE.. 85 and 125. 

* BSR., XXII (1954). MI- 

* JRAL, UV, 67 fL, IPBK. (1927), 131. 

* BSH. t XXII, 13, pi III. Ibid , n. 

354 



ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS 

Vases, too, were carved in stone, probably already in phase A but 
with exquisite skill by phase C. Then quite complicated shapes, familiar 
in pottery, were reproduced in stone and even fitted with tunnel or 
nose-bridge handles. A giant cup from Hagar Qim is 6 ft. in diameter 
and equipped with a projecting nose-bridge handle! 

The Maltese ceramic industry was as fine as the stone- work. No less 
than 26 varieties of pottery had been distinguished at Hal Saflieni 
by igio. 1 These have been arranged in a chronological order, based 
on stratigraphy, by Evans, 2 who has also recognized their affinities 
with Sicilian and South Italian wares. The earliest are closely related 
to the Middle Neolithic Stentinello wares, but even in phase A (Evans' 
A2) appear vases still more closely related to the later San Cono group 
and probably tubular handles of the Upper Neolithic Diana type, as 
well as a little red-on-buff painted ware. In phase B vases were decor- 
ated with scratched lines sometimes incrusted in red or white and 
forming curvilinear patterns. Elbowed or triangular handles were 
already attached to some vases in phase B and in C develop into fully 
fledged nose-bridge and even axe-handles (like Fig. 116, 3), while 
tubular lugs had been converted by a local evolution into the so-called 
tunnel handle; 8 that is a clay tube attached horizontally to the inner 
wall of the vase the contours of which are interrupted only by two 
apertures corresponding to the tube's ends. Such handles appear in 
the Piano Conte phase of the Chalcolithic on the ^Eolian Islands and 
will meet us again in Sardinia. Axe-handles too are appropriate to the 
Early Bronze Age of Italy. 

Judged by ceramic analogies, therefore, the age of temple-building 
and tomb-cutting on Malta should have begun late in the Middle 
Neolithic of the Italian scheme, used in the last chapter, and continued 
well into the succeeding Chalcolithic. The bossed bone plaque from 
Tarxien, if correctly attributed to period I, should mean that period 1C 
overlaps with the Castelluccio culture of Sicily. It should, however, 
end therein since the earliest pottery of period II can best be paral- 
leled in the Capo Graziano culture of the Lolian Islands that can be 
synchronized both with Castelluccio and with L.M.I. Sepulchral 
architecture would suggest rather different correlations with Italy. 
Chamber tombs there are at earliest Upper Neolithic, most explicitly 
Chalcolithic. In the West, too, ^perforated buttons are most com* 
monly associated with Bell-beakers that are late Chalcolithic. 

If the first settlers on Malta and Gozo were Sicilian in ceramic tastes, 
their ideology was rather East Mediterranean. But the architecture 
that expressed it is more West Mediterranean; the best analogies for 

1 LAAA., Ill (1910), 1-22. * PPS., XIX. 44-63. * /* 55. 

55 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

the trefoil temples may be found in the corbelled tombs of Los Millares 
(pp. 270-4). Ideological megalithicism seems again a West European 
disease. The statue menhir could indeed as well be a symbol on its 
way from Troy to South France as a contribution from that direction, 
but V-perforated buttons are explicitly Western. Allowance must 
certainly be made for West European stimuli at the birth of the islands' 
remarkable culture. Fresh inspiration from the East may be suspected 
in promoting the brilliant efflorescence of phase C, but despite analogies 
to the spiral carvings and painting on Middle Minoan Kamares cups 1 
and on the Shaft Grave stelae from Mycenae, concrete evidence for this 
is lacking. 

Whatever its origins, the megalithic culture of period I wts brought 
to a violent end by an armed invasion or a religious revolution. As a 
result the temple complex of Hal Tarxien was diverted from its primary 
use and made a cemetery for cremation burials. With these were 
deposited 2 little triangular daggers and flat or hammer-flanged axes 
of copper or bronze, pottery in an absolutely new tradition, and clay 
figurines curiously stylized to a disc with projections. 8 The novel 
pottery includes vases with oculi ornaments, handled mugs, askoi, and 
two-storeyed urns. Beads of silver, fayence, and shell were worn as 
ornaments. 

On the typological systems, valid for the East Mediterranean and for 
peninsular Italy, the metal gear would be Early ^Egean and Chalco- 
lithic respectively, though in Sardinia almost equally archaic bronzes 
survive in hoards attributable to the first millennium. The pot forms, 
too, are definitely Early ^Egean and find vague analogies in the Chalco- 
lithic Paestum cemetery. But in Sicily and Sardinia askoi and similar 
^Egeanizing forms reappear after 1200 B.C.* The new burial-rite might 
be connected with the urnfield invasion that had reached Northern 
Sicily about that date. Indeed, a few sherds of Apennine ware have 
turned up in the cemetery and on other period Ha sites. However, 
cremation had been practised at Bogaz K6y and Troy much earlier in 
the second millennium and might have reached Malta direct from that 
direction. Still, the closest parallels to the pottery of period Ha are 
found in the village of Capo Graziano on Filicudi, the occupation of 
which was roughly contemporary with Castelluccio and L.M.I-II but 
lasted nearly to 1400 B.C.* That is not to say that the cremationist 

1 Evans, P. o/M., II, 182-9. 

* The best illustrations of the cemetery furniture are given by M. A. Murray, Corpus 
of Bronu Age Pottery of MaUa (London, 1934). 

1 Curiously like some figurines from Middle Bronze Age sites near the Iron Gates on 
the Danube, e.g. Hceraes-Menghin, Urgeschichtt d*r bildend** Kun&t (Vienna, 1925), 4x1. 
E.g. MA., XXV, id. VIII; Not. Sc. (1888), pi. XV, 2; St. Et. t III (1929), 21 

* Evans. PPS.. XIX, 85; Bernabo Brea, BP. (1956), 31. 

256 



ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS 

invaders came from the jEolian Islands, but does suggest that the 
Maltese Bronze Age began a little before 1400 B.C. 

It failed to develop. Bronze merchants would not accept the spiritual 
commodities that had satisfied pedlars in flint and obsidian, and the 
Maltese had nothing else to offer. Nor could they, like the ^Eolian 
Islanders, become intermediaries in Mycenaean trade with the West; 
for even voyagers to Spain preferred the coastwise route up the 
Tyrrhenian Sea to a direct crossing exposed to the western gales in the 
fifteenth century A.D., a fortiori in the fifteenth century B.C. 1 No later 
bronzes survive in the islands. Still new settlers arrived and converted 
some old temple sites, like Borg in-Nadur 2 into fortified villages. They 
introduced new pottery types, quite unlike those of the Tarxien 
cemetery, and made pottery anchor ornaments. A single Mycenaean 
(L.H.IIIb) kylix is the sole import or piece of loot that survives from 
period lib. It serves to date the phase to the thirteenth century and so 
confirms the dating of phase Ila. Moreover, some vases from the 
Thapsos cemeteries round Syracuse are thought by Bernabo Brea* to be 
imported products of the Borg in-Nadur culture. But anchor orna- 
ments, just like Fig. 38, appearing about the same time also at Milazzesi 
in the ^Eolian Islands, had been Early Helladic in Greece and so took a 
thousand years to reach Malta! 

In the sequel Malta made no further contribution to European 
culture. In fact it was only during period I that the island culture was 
original and creative. Even then its contributions to the European 
heritage can only have been immaterial and may well have been 
illusory. 

SARDINIA 

Sardinia, though apparently uninhabited in the Old Stone Age, is large 
enough despite its mountainous character to support numerous, if 
mutually isolated, farming communities in its valleys and plains. 
Moreover, it possesses natural resources obsidian, copper, and silver 
to attract industrial colonists. When the archaeological record opens 
clearly, all these opportunities were already being exploited. The 
evidence is derived in the main from natural caves and rock-cut tombs 
used as collective sepulchres for many generations. Relics of different 
periods accordingly occur generally mixed together. 
Only in the cave of San Bartolomeo 4 near Cagliari in the south of the 

1 Clavijo (Embassy to Tamerlane, London, 1928) en rout* from Cadiz to Constantinople 
in 1403 sailed from Minorca through the Straits of Bonifacio to the Tyrrhenian c6ast 
but was forced to shelter off Upari before passing the Straits of Messina. 

PPS., XIX, 69, 88. 

BP. t n.s., X (1956), 60. BP., XXIV (1898), 253 ff. 

257 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

island is a stratigraphical separation possible. In an upper layer here 
the grave goods comprised Beakers, tripod bowls decorated in Beaker 
style (Fig. 124, i), West European daggers and a flat axe of copper, and 
a prismatic V-perforated bone plaque in fact a typical "Copper Age' 1 
assemblage. Bdiow and separated by a layer of stones from the "Copper 
Age" burials was an earlier funerary deposit comprising, as well as 





FIG. 124. Tripod bowl, San Bartolomeo (J), and vase-handle of nose-bridge 
type, Anghelu Ruju (J). 

skeletons, simple obsidian implements and hemispherical and carinated 
bowls, one adorned with a stellate pattern of finely incised hatched 
ribbons. Technically the last-named vase recalls some vessels from 
Villafrati in Sicily, from Hal Saflieni in Malta, and from pre-Beaker 
horizons in South France. The pottery from the sepulchral cave of San 
Michele (Ozieri) 1 includes vessels of the same type, but others with 
tunnel-handles quite like the Maltese but decorated with semicircles 
executed in cardial and stab-and-drag technique that is represented at 
San Bartolomeo only in the upper level. 

Sardinian culture of Beaker and post-Beaker age is better represented 
by the rock-cut tombs, locally termed <fcwM*s di gianos. Some of these 
family vaults may have been dug even in pre-Beaker times, since sherds 
of the incised fabrics represented in the lower level at San Bartolomeo 
occur in them, but others were excavated, or in any case still used, in 
the first millennium B.C. Generally the tombs are isolated or grouped in 
twos or threes, but at Anghelu Ruju, 1 a cemetery of no less than thirty- 
one chamber tombs has been systematically explored. The burial 
chambers here tend to a rectangular plan, are often preceded by an 
antechamber and entered either by a stepped pit or a passage. Subsidiary 
chambers may open off the principal compartment. The inner portals 
may be carved to suggest a lintelled wooden doorway like the f aades 
of Early Cypriot tombs. 1 In two cases rock pillars were left standing in 
the chamber. On such pillars and on the walls bulls' heads or high- 

6x-3. ' "* * (1904)> 3 5 * MA 
258 



ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS 

prowed ships have been carved in low relief {Fig. 125). Traces of red 
ochre were found on the floors of two tombs. Normally the bodies were 
buried in the contracted attitude, but in two tombs (XV and XXbis) 
cremated remains were found in small niches and in tomb XX a baby's 
skeleton in a jar. 
A series of intermediate forms leads from the subterranean domus di 




FIG. 125. Plan and elevation of tomb XXbis at Anghelu Ruju. 

gianas (Witches' Houses) to the megalithic tombs built above ground 
and termed locally tombe di giganti (Giants' Tombs) rock-cut tombs 
roofed by corbelling in megalithic style, 1 megalithic extensions built on 
in front of rock-cut tombs, 2 domus di gianas with the rock face above 
and around the entrance carved to reproduce the portal and forecourt 
of a Giants' Tomb. 3 Similarly Mackenzie 4 has constructed a typological 
series leading from simple "dolmens" to the classical Giants' Tomb a 
long narrow gallery walled with megalithic slabs, roofed by corbelling, 
covered by a cairn enclosed by masonry walls and entered through a low 
arch cut in a tall upright slab or stele from a semicircular space flanked 
by masonry walls (Fig. no). Of course, such a series can be reversed 
as it is a pure a priori construction and unsupported bya reliable series of 
closed grave finds. The so-called "dolmens" have yielded no datable 
furniture. Some are just remnants of Giants' Tombs.* The distribution 

1 BSR., V (1910), 103, fig. 5. 

I Taramelli, // Convegno archeologico sardo, fig. 65. 

II Taramelli, // Convegno archeologico sardo, fig. 66; BSR., V, pi. IX, i. 

BSR., VI (1913), 167; BJP., XLI, 15. Antiquity. XIII (1939), 

259 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

of the latter does not agree so exactly with that of the nuraghe as to 
prove contemporaneity. 1 Nuragic and even Roman 8 relics have been 
found in Giants' Tombs. But of course such finds do not establish 
erection in the Iron or Late Bronze Age. 

The grave goods recovered at Anghelu Ruju give the best available 
picture of Sardinian culture before the Nuragic age, though tomb- 
robbing in antiquity has stripped that picture of any pretence at being 
complete. Metal was used, but apparently only sparingly; only two or 
three West European daggers, one flat axe, one arrow-head, several 
quadrangular awls, some beads, bracelets and atypical pins of copper 
and olive-shaped beads, and a ring of silver have escaped the ancient 
plunderers. Martial activities are indicated by numerous weapons 
the copper daggers, spheroid mace-heads of stone, arrow-heads (tri- 
angular, tanged, tanged-and-barbed, and even serrated) of flint together 
with wrist-guards (these, however, having for the most part only two 
perforations, may have been used as whet-stones as in Crete) and an 
arrow-straightener of pumice. In the pottery we might distinguish: 
(i) carinated vases, and cylindrical pyxides, vaguely iEgean in form; 
(ii) vessels decorated with semicircles and other patterns formed either 
of (a) finely incised hatched ribbons or of (b) stab-and-drag lines; 
(iii) Bell-beakers and tripod bowls like Fig. 124, i; (iv) carinated cups 
and other vessels with nose-bridge handles (Fig. 124, 2), which persist 
into the Nuragic age. 

As ornaments and charms, stone bracelets and rings, axe-amulets, 
disc-beads of shell, and tortoise beads (Fig. 126, a, c, f) and conical 
buttons with V perforations were worn. Finally, three tombs contained 
marble idols, which, although made of local stone, look like deliberate 
imitations of Early Cycladic models. 

Plainly many streams have converged in the Copper Age culture 
of Anghelu Ruju. Its debt to Crete was admirably summarized by 
Patroni*: "Not only the form of the tombs but also the shape and 
decoration of some of the vases in them recur in Crete. The symbols 
sculptured on the walls and the statuettes of marble show relations 
of a nature superior to any external relations of commerce; for they 
denote a profound affinity of thought and culture." Giuffridi-Ruggieri 
adds anthropological arguments. Noting that fifty-three skulls from 
Anghelu Ruju were long-headed and ten round, and that a similar 
mixture is detectable in Crete, he concludes that Sardinia was invaded 
at the end of the third millennium by a mixed race of Cretans. (It 

1 RMsta, XX. 6 ff.; BSR., V, 135. 

MA. t XI, 268; Not. Sc. t 1933, 360. 

Quoted by Ginffridi-Ruggieri in Archivio per Antrop. ed Etnogr., XLVI, 18. 

260 



ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS 

would be safer now to say "East Mediterraneans, including the round- 
headed type that reappears among the Beaker-folk" (p. 227). The 
invaders, combined with some small pre-existing population also of 
Mediterranean stock, created the Copper and Bronze Age civilizations 
of Sardinia. 
If Giuffridi-Ruggieri be right, the finely incised wares of our group (ii) 





FIG. 126. Necklace from Anghelu Ruju (|). 

might be taken as representative of the "pre-existing population". 
These fabrics are certainly related to those of Malta, Apulia, and Sicily 
on the one hand, of South France on the other. Their origin is not 
thereby determined. The Beaker-folk's effective contribution is demon- 
strated by their pottery, armament, and ornaments. Some beakets from 
Anghelu Ruju resemble especially those from Almeria, but one is 
almost identical with specimens from Bohemia and Denmark. 1 The 
arrow-straightener, too, though locally made, is a Central European 
trait in the West Mediterranean. But a beaker from a rock-cut tomb 
at Cuguttu 2 has a rudimentary thumb-grip handle. 

This and related nose-bridge handles and many other traits, espe- 
cially the V-perforated tortoise beads and prism-shaped buttons, 
betoken particularly intimate relations with Catalonia and South 
France. In South France such handles belong to a horizon explicitly 
later than wares like our group (ii) and on the whole post-Beaker 
(p. 310). In Sardinia they persist into the Nuragic age. 

Despite the industrial development and wide cultural relations 
attested at Anghelu Ruju, no urban civilization arose and Sardinia 
held aloof from any comprehensive system of foreign commerce that 
might bring datable foreign manufactures into the archaeological 
record. Judging by sepulchral architecture, island culture developed 

1 Nordmann, "Megalithic," p. 122. * Not. Sc. (1909), 103. 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

insensibly into the extremely insular Nuragic phase. This development 
did not take place without renewed contact with the East Mediter- 
ranean. A Cypro-Mycenaean copper ingot stamped with Mycenaean 
letters was found on the island. About 1200 B.C. maritime raiders, 
termed Sh'rd'n', appear in the Egyptian records. They are depicted 
protected by horned helmets and round shields and armed with swords 
precisely like those of bronze statuettes from the Sardinian nuraghi. 
Whether the Shardana originated in Asia Minor, like the Etruscans, 
and only settled in the Western Mediterranean after raiding Egypt, 1 
or were actual descendants of the Copper Age Sardinians, 2 their con- 
nection with the island in its Nuragic age is indisputable, as is the 
stimulus given to West Mediterranean development by their experiences 
in the East. 

But the result was not the establishment of a city-state organization 
such as the Etruscans created. In the island the highest social unit 
was a cluster of round huts sheltering beneath the dry-stone tower 
nuraghe of the clan chief. Architecturally as well as sociologically 
these complexes are significantly like a modern Nigerian village. 8 
Mines and smelting furnaces, as well as many hoards belonging mostly 
to founders, disclose indeed an active and efficient metallurgical 
industry. 

On the whole, indeed, the Late Bronze Age industry of Sardinia, 
like those of peninsular Italy and Sicily, was based on Central European 
traditions. Yet the variety of types comprised in the hoards would 
suggest trade with, or raids on, both the ^Egean (double-axes, axe- 
adzes) and Atlantic coasts (double-eared palstaves, carp's-tongue 
swords). But the island industry was extraordinarily conservative. 
Hoards of Nuragic age may contain every sort of axe 4 from flat or 
flanged types assignable by typologists to the Copper or Early Bronze 
Age, up to socketed forms of the Late Bronze Age and of stabbing 
weapons from archaic round-heeled daggers* to carp's-tongue swords. 
Luckily a few imported manufactures prove that these archaic types 
were still current in the eighth or even seventh century B.C., when the 
Etruscan Iron Age was in full bloom in Italy. 4 

Yet the nuragic bronzes appear in the archaeological record as the 
immediate successors of the Copper Age types just as nuragic pottery 

1 So Hall, Cambridge Ancient History. II, 282. 

* BP., XXXIX, zoo; MA.. XXV, 896; Archivio, XLVI (1916), 9; RM.. XIII (1928). 

74 

* Bosch-Gimpera, Etnohgia, 194. 

* E.g. at Monte Sa'Idda, MA., XXVII, 14 ft. 

* At Monte Sa'Idda and Ala dei Sardi, Not. Sc. (1925), 466. 

* Not. Sc. (1922), 293; (1926), 374; fcf. Bosch-Gimpera in CIPMO.. 30 f.; Studi 
Etruseki. Ill, 20. 

262 



ISLAND CIVILIZATIONS 

occurs already in the rock-cut tombs of Anghdu Ruju itself. We have 
unconsciously overstepped the chronological boundaries of this book. 
The excursus demonstrates how dangerous it would be to apply to the 
West Mediterranean typological systems that may work well within 
the Danubian and British commercial spheres and how difficult it is 
to fill with developments in tools and vessels, weapons and tombs any 
vast interval between the prehistoric Copper Age or Beaker period 
and the proto-historic Bronze Age of the eighth century B.C. Archaeo- 
logically a millennium is not very plausible, two quite incredible. 

THE BALEARIC ISLANDS 

In the Balearic Islands the archaeological record begins with the mega- 
lithic culture. In Mallorca the normal family vault was a rock-cut 
tomb. 1 The chamber (Fig. 109) takes the form of a long narrow gallery 
round which runs a shallow bench divided into several stalls by low 
ridges of rock. One or more cells may open off the chamber, and it may 
be preceded by an antechamber. The entrance is a low arch or window 
cut in the rock and may give on to an uncovered forecourt excavated in 
the hillside. In Menorca the form of the underground gallery is repro- 
duced above ground in megalithic chambers enclosed in boat-shaped 
constructions walled with cyclopean masonry and termed navetas. The 
end at which the chamber opens is flattened and sometimes even concave 
in plan. 2 

Evidence of early contact between the islands and the <<Egean is 
afforded only by a matt-painted beaked jug of Middle Cycladic type 
like Fig. 41, 3, certainly an import but found without definite context 
on Menorca. Otherwise the earliest contacts with the outer world are 
provided by a single sherd of Beaker ware 3 from the rock-cut tomb of 
Felanitx, and a conical button with V perforation from the tomb of Son 
Mulet. Both are indicative of the activities of Beaker-folk on Mallorca. 
On the other hand, splay-footed vases typical of the Horgen culture 
from a rock-cut tomb at Sa Val 4 prove connections northward, as do 
the similarities of the Balearic tomb plans to those of the Rhdne and 
Seine valleys. 

The bulk of the sepulchral pottery from the rock-cut tombs, however, 
consists of plain vases sometimes provided with upstanding lugs but 
never with true handles. Technically this fabric resembles the Argaric 
ware of the East Spanish Bronze Age, and several forms can be matched 

i Arch., LXXVI, 121 ff.; Ant. /., XIII (1933), 33 *: CAS., 113. 
1 CIPMQ., 26. 

1 Castillo, Catnpaniforme, 125; CIPMO., pi. II. 
4 In museum at Palma unpublished before the rebellion. 

263 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

in the same context. But ample round-bottomed and carinated vessels 
preserve the traditions of the oldest West European neolithic ceramics. 

Little metal survives among the grave goods. Round-heeled daggers 
of "Early Bronze Age" type were recovered from Sa Val and several 
other tombs, 1 but one tomb yielded an identically shaped dagger of 
iron! 

Indeed, the cultural history of the Baleares is parellel to that of 
Sardinia. There is no obvious break between the "Copper Age" culture 
represented in the rock-cut tombs and that represented in the 
"talayots". The latter are fortified hamlets, counterparts of the 
Sardinian nuargic settlements, and like these, the talayots 2 continued to 
be inhabited into the Iron Age. As in Sardinia, the archaeological 
material from the Balearic Isles does not show sufficient typological 
development to justify a very high dating for the local megalithic 
culture. If, like Hemp, 8 we treat the Mallorcan rock-cut tombs as the 
starting-point for the French series of gallery graves, we must still insist 
that a reversal of the relations would accord far better with the tombs' 
furniture and any chronology based thereon. 

1 Ant. /., XIII, 35, 39; CIPMO., pi. III. 

1 So the axes of the Talayot culture include both flat and socketed forms, CIPMO, 21. 

PPS., I (1935), "o. 



264 



CHAPTER XV 
THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

THE Iberian Peninsula 1 offers the natural channel through which 
Oriental influences, whether transmitted by land ways across North 
Africa or by sea along the Mediterranean, might penetrate to Atlantic 
Europe. In the Peninsula a substantial Old Stone Age population had 
probably been augmented at the end of the pleistocene by makers of 
microliths in the Capsian tradition (p. 7). Some of these may indeed 
have brought with them at least domestic sheep and goats if not some 
rudiments of agriculture. Their traditions of flint-working and of 
parietal art at least can be recognized in cultures that are admittedly 
neolithic. 

Now Spanish prehistorians to-day recognize two "Neolithic" phases, 
I and II, followed by a "Bronze Age I", equivalent to the old "Copper 
Age", that is divided into phases A and B; the old "Early Bronze Age" 
(El Argar) thus becomes Bronze Age II. And within the Neolithic they 
have long recognized two parallel cycles the Almeria culture and the 
Cave culture. 

MARITIME NEOLITHIC SETTLEMENTS 

The Cave culture used to denote a very heterogeneous assemblage; for 
at all times hunters, herdsmen, pirates, and outcasts have taken shelter 
in caves for shorter or longer periods. But in some caves both in the 
Peninsula and in South France, as in Liguria, it is now possible to dis- 
tinguish at the base of deep deposits a recurrent assemblage of pots and 
implements. This is just that culture, characterized by Cardial ware, 
already encountered in South Italy and Liguria. It is found all round 
the West Mediterranean coasts in North Africa, 2 the Iberian Peninsula, 8 
and South France 4 too. But at least in its earlier manifestations it is 
strictly confined to the coastal regions where the Mediterranean en- 
vironment is preserved in its most distinctive form. 
It was carried by groups of hunters and stock-breeders, known 

1 Pericot, Historia de Espafta, I (Madrid, 1947); La Espaiia Primitiva (Barcelona, 
1950), 655. 

Rev. Anthr., XLI (1931), 158; A. Ruhlmann, La Grotte prehistoriqu* de Da* es-Sulte* 
(Paris, Col. Hesperies), 1951. 

Pericot, Historia, 121; Act. y Mem., XVII, 1942, 88-108. 

Riv. St. Lig., XV (1949). 22-5; Baffloud and Mieg, 58-71; AC., II. 

265 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

almost exclusively from their occupation of caves. This circumstance 
has unduly exaggerated the rdle attributed to animal husbandry in the 
economy; for herdsmen periodically shelter in caves even though they 
have homes in permanent farming villages. Actually the Cardial herds- 
men did cultivate cereals; in their deposits have been found not only 
grains of barley, 1 sickle-teeth, and querns, but also both in Spain 1 and 
Provence 8 bone spatulae of the specialized type used by StarCevo folk 
in the Balkans for collecting flour (p. 84). Perhaps they followed that 
system of cultivation, still observable in Corsica and Liguria, by which 
the scrub is burnt off and the grains planted between the trees still left 
standing. 4 But for hunting they employed bows and arrrows armed 
with microliths and clubs, weighted with percussion-f>erforated 
stone heads 6 both items that could have been borrowed from 
local "Tardenoisians". 

The flint-work is generally very simple. Axes, in preference to adzes, 
were made from fine-grained rock. The pottery shows leathery forms, 
generally round based and sometimes provided with small strap 
handles. The vases have been profusely decorated by impressing the 
edge of a shell or other stamp in the wet clay. The impressions are 
normally arranged to form skeuomorphic patterns recalling wicker 
cases in which pre-ceramic vessels might have been carried. 

Bracelets of shell or stone were worn as ornaments together with 
necklaces of bored teeth. The dead seem to have been buried in caves, 
used as collective ossuaries. 6 

The coastal distribution of this culture leaves no doubt that it was 
diffused by seafarers. Though very similar pottery is distributed very 
widely in North Africa down to Tibesti and Khartoum, 7 there are no 
convincing grounds for supposing that the maritime distribution of 
our culture began from Little Africa rather than the Balkan or Levant 
coasts. Cardial decoration is found on some of the earliest neolithic 
pottery of North Syria. On the other hand, Startevo ware is related 
to Cardial and associated with the bone spatulae that occur in no other 
context. It certainly seems that the earliest neolithic cultures, adapted 

1 San Valero Aparisi, La Cueva de la Sarsa, Servicio de Investigation Prehistorica 
(Valencia, 1950), pi. II. 
1 Ibid., pi. I. 

* Bailloud and Mieg, 71 (ChAteauneuf-lez-Martigues), but in Prthistoire, XII (1956), 
89, this is classed as "neolithique cardial". 

4 Sereni, "II sistema agricola del debbio nella Liguria antica," Mem. della A cad. 
Lunigiantse, XXV (La Spezia, 1955). 

* San Valero, op. tit., 37-46, argues that these are weights for digging-sticks. Similar 
objects are widespread in the North African Capsian, cf . Vaufrey, Prthistoire de I'Afriqut, 
I, 413-15. They are too light for digging-sticks. 

* Riv. St. Ltg., XVII (1931), 132. 

7 Cf, Arkell, Shakeinab (London, 1953), 69. 

266 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

respectively to Balkan and West Mediterranean environments, at 
least sprang from a common root. 1 In the latter area Cardial herdsmen 
may well have mingled with surviving mesolithic hunters and with 
neolithic farmers' of Capsian tradition. And so a certain continuity of 
tradition may be observed in the cave deposits. But the varied styles 
of pottery and kinds of stone tool grouped together in earlier books 
to constitute a "Cultura de las Cuevas" are no more homogeneous 
culturally or chronologically than the relics from the several strata 
of Arene Candide. But in Spain they can seldom be distinguished 
stratigraphically. At least at El Pany near Barcelona, however, col- 
lective burials with Cardial ware were stratified below Bell-beakers 
of Bronze I. 1 

THE ALMERIA CULTURE 

A second and possibly earlier stream of neolithic colonists, come this 
time from Africa, introduced a different culture that is first recogniz- 
able in Almeria and therefore thus designated. 

The neolithic colonists settled generally on hilltops like the type site, 
El Garcel, 3 overlooking the fertile valleys; they arrived at a time when 
pines still grew on the now treeless hill. In addition to breeding stock 
and cultivating cereals they may have introduced the culture of olive- 
trees since olive-stones were found, but grape-seeds are said to be 
derived from wild vines. 4 The grains were reaped with sickles armed 
with serrated flint teeth, like those from the pre-dynastic Fayum, 
stored in subterranean silos and ground on saddle-querns. Tied to the 
soil by their fruit trees, the villagers lived in round or oval huts, partly 
excavated in the soil but roofed with a superstructure of wattle-and- 
daub. Huntsmen still used microlithic arrow-heads micro-gravers 
found at El Garcel may be by-products in the manufacture of these. 

Carpenters employed ground stone axes, adzes, and gouges. A textile 
industry is implied by biconical whorls. Pottery was undecorated and 
vases were never provided with true handles, though singly or even 
doubly perforated lugs were applied. Forms include jars with pointed 
bases (Fig. 127, 3) like the early Egyptian (Gerzean) and North African,* 
curious bottles, oval in plan, that also recur in North Africa, and sack- 
like leathery vessels related to the neolithic pottery of the Fayum and 
Merimde* in Egypt. The leathery sack-like forms continued to be 

Cf. Miloj&il, Germania, XXX, 314-18; Bernabo Brea, A.C., II, 192-8. 
Anuari, VIII (1936), 19 ft; Ampurias, V, 190. 

Siret, RQS., XXXIV (1893), 489 ft, and Les premiers Ages d metdt dans I* surest 
de I'Espagne; Go6, Amfvruu, III (1941), 63-84. 

Siret, Questions de chronologie et d' ethnographic iberiques, Paris, 1913* 
BSPF., XXXIII, 633; Rev. Anthr., XU (1931), 150. fig. x, 4. 
Caton-Thompaon, The Desert Feyum; Childe, NLMAE., 58. 

267 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

popular in all later phases of Almerian culture. In Siret's second neo- 
lithic phase as represented at Tres Cabezos 1 they are provided with 
upstanding perforated lugs (Fig. 130, i), while bowls may be carinated, 
and even double-vases were made as at Merimde in Egypt. Vessels 
were also woven of esparto grass. 

Disc-beads of shell, made also by African Capsians, and bracelets 
of Pectunculus* shell and stone, beads of callals and later of steatite 
were worn as ornaments. The dead were buried collectively in natural 
cave ossuaries or in stone- walled but closed cists, usually circular in 
plan and covered by low tumuli. 8 Even at El Garcel a very crude 






FIG. 127. i, Gouge, El Garcel (J); 2, schist adze, Portugal (J); 3, jar, El 

Garcel (i). 

fiddle-shaped stone, rather like Fig. 8, 14, may represent a ' 'Mother 
Goddess". She is slightly more recognizable in stone figures from the 
tombs that may, however, be Neolithic II. 

Vaufrey 4 reports "the whole assemblage from El Garce!" flints, 
celts, and even pots "is an almost exact replica of the neolithic of 
Capsian tradition" as found throughout the Maghreb. The African 
origin of the Almeria culture is thus established. But bifacially trimmed 
arrow-heads and richly decorated pottery are missing from its neo- 
lithic I phase. Hence the Straits may have been crossed before the 

1 Siret, Ages du mttal, pi. 3; segmented bone beads, a clay plaque perforated at the 
four corners and a heap of ore suggest that this site should be assigned rather to the 
Copper Age. 

Siret, Questions, 38; APL., I (1928), 25. 

1 Leisner, Megalithgrdber, 390-404. 

4 Prthistoire de I'Afrique, 1, Maghreb (Paris, 1955)* 412- 

268 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

main expansion that Vaufrey has traced took place in Africa. And the 
radio-carbon date of 3050 B.C. for the Capsian neolithic in the Maghreb 1 
need not be accepted as an upper limit for its arrival in Europe. 

A parallel colonization of the west coast may perhaps be inferred 
from plain baggy pots and microliths, similar to those from El Garcel, 
found in megalithic passage graves that are at best Neolithic II (p. 276 
below). Perhaps the first phase of this western colonization will be 
documented if the furniture of the Portuguese "dolmens" be pub- 
lished. These are reported 2 to be megalithic cists, each containing 
a single corpse accompanied by archaic microliths. 

On the east coast Spanish prehistorians have traced the spread of 
the Almeria culture northward to Catalonia by a series of burials of 
contracted skeletons in simple pit graves. Their furniture includes 
tanged and transverse arrow-heads, Pectunculus bracelets, callafe 




rH 

ft O 




FIG. 128. Stages in conventionalization of parietal art in Spain. After Obermaier. 
A, Maimon; B, Figuras; C. La Pileta. 

beads, and plain "Western" pottery once indeed a "square-mouthed 
vase' 1 . 8 Though formally neolithic, these Almerian cemeteries in the 
north may be relatively late, but at least once the distinctive plain 
pottery has been found stratified below Beakers. 4 

On their way north these Almerians must have come into contact 
not only with Cardial herdsmen but also with descendants of older, 
mesolithic, tribes. Interactions with the latter must be responsible 
for the curiously African character of some of the East Spanish rock- 
shelter art. Pericot indeed now believes that the practice of decorating 
shelter walls with lively but impressionistic scenes of animals and the 
chase began in the Solutrian phase of the old Stone Age. But some 
still quite lively paintings depict side by side with gathering activities 
sheep, equids, and even a rider. 6 If these neolithic elements be derived 



. 415- 

* Leisner, Antas do Conctlho de Reguengos de Monsarra* (Lisbon, 1951), 177. 

* Maluquer de Motes, "La Culture neolitica del Valles," Arrahona, 1-2 (Sabadell, 
1950), 4-13- 

Ampurias, VI (1944;, 43-58. * AJA.. LIII (1949), 150, fig* 1-4- 

269 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

from the Almerian of Capsian i.e. North African tradition, the 
stylistic similarity of some East Spanish paintings to those of Libya 1 
or even Rhodesia would be more comprehensible. But the paintings in 
question are demonstrably older than more conventionalized paintings 
the figures of which can be matched on Copper Age I vases (Fig. 128) 
and tomb walls. Rock-shelter art of this later conventionalized type 
is not confined to the eastern coasts, but occurs widely in the Peninsula 1 
and along the Mediterranean coasts even east of the Rhone. 8 It must 
be the work of roving hunting and herding groups whose palaeolithic 
traditions had been enriched by interaction with Almerian and other 

neolithic farmers. 



THE RISE OF A METAL INDUSTRY 

The Peninsula was rich in gold, silver, copper, lead, and even tin. The 
discovery of these natural resources permitted the development of a 
new economy in which industry and trade could absorb some of the 
rural population, as in the Eastern Mediterranean. It was presumably 
initiated by actual prospectors, probably by veritable colonies, from 
that direction. It is in fact first and most brilliantly attested in Almeria 
at sites adjacent to the Mediterranean coasts whence colonists come 
by sea from farther east could conveniently exploit and work neigh- 
bouring lodes of argentiferous copper and lead ores. The type station, 
Los Millares, 4 a few miles up the Andorax from the modern port of 
Almeria, has indeed all the aspects of an gean township, covering 
5 hectares (iz acres) and protected by a wall and fosse. Outside the 
wall lay a cemetery of a hundred-odd collective tombs said to have 
held up to a hundred interments. A similar settlement was established 
at Almizaraque about a mile up from the mouth of the Almanzora. 
Others may be inferred from corbelled tombs at Belmonte, Purchena, 
and Tabernas. 6 

Most of the townsmen were of course farmers who cultivated emmer 
and hexaploid wheat, barley, beans, and flax. 6 But the population 
included also metallurgists, presumably initiated in the East Medi- 
terranean and interested especially in silver and gold. Slags from 
Almizaraque attest the extraction of silver, copper, and lead. Siret 7 



Cf. e.g. Granott, L'Arte ruptotre detta Libia (Napoli, n.d.), 275-85. 

rvptstres scl 
BSPF., XLI (1944). 168- 



Breuil, Les Peintures ruptstres sekimatiques d$ la Ptninsule ibtriqve (Paris, 1936). 



Siret, RQS. (1893); Leisner, Megalithgr fiber, 19-64. 

Lei*ner, ibid., 10, 13, 73. 

r. dicoccum and compactum, H. htxasticho*', Telles and Ciferri, Trigo$ arqueologieos de 
EspaAa, Madrid (lust. nac. de Investigaciones Agronomicas), 1954; Cuademos, I (1946), 
38 f. 
f Cuademos, III (1948), 117-24. 

270 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

believed that clay arcs, perforated at both ends and up to 22 cm. long, 
formed parts of a reverberatory furnace. But the exact Anatolian 
parallels to such arcs, that are characteristic of most sites of Bronze I, 
suggest that they really served as loom weights. The copper-smiths 
were masters of only the simplest techniques of forging and open- 




FIG. 129, Flint arrow-heads: i, Alcala 
da Moura; 4, Los M 



; 5, Los Mfflares ). Halberd blades; 3. Casa 
Hares (J); 2, Palmella points (f). 



hearth casting. So they manufactured only daggers with a midrib on 
one face (like Fig. 132, bottom), as at Usatova, or quite flat and tanged 
(of West European type) together with long narrow flat adzes, cutters, 
as in the Cyclades, quadrangular awls, and even saws. 

Trade brought to Los Millares hippopotamus ivory and ostrich 
egg-shells from Africa, turquoise, callafc, amber, and jet from undeter- 
mined sources. But stone was still normally used instead of metal for 
axe-heads, and flint was now superbly worked by pressure flaking for 
arrow-heads, dagger or halberd blades (Fig. 129, 4), as well as knives 

271 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

and sickle-teeth. Apart from transverse arrow-heads which were still 
used, 68 per cent of the specimens from Los Millares are hollow-based, 
17 per cent tanged-and-barbed, 7 per cent leaf-shaped (Fig. 129, 5). 
Thick plaques of clay, perforated at the four corners, may have been 
used as wrist-guards or loom-weights. 1 A stone plaque perforated at 
each end from Belmonte was used as a whetstone. 

The pottery on the whole carries on the native Almerian tradition, 
but some vases are decorated with incised patterns that include oculi 
motives (like Fig. 130, 2) and conventionalized stags (Fig. 130, 3), with 




FIG. 130. i, "Late Neolithic" vase from Tres Cabezos; 2-3, symbol vases from 

Los Millares. 

small knobs or even painted in warm black on a light ground. New forms 
include squat birds' nest pyxides, sometimes with plaster necks, 
cylindrical tumblers and little globular vases with short necks as well 
as a few multiple vessels. Beakers were found, apparently as an intrusive 
element in only four tholoi at Los Millares, in one each at Belmonte, 
Purchena, and Almizaraque, and in five cists. Vases were also made out 
of plaster to imitate ostrich eggs, and unguent flasks were carved out 
of ivory or white limestone. 

As toilet articles and ornaments, bone or ivory combs were worn at 
Los Millares, the clothing fastened with shanked stone buttons, and 
simple disc or barrel beads of stone, shell, talc, and imported materials 
were hung on strings round the neck. At Almizaraque, conical and 
prismatic buttons with V perforation and a grooved bone toggle of a 
type found at Troy and Ali$ar were used as dress-fasteners, and in the 
tholos at Tabernas and probably also in that at Llano de Media Legua 
on the Almanzora, bone pins with grooved cylindrical heads (like 
Fig. 132) were found. 

The Almerians were, however, deeply preoccupied with immaterial 
ends. The collective tombs were constructed with great care; sixty- 

1 From Tres Cabezos (neolithic), Velez Blanco, Mas de Menente (Alicante, Bronze 
Aget). 

272 






FIG. 131. Ritual objects: i, Almeria; 2 and 4, Portugal; 3. Granada (J). 

ive of those at Los Millares, as at Almizaraque, Belmonte, Tabernas 
ire corbelled tholoi (Fig. 108), often with cells opening off the chamber 
>r passage, and with porthole slabs for entries. 1 covered with circular 

1 Leisner, MegaKthgrSber. 289-328. 
273 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

cairns supported by a built retaining-wall on to which straight or 
curved walls may be built to frame a forecourt. Wooden pillars are said 
to have supported the roofs. A few of the earlier tombs at Los Millares 
are rectangular or trapezoid megalithic cists from 2 to 5 m. long, pre- 
ceded by a short entrance passage. Ritual objects include owl-eyed 
female figurines made by painting bovine phalanges (Fig. 131, i), or 
stone and ivory cylinders, plain plaques of schist (Los Millares), and 
flat stone figures without faces like Fig. 8, 13, and, at Almizaraque, 
bone models of sandals. Axe-amulets were worn as charms at Los 
Millares and elsewhere. 

The urbanization of Almerian economy seen at Los Millares and 
Almizaraque is presumably a reflection, however indirect, of Oriental 
cities' demands for metal. But the townships thus created, themselves 
constituted local secondary centres of demand and radiated their 
influence right across the Peninsula. Westward, parallel or colonial 
settlements sprang up all across Andalusia to the coasts of Portugal 
along the natural route, followed by the modern railways from Almeria 
to Algarve, and principally at focal-points (now junctions) thereon or 
in metalliferous districts. 

On the plateau of Granada 1 are several large cemeteries of collective 
tombs round Guadix, Gor, and Gorafe, composed partly of tholoi, 
more often of cists of the Almerian form and frequently entered through 
porthole slabs. The tombs contain typical Almerian products oculi 
vases, flat stone idols, phalange idols, ribbed cylinder-headed pins 
as well as a few Beakers. Yet other tombs of the sartie form in these 
cemeteries contain pottery and bronzes characteristic of the succeeding 
Argaric Bronze Age. Farther west at Antequera 8 and in the ancient 
Betica,* the route is marked by superbly built tholos tombs. But near 
the princely tholos of Romeral at Antequera is a small cemetery of 
rock-art tombs 4 that reproduce in miniature the plan of the tholos 
but contained mainly Argaric bronzes. On the other hand, stroke- 
burnished ware from villages near Jerez and Carmona 6 points to fresh 
impulses direct from the East Mediterranean. But at Campo Reale 
near Carmona, Bonsor* found burials in "silos" really chamber 
tombs accompanied by polished stone axes, plain pottery, and a 
little painted ware akin to the Almerian and the characteristic clay arcs. 

1 Lefoner, Megalithgr fiber, 84-168. 

* Ibi4. t 174-85. 
1 Ibid., 194-213. 

4 S. Gimenez Reyna, "Mam. arqueoL de Prov. Malaga hasta 1946", Informes y 
Memorial (Madrid, Junta para Excavaciones, 1946). 

9 Act* ArqueoL ffispantca, III (1945), 37; Bonaor, "Lea Colonies agricoles prl- 
romainM de U vattfe da B*tis," Rev. Arch., XXXV (1899), in. 

Op. rtt., 36-9, 105-10, fig. 41-2. 

274 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

Then, in Algarve, a metalliferous region where the rocks are suited 
to dry-stone masonry, a cemetery of seven tholoi at Alcali 1 marks the 
site of a smaller Los Millares. The tombs contained flat adzes, notched 
daggers with midribs on one or both faces (Fig. 132), awls and saws 
of copper, superbly worked hollow-based arrow-heads of flint (Fig. 
129, i), undecorated vases of Almerian type, a marble paint-pot, a 
clay arc, hammer beads, and beads of amber, callais, and jet, but not 
Beaker ware nor West European daggers. Corbelled tombs extend along 




FIG. 132. Copper daggers and adze, Alcala, and bone pin, Cabeco da 
Ministra (i). 

the Portuguese coasts as far north as Torres Vedras (Pefla and Barro 
with semicircular forecourt). 2 Tombs at Monge and San Martinho, 
Cintra, 8 excavated in the rock but roofed by corbelling, illustrate the 
transition from the built tholos to the rock-cut tomb. 

Tombs of the latter class, agreeing in plan with the tholoi and, like 
them, sometimes preceded by an antechamber, a curved forecourt or 
a long entrance passage divided by roqk-cut versions of the porthole 
slab form regular cemeteries at Palmella, 4 Alapraia,* Estoril, and 

1 Estacio de Veiga, Antiguidades monumentaes do Algarve (Lisbon, 1886*91). 

1 Pefla (OAP., XIV, 354), and Barro, with semicircular forecourt; V. Correia, CIPP. 
Mem. 27 (1931). 72, relics at Belem. 

Cartailhac, op. cit.\ OAP., II, an. OAP., XII (1907), 210, 320. 

* Afonso do Paco, "As Grutas de Alapraia", Brolma, XXI (Lisbon, 1935): Anals 
IV (Lisbon, 1941). 

275 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

other sites round the Tagus estuary. 1 From their situation at the 
river mouth and from the tomb furniture these cemeteries of the 
PalmeUa culture might belong to maritime colonists from the East 
Mediterranean like Almizaraque and Los Millares, with which they are 
in fact largely contemporary. 

But in the hinterland, including the stanniferous plateaux of Northern 
Portugal, are cemeteries of four or five megalithic passage graves 
(antas) under round cairns which embody an older tradition of sepulchral 
architecture and should belong to a native population of neolithic 
ancestry (p. 269) the builders of the unpublished "dolmens". Nearly 
all antas had been pillaged in the seventeenth century. The surviving 
furniture from most includes beakers and typical relics df the Palmella 
culture. But at least two 2 were demonstrably earlier than "Almerian" 
tholoi that had been built up against them under the same cairns. And 
from a couple of very simple passage graves (Fig. 133) the original 
furniture has been recovered intact. 8 Each interment was accompanied 
by an axe and an adze, a set of geometric microliths and a couple of 
plain round-bottomed "Western" pots and a plate of red-slipped ware. 
So the first megalithic passage graves in Portugal were built by a neo- 
lithic population akin to the Almerian and at a time at least culturally 
equivalent to Neolithic II in Spain. Yet larger, and presumably later, 
tombs reproduce in orthostatic masonry all the features of the tholoi and 
rock-cut tombs 4 with their divided passage and even porthole slabs. 5 

The only settlement yet explored in Portugal is Vila Nova de S. 
Pedro, 6 not on the coast, but well in the hinterland of Lisbon. It was 
founded before Beaker ware became fashionable locally, 7 but was 
occupied throughout the "Copper Age" (Bronze I) and until Argaric 
types were locally produced in Bronze II. The villagers cultivated 
hexaploid wheat, 8 barley, and beans and engaged in stock-breeding and 
hunting. Local copper ores were smelted at the site and the metal 
worked into flat axes, saws, and other types, 9 though perhaps not before 
Bronze II. The domestic pottery is characterized by reinforced rims, 
surprisingly like those of neolithic Britain. 10 But beakers and other 
vases, found in the rock-cut tombs, were also used, and on the whole 
the site reveals just a provincial variant on the Palmella culture. 

1 Alapraia e S. Pedro, Junta de Turismo de Cascais, 1946; Congresso Luso.-Espanhol. 
do Porto, T. VIII, 1943. 

Leisner, Antas do Concelho de Reguengos (Lisbon, 1951), 284-9. 
Ibid., 212 and 310. 

Correia, CIPP., Mem. 27. Marburger Studien, i, 150. 

Afonuo do Paco, Act. y Mem., XX (1945). T Id. Broteria, LIV (1952), 7-16. 

Amfts, V (1954), 280-356, T. sph&rococcum; cereals from other sites are described here. 
Zepkyrus, III (Salamanca, 1952), 32-9. 
" Childe, Revista GtUmartos, LX (1950), 7-12. 

276 





*" *." ^ ^ 

FIG. 133. Plan of "neolithic" passage grave (anta) and part of furniture; Alemtejo. 
After Leisner. Pottery and celts (J), flints (}). 



In the Palmella culture the essential features of the Millares economy 
are conserved though less fully than in Algarve. Metal tools and weapons 
are rare in the rock-cut tombs and practically confined to the odd arrow- 
heads 1 shown in Fig, 129, 2. The place of copper in industry is taken 

1 One such "point" was found sticking in a skull at Valdenabi, Leon; Corona d'Estudis 
dedica a sus Mar tires (Madrid, 1941), 128. 

277 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

by stone axes and adzes and superbly worked flints, including halberd 
blades like Fig. 129, 4, that may be polished on the faces as if in imita- 
tion of metal. Arrow-heads include still microlithic types, but hollow- 
based, tanged, and leaf-shaped forms, none comparable in delicacy to 
those from Alcal&, occur in the proportions of 72, 19, and 9 respectively 
at Palmella. Trade brought gold, callals, amber, and ivory, while the 
connections with Almeida are explicitly attested by cylinder-head pins 
from tombs and by clay plaques perforated at the corners from con- 
temporary settlements. But tortoise beads from Palmella and Vila Nova 
de S. Pedro conform to the Sardinian-Proven9al type of Fig. I26a, 
while a pair of basket-shaped gold earrings from a rock-cut tomb at 
Ermageira 1 reproduce a familiar Irish type (cf. Fig. 154). * 

In the Palmella pottery Beaker ware, both of the "grand style" 
(Fig. in, 1-2) and of the "classical" variety decorated with rouletted 
zones, is the most conspicuous element, but plain round-bottomed and 
carinated vessels may just carry on the native "neolithic" tradition, 
illustrated in the megalithic tombs. Stroke-burnished sherds have 
been recovered from tholoi and from sepulchral caves while channelled 
and other kinds of incised decoration are also represented in caves and 
settlements. 

Among the ritual objects too, besides familiar Millares types- 
phalange (S, Martifiho) and cylinder idols and schist sandals (Alapraia) 
the Palmella tombs contain a variety of peculiar Portuguese forms 
plaque idols richly decorated with incised patterns (Fig. 131, 2), schist 
croziers, similarly decorated, marble copies of shafted hoe-blades, large 
crescentic "collars" of limestone, 8 and pendants in the form of a rabbit. 8 
The owl-face of a funerary goddess and even representations of a copper 
dagger were carved or painted on the uprights of some tombs. 4 

Similarly on the east coasts from Almeria northward to Catalonia 
rural communities continued to bury the dead in natural cave ossuaries. 
While they relied mainly on stone for axes, they obtained objects of 
copper, and beads of callals, learned to work metals and copied locally 
such Almerian types as cylinder-head pins and painted phalange idols. 6 
Flint daggers and hollow-based arrow-heads of Portuguese form are 
not, however, found north of Almeria. The local pottery preserves the 

1 Ethnos, II (Lisbon, 1942), 449-58* 

" Afonao do Paco, Anai's, IV, 122, compares these to Irish gold lunulae, but the per- 
foration*, if any, are near the centre, not the ends; comparison with the day arcs might 
be equally legitimate. 

* Leianer, As Antes de Mensarras (Lisbon, 1952), 145. 

4 Brottil, L*s P**W*5 npestres scMmatiques, IV (1936), 148. 

ft Blanquires de Labor, Murcia, Cuadernos, III, 5.30; Cami Real and Barranc de 
CmstelJet, Alicante (Arch. Prek. Levant., I, 31-72)1 M o te dc Barsella, Alicante, JSEA., 
Mem. 112 (1930); A PL., II, 115-40. 

278 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

rounded Almerian shapes but is generally mixed up with decorated 
"Cave wares" and beakers. A round-headed minority is represented in 
most of these caves. 

From many Copper Age tombs and settlements, especially in Portugal, 
but also in Almeria, bones of horses or just possibly asses have been 
reported. 

We might thus recognize in the Copper Age Almerian (Los Miliares) 
Andalusian, Algarvian, Portuguese, and East Spanish cultures though 
the first four might be grouped together as local fades of one Early 
Hispanic culture. Should we distinguish a sixth entity a "pure" 
Beaker culture in the Peninsula. Beakers of the Pan-European type, 
like Fig. in, 3-4, with their usual accompaniment of West European 
daggers and arrow-heads but no wrist-guards, have been found in every 
type of Copper Age tomb tholos, rock-cut, megalithic, natural cave 
but far more frequently in Portugal than in Almeria. But there are local 
variants on this standard model. Fig. in, 1-2, illustrates a Portuguese 
variant that may be found in the same tomb as the Pan-European 
form. 1 Beakers, decorated in this style, are associated with chalices of 
Argaric shape at Acebuchal near Carmona in Betica.* In two tombs at 
Gandul in Betica beakers were associated only with the latest (Copper 
Age I) and presumably intrusive, interments and must thus be later 
than the erection of the tombs. Similarly, at Vila Nova de San Pedro 
Beaker ware was missing from the oldest habitation deposit. On the 
other hand, at Los Miliares, Leisner assigns beakers to the earliest 
phase. So it is impossible in the south of the Iberian Peninsula to 
isolate an assemblage of relics and rites that should distinguish archseo- 
logically a Beaker people from the rest of the interrelated societies 
responsible for the Early Hispanic culture. Physically Beaker-folk were 
undoubtedly represented among those societies, and, assuming they 
were of East Mediterranean origin, should have been among the first 
colonists thence who founded those societies. Yet they did not arrive 
as Beaker-folk since Beakers are not known in the East Mediterranean 
nor yet at Paestum, where the physical type is represented. 

Presumably they separated out from them in the Peninsula. Margaret 
Smith has shown that the beaker cannot be derived from the native 
Cave culture pottery of Betica 8 and that the Tagus estuary is the most 
likely focus for the wide dispersion described in Chapter XIL But 

1 The alleged stratigraphical evidence for Bosch-Gimpera's view (Man, XL (1940), 
6-10) making the Palmella style older than the Pan-European, has been demolished by 
Castillo, APL., IV (1953), 135 ff.; cf. also Savory, Revista Guimar&ts, LX, 363-6; Leisner, 
As Antes nas Herdades da Casa de Braganfa (Lisbon, 1955), 20-27. 

1 "Colonies agricoles" (Rev. Arch., XXXV), 88-90, 116-23, 132. 

PPS. t XIX (1953), 95-107. 

279 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

unless the fine Wfacially worked arrow-heads they carried with them 
evolved in the Peninsula from microlithic forms as Siret suggested, 
we might suspect that they had been joined by a contingent of bowmen 
from the Sahara, where such arrow-heads were made in profusion, 
whether as a local continuation of the Aterian tradition or under 
inspiration from the Fayum neolithic. 

The foundation of the Copper Age cultures in the Peninsula, as in 
Italy and Sardinia, is generally attributed to an actual colonization by 
East Mediterranean prospectors. But these colonists did not, like the 
Phoenicians and the Greeks, bring shiploads of manufactured articles; 
not a single East Mediterranean export has been recognized on any 
Peninsular site before the Argaric period. The metal gear, locally made 
by the immigrant smiths, was technically inferior to that current in the 
East Mediterranean even during the third millennium but after all 
the "prospectors" would have been looking for silver and gold, not 
copper. Some Millares pot forms have general parallels in the Early 
Minoan ossuaries of Crete, 1 the stone figurines are obviously like 
Cycladic and Anatolian ones; the owl-face engraved on plaques and 
vases or painted on phalanges and caves belongs to the same "goddess" 
whom the Sumerians depicted on the handles of funerary jars and the 
Trojans on a stele and on face-urns. The plaque-idols like Fig. 131, 2, 
are very like Egyptian block figures (p. 19) or Early Cypriote clay 
"idols". 2 The clay arcs have exact parallels in Anatolia, as has the 
toggle 8 from Almizaraque; a segmented stone bead from Palmella is 
quite like Fig. 12, 2, while the stroke-burnished ware from Betica 
(p. 274) is identical with the East Mediterranean fabric. The idea of the 
aritficial collective tomb is East Mediterranean and was translated into 
corbelled vaults in Crete and the Cyclades in the third millennium. 
The tholoi of Los Millares are actually rather similar to Krazi in Crete 
(p. 23), while the contemporary cists resemble those of H. Kosmas 
in Attica (p. 72). 

Still these analogies are distinctly vague. Collective burial had 
apparently been practised in the Peninsula already in the neolithic 
period. In Portugal even built collective tombs may be equally neo- 
lithic. There, too, megalithic tombs are demonstrably older than tholoi. 
Even for the Almerian tholoi Leisner has expounded a plausible evolu- 
tion from the neolithic round cists. The similarity between tholoi, like 
those at Antequera and AlcalS. and the Mycenaean looks indeed particu- 

1 Xanthudides, Vaulted Tombs, pis. XI, 1850 (stone birds' nest vases), XXXI 687 
(clay tumbler), XXX, 4982 (stud-<nament), M.M.I. ' ' 7 

Act. y Mem. Soc. EspaA. Anthropologia, XIX (1944), 135. 

Schliemann, Ilios, fig. 536; van der Osten, "The Alishar Htiytik, 1928-29," QIC. 
Pub*., XIX, fig. 85; for arcs, see p. 40, n. i. 

280 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

larly striking. It is accentuated by the cemetery of rock-cut tombs near 
Antequera that seem to bear the same relation to the tholos as chamber 
tombs do to Mycenaean tholoi. But perhaps the similarity in plan is 
deceptive; in Greece the passage was unroofed, where in Iberia it was 
always covered. In any case it is no longer plausible to derive from the 
Mycenaean the Iberian tholoi any more than to make the latter the 
models for thfe Portuguese passage graves. Indeed, it is now just as 
plausible to derive the Mycenaean tholoi from the Peninsula (p. 80.) 
Hence its East Mediterranean relations provide no indisputable limiting 
dates for the Early Hispanic Copper Age. 

Whether as a consequence of East Mediterranean colonization or 
no, during the Copper Age the several societies inhabiting the Peninsula, 
while asserting their autonomy in divergent ceramic styles, fashions in 
amulets, and preferences for arrow-heads, had achieved a considerable 
degree of uniformity in stone and metal tools and weapons, in costume 
and personal ornaments and from one coast to the other. To this cultural 
uniformity no political union need have corresponded. Only in Andalusia 
and perhaps Algarve do a few monumental tombs look like princely 
sepulchres rather than communal ossuaries or family vaults. 

The exotic materials turquoise, amber, jet, callais and foreign 
types, like tortoise beads, from Copper Age tombs illustrate wide 
commercial relations, particularly with the North-west. The counter- 
balancing exports at least before the Beaker expansions seem to 
have been of a less substantial character elements of a cult. The 
passage graves of Brittany are so closely related to the Portuguese in 
architecture and furniture as to suggest direct maritime intercourse 
foreshadowing that of the Tartessians in the eighth century. 1 The 
Northern passage graves should result from a further extension of such 
relations that might account for the amber at Los Millares. The symbol- 
ism and the technique of ceramic decoration in Brittany and Scotland 
point in the same direction, while the magic patterns on Irish bronzes* 
are inspired by the hieratic art of Palmella. In the sequel, of course, the 
Beaker-folk, presuming they did set out from Spain, played a decisive 
role in initiating a Bronze Age in Central Europe and Upper Italy. The 
main contribution of the Peninsula to Atlantic and North-Western 
Europe was, however, surely "the Megalithic Religion". With Hawkes 8 
we might imagine the megalith-builders sailing from the Portuguese 
coasts, like the Conquistadores, to conquer for that faith a New World. 

1 As described in the late Latin poem, Ora Maritima, by Avienus; cf. Hawkes in 
Ampurias, XIV (1952), 81-95. 

* Mac White, Estudios sobre las relations atldnticas de la peninsula hispdnica (Disserta- 
tiones Mairitenscs, II, Madrid, 1951)* 

The Prehistoric Foundations of Europe (London, 1940), 159. 

28l 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Or perhaps the saints of the Celtic Church would provide a better 
analogy; some actually followed routes marked out by megalithic tombs 
while our megalith-builders have left no superior copper weapons to 
correspond to the fire-arms with which the Conquistadores vindicated 
the authority of the cross. 

The great creative moment was transient. As in the seventeenth 
century, after the great expansion, Peninsular culture stagnated and 
compared to Britain and Central Europe declined. Even in Copper 
Age II decline is perceptible. According to Leisner the later tombs at 
Los Millares contain a poorer and less varied furniture than the earlier 
ones. In the succeeding Bronze Age (Bronze II), though tin was now 
obtainable and alloyed with copper and methods of casting were 
improved, Hispanic culture seems less progressive and its domain 
contracts. 

THE BRONZE AGE 

In Eastern Spain the Copper Age culture of Los Millares develops into, 
or is succeeded by, a no less well-defined semi-urban culture of Bronze 
Age type, named after the type station at El Argar. 1 Its authors con- 
tinued to live in hilltop townships, or citadels, more solidly fortified than 
before. There might even be galleries in the walls. The houses are agglo- 
merations of rectangular rooms with stone foundations, but the total 
areas are small the acropolis of El Officio covered 2 \ acres. The dead 
were no longer buried in collective tombs but individually in cists or 
jars among the houses; the 780 graves actually identified at El Argar 
give some indication as to how large the population must have become 
or how long the Argaric Bronze Age lasted. Metal was mined and worked 
locally on a larger scale than in the Copper Age and was effectively dis- 
tributed throughout the province. Long-distance trade, on the contrary, 
languished; it brought only a few beads of callais and segmented beads 
of Egyptian fayence like those from Perjdmos graves. Tin was scarce, 
and the smith had generally to be content with copper or poor bronze. 
But he could turn out flat axes with splayed blades or even with 
hammered flanges, awls, saws, round-heeled daggers that might be 
elongated into swords up to 70 cm. long (Fig. 134) and specialized 
halberds which seem to be local translations of Copper Age flint forms. 2 
Silver was sometimes used for rivets. Whetstones perforated at both 
ends were in regular use. Yet polished stone axes are quite plentiful on 
all Argaric settlements. 

1 Siret, Let premiers dges is the principal source. 
Arch., LXXXVI (1936), 288, 298. 
282 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

Round-bottomed and carinated pots might seem to carry on some 
Copper Age traditions (Fig. 134), but technically the fabric red, black, 





FIG. 134. Arcane burial-jar showing diadem (^); funerary vases (1); halberd and 
dagger-blades (J); sword ($). By permission of Trustees of British Museum. 



or mottled is surprisingly like Anatolian Bronze Age pottery and its 
Danubian IV analogues. The carinated shapes, too, but for the absence 
of handles, would fit well into the UnStician repertory; indeed, one mug 

283 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

from A typical ccsmetery pear Orihuda is actually provided with a 
haiMSe,* 

Ornaments included diadems of silver (Fig. 134, top), beads, rings, 
and simple bracelets of gold, silver, or copper, perforated boars' tusks 
carrying tiny rings of copper wire, shells, fish-vertebrae, and various 
beads (none of amber). Rare burials with diadems (Fig. 134) must 
belong to chiefs or nobles, burials of males and female^ together 
should be instances of satt A class division of society and a patriarchal 
organization are thus attested. Concurrently the cult of a mother 
goddess, in so far as it inspired the production of female figurines, was 
given up. Indeed, apart from an ''altar" surmounted by "horns of 
consecration" at Campos, ritual objects are no longer conspicuous. 
In the mixed population, round-heads were mingled with a majority of 
Mediterraneans. 8 

The Argaric culture might be regarded as a continuation of the old 
Almerian stripped of foreign elements after appropriating the technical 
advances introduced therewith. 8 The Almerians, having emancipated 
themselves from the megalithic superstition, went on to develop the 
metallurgy introduced therewith on original native lines. Yet the novel 
burial practices, as strange to El Garcel as to Los Millares, but tradi- 
tional in Central Anatolia and adopted in Middle Helladic Greece, 
suggest that this emancipation was not effected without help from the 
East Mediterranean. Indeed, there is better evidence for an East 
Mediterranean colonization of Almeria at the beginning of the Bronze 
Age than in the Copper Age. Agreements in burial practices are more 
specific. The typical Argaric chalices are just ^Egean kylikes of wood 
or metal translated into the local pottery as they were into Minyan or 
painted Mycenaean ware in Greece. The f ayence beads are actual ^Egean 
imports. On the other hand, some would derive the innovations of the 
Argaric culture from Upper Italy. Italian prehistorians, however, prefer to 
regard the halberd-brandishers there as immigrants from the Peninsula. 

The segmented fayence beads from Fuente Alamo in any case prove 
that the Argaric culture was flourishing at latest by 1400 B.C. If due to 
^Egean colonists, it could not have started much before 1500, since 
even the Minyan kylikes are Late Helladic (p. 75). How long it lasted 
is still more uncertain. There are no connected remains outside the 
Argaric citadels and graves till the Iron Age began after 1000 B.C., 
so that Almeria is in much the same plight as Sardinia. Outside that 
province the position is still worse. 



No - 5 (I9a8) - 

* Coon, Races. 151. insists on contrast with "Copper Age" population 

So Boach-Gimpera, Archivo Espafiol de Arpuohgia (igsfi, 48. 

284 



THE IBERIAN PENINSULA 

Typical Argaric cemeteries, well provided with metal tools, as far 
north as Alicante and Valencia 1 illustrate the effective extension of the 
Almerian economic system. But in the province of Alicante itself in 
the Alcoy district. on the hilltop citadels of Mola alta de Serelles 1 and 
Mas de Menente* axes of Argaris type were cast, or Argaric riveted 
daggers used, but the round-bottomed bowls and globular jars pre- 
serve purer traditions of the Almerian culture in contrast to the sharper 
profiles of Argaric pottery, while polished stone axes were still regularly 
employed. 

Westward in Granada some megalithic tombs in the cemeteries of 
Gor, Gorafe, and Los Eriales contain Argaric bronzes, ornaments, and 
pots. So at Alcalde near Antequera, 4 rock-cut tombs, reproducing 
exactly the plan of the built tholos, contain relics of Argaric type. 
Otherwise there is nothing in South Spain till the Iron Age. In Portugal 
cemeteries of cist graves containing (? Argaric) carinated pottery are 
rare and mainly concentrated in Algarve. 6 Sometimes the capstones of 
the short cists are carved with representations of developed metal 
axes. 6 Apart from cist graves, only the megalithic passage graves and 
natural cave sepulchres are available to fill the gap in the funerary 
record between the Copper and Late Bronze Ages; carinated and even 
handled pots from such might well be "Bronze Age 1 '. On the other hand, 
bronzes of highly specialized type, especially two-eared palstaves, 7 
show that there arose in North Portugal and Galicia during the Late 
Bronze Age an important centre of metallurgy the products of which 
were exported to Britain in a revival of the old trade that had been 
reflected in the ear-rings of Irish form from Ermageira and lunulae 
from Galicia. 8 

With this revival the Peninsula's Atlantic coast or at least its stan- 
niferous northern part at length became again a creative centre of 
metallurgy and trade, of which Avienus' verses have preserved a 
memory. 9 Yet this Late (Atlantic) Bronze Age began only after 1000 BX, 
No Middle Bronze Age is defined by typological landmarks. Into this 
vacuum the poor Early Bronze Age cists and even some Copper Age 
collective tombs might easily slide! Between 1550 and 1400 B.C. 
indirect commerce between Britain and Mycenaean Greece by some 

Bol. R. Ac*d. Hist., LIV, 357; APL., II, 151-63. 
JSEA., Mem. 94 (1927). 
A.P.L., I, 101-12. 

Gimenez Reyna, "Mem. Arqueol. de Malaga", Informes y Mems., 12 (Comisario 
gen. de Excavaciones, Madrid, 1946), 49 ff. 
Archive Espafiol de Arq. t XXII (1949), 3x0. 
OA P., XI (1906), 108; Act. y Mem., XXII (1947), 158. 
Savory, "TheAtiantic Bronze Age", PPS., XV (1949), 128 ff. 
Cf. MacWhite, E studios, 48-64. 
Hawkes, Ampurias, XIV, 81 ff. 

285 



0F EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

western route is positively attested Were AlcaU and Los Millares 
points on that route? An affirmative answer seems quite plausible 1 and 
the extra-short chronology for the Hispanic Copper Age cannot be 
refuted just by the vague parallels in the third millennium we have 
cited. But then the Peninsula's claim to cradle the Beaker-folk would 
become precarious unless the chronology for Temperate Europe be 
similarly telescoped! 

1 Bggott, Rwista Gvimartos, LVII (1948), 10 ff. Sir Lindsay Scott (PSAS., LXXXII 
(i95<>)* 44) has pointed out the close resemblances between British Middle Bronze Age 
"incense cups" and stone and pottery vases from Los Millares and cognate Copper 
Age sites. 



286 



CHAPTER XVI 
WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE 

THE diversified region north of the Pyrenees and west of the Rhine 
and the high Alps, which had been steppe and parkland during the 
Ice Age, in the subsequent forest period still supported Azflian de- 
scendants of the Magdalenian reindeer-hunters and salmon-fishers, of 
Tardenoisian immigrants from Africa, and of Forest-folk who spread 
southward. These autochthonous food-gatherers were converted 
gradually to a food-producing economy by the spread of an exotic 
neolithic culture, and, multiplying in response to the new opportun- 
ities of livelihood, accelerated its ejq>ansion. This conversion itself 
might indeed have taken place in Provence and round the Pyrenees, 
where the Cardial herdsmen, as shown in Chapter XV, had implanted 
their neolithic culture and economy. It is, however, generally attributed 
to a second wave of immigrants who would have introduced a Western 
Neolithic culture and spread it thence to more temperate regions, 
indeed to the Alps and the Channel. Even on the latter view the 
primary Western farmers admittedly mixed with native food-gatherers 
and, in adapting their rural economy to the novel environment, took 
advantage of their experience and equipment. Moreover, in South 
France the postulated Western immigrants have left only ambiguous 
traces of their passage, and the Western culture they should have 
brought with them is largely an inference from the "Western" cultures 
of Lombardy, Western Switzerland, Central and North Fiance, and 
Southern England. 

No doubt in a number of South French caves Cardial ware is replaced 
in higher strata by plain leathery pots that can be more or less exactly 
matched on the one hand in the Lagozza, Cortaillod, Chassey, and 
Windmill Hill cultures, 1 on the other in the Almeria culture and its 
Portuguese counterpart (p. 269), while similar pots occur in the basal 
levels of caves outside the narrow zone colonized by Cardial herdsmen. 
It is less clear whether other distinctive traits occur so early in South 
France or, if they do, whether they be distinctive of the Western 
Neolithic. Leaf-shaped arrow-heads are thus found 1 and are distinctive 
of the earliest Neolithic in Britain, but not of Lagozza or Cortaillod. 

T. Hawkes, Antiquity, VIE, 26-40; Ftegott, L'A*tf*. 9 LVH (1953), 4*3-4*. 
* Piggott, he. cit., 4 a6; Bailloud and MTeg, too. ' 

287 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Antler sleeves for celts so distinctive of Cortaillod occur early in Aude 
and Arifege, 1 but are missing from the deepest levels in Gard as from 
Lagozza and Windmill Hill. Hares 1 phalange pendants again occur 2 
in Gard as in South Spain and in Cortaillod and in the Lower to Middle 
Neolithic of Liguria. Hence the South French caves have yielded some 
material, stratified below Beaker layers, which could be treated as 
intermediate between the Almeria culture on the one hand, the Ligurian 
Middle Neolithic and the Alpine Cortaillod cultures on the other. In 
the last-named assemblage we have the fullest picture of the Western, 
indeed of any, neolithic culture available in Europe. 

THE EARLY NEOLITHIC PHASE ON THE WEST ALPINE LAKES 

The Swiss lakes have provided not only an unique picture of neolithic 
equipment and economy, owing to the preservation by the waters of 
organic materials, but also the clearest record of cultural development 
in Western Europe, thanks firstly to the stratigraphical excavations 
on Lake Neuchatel, initiated by Paul Vouga in 1919, and to the subse- 
quent observations of E. Vogt 8 and others which have clarified and 
extended Vouga's sequence. The names Cortaillod-Michelsberg, Horgen, 
and Corded Ware denote three culture periods that follow one another 
in that order on all the Alpine lakes and bogs. But the earliest neolithic 
colonization of the area is not represented by lacustrine habitations at 
all, but is known exclusively from cereal pollen blown into some peat 
mosses from cultivated fields adjacent to unidentified settlements on 
what is still dry land. 4 

So the oldest "lake-dwellings" in Western Switzerland were erected 
by farmers who arrived with a complete neolithic equipment, con- 
stituting what is termed the Cortaillod culture now divisible into an 
Early and a Late phase. 5 But the majority of Swiss prehistorians by 
I956 6 have become convinced that "lake-dwellings" were not raised 
on piles above the waters but erected on solid, if rather moist, ground, 
strung out along the shore between the reed belt and the strand scrub, 
which had then been left dry owing to the contraction of the lakes in 

1 Riv. Sc. Pr., VI (1951)* 130-7; Helena, Les Origins de Narbonne (Paris-Toulouse. 

* Vogt, CIPPS. (Zurich, 1950), 33; Piggott, he. cit. 430. 

Germania, XVIII (1934), 91 fi. w 

Welten in Das Pfahlbaufroblem (Monographic zur Ur- und Fruhgeschichte der 
Schweiz, XI), (Basel, 1955), 78. * 

* Vouga, "Le Neolithique lacustre ancien", (Universite de Neuchatel Recueil de 
Travaux, FacuUe de Lettres, 1934) I Antiquity, II (1928), 388-92 ; von Gonzeobach Die 
Cortaillodkultur in der Schweiz (Monographien zur Ur- und Fruhgeschichte IQAQ] ' 

Vo&,Guy**,VfeltenmDasPfahlbauproblem; butTschumi, Urgeschichte der Schweiz 
(1948) adhered to the classical theory of pile-dwellings formulated by Keller in i8<u 

288 



WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE 



late Atlantic and Sub-Boreal times. Similarly the so-called "stacked 
platforms" (Packwerkbauten) were not artificial islands floating in 
bogs, but houses built on firm peat the floors of which required frequent 
renewal owing to. subsidence. 

The farmers cultivated wheats (Triticum monococcum, dicoccum, and 
compactum) and barley, and also peas, beans and lentils. 1 Plums and 
apples were at least gathered; apples were eventually cultivated by the 
Lake-dwellers, though not certainly in the Cortaillod phase, and a sort 
of cider brewed from them. Horned cattle (Bos brachyceros) were bred 
together with minor herds of pigs and small flocks of sheep and goats. 2 
Cattle were tethered and fed on leaves during the winters. 8 A neolithic 
(? Cortaillod) yoke 4 survives, and Vouga con- 
siders some stone implements to have been 
used as ploughshares, but more probably the 
land was tilled only with antler hoes. 6 Game 
contributed much less to the community's 
diet than domestic stock. But the huntsman 
used arrows tipped with double-ended bone 
points (Fig. 135), or more rarely with trans- 
verse or triangular flint heads. Fish were 
caught in traps, in nets weighted with grooved 
stones and suspended from birch-bark floats, 
and were also speared with antler "harpoons" 

(Fig. 135). 
Wood-work was done with stone axes and A ^ . ... , _ 

, , . ., , , - , -.-. Antler harpoon (}) and bone 

rare adzes made from suitably shaped pebbles [arrow-head (i). Switzerland, 
or sawn-out blocks of fine-grained rock. They 

were mounted directly in straight shafts or in tapering antler sleeves 
(Fig. 139 A) which were fitted into straight wooden shafts. Antler 
axes and picks with square-cut shaft hole were also employed. 

A local flax was cultivated for its seeds and for its fibres, which were 
woven into linen, but the spinner did without whorls. Skins were 
doubtless largely worn; bundles of bone spines, like the antler combs 
of Michelsberg and Windmill Hill, could have served for leather- 
dressing. Baskets were plaited with great skill. 

1 Urgeschichte der Schweig, 597; cf. Beck, Rytz, Steklen, and Tachumi, "Der neol. 
Pfahlbau Thun", Mitt, naturforschenden Gtsellschaft (Bern, 1930). 

1 The proportions are: oxen 39 per cent, swine 21 per cent, sheep and goats each 
1 8*5 per cent of food animals; game only 30 per cent of total animal bones; Vouga, 
op. at. Bones of wild horse are reported from Port; Tschumi, Die ur- und friihgeschicht- 
licke Fundstelle von Port, im Amt Nidau (Biel, 1940), 73. 

* Troels-Smith, Pfahlbauproblem, 49-52; Guyan, %b. t 262. 

4 Ischer, Pfahlbauten des Bielerstes (Biel, 1928), 43, pi. VII. 

Such actually survive with wooden handles: von Gonzenbach, Cortaillodkultur, 51. 

289 




FIG. 135. 



OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Early Cortaillod pots are of simple leathery forms without handles 
save fof lugs, which may be perforated with several vertical holes 
(Fig. 136). IB the Late phase much more sophisticated forms were 
produced and vases were often decorated 1 with strips of birch bark, 




Flo. 136. Cortaillod pottery. After Antiquity (J). 

stuck on with birch-pitch to form patterns, including the magic con- 
centric circles popular at Conguel and Beacharra (pp. 317, 326), or 
just with paired nipples simulating human breasts. 

In Late Cortaillod sites appear some vases of Rossen style or at 
least influenced by Rossen and others of Michelsberg affinities. And on 
all Cortaillod sites flint instruments were made exclusively of a trans- 
lucent yellow flint, strange to the Neuchatel basin but of unknown 
provenance. Otherwise Cortaillod sites have yielded no conclusive 
evidence for trade. 

Combs for the hair were made of wood. As ornaments were worn 
beads of steatite, wood, and bored teeth, cranian amulets (p. 311), 
pendants made from segmented tines, from perforated phalanges of 
hares, boars' tusks, perforated at both ends, and wooden models of 
dubs. 

No cemeteries attached to the lake-side villages have been found, 
but some human bones, broken to extract the marrow, turned up in 
the villages as if the peasants had practised cannibalism while two 
measurable skulls proved to be dolichocranial. On the other hand, 
Sauter* has argued that cist graves of the Chamblandes type belonged 
to Cortaillod people. Cemeteries of such graves, 3 containing single 
contracted skeletons or a male and female together, extend from the 
vicinity of Basel in the Aar valley to the Upper Rhdne and thence 
beyond the Great St. Bernard along the Aosta valley into Upper Italy. 
The grave goods unpolished flint axes, a triangular axe hammer, 
hollow-based arrow-heads, coral and Mediterranean shells, a copper 

* von Gonwbach, 25; Vcwt, PPS., XV (1949), 50-2. 
1 Sibrium. II (1955). *33-& 

Tactwmi, "Dfo steinreitlicbe Hockergrftber der SchweUs, At A., XXII-XXIII 
(19*0-21); Altokki*, V, 96 & 

290 



WESTERN CULTURE IN TH ALPINE ZONE 

disc, a cranian amulet, and a V-perforated button are certainly very 
poor, but look late. The "Chamblandes culture' 1 has therefore generally 
been assigned to Swiss Middle or Late Neolithic. But its distribution 
agrees very closely with that of the Cortaillod culture, and the grave- 
type is identical with that characteristic of the Middle Neolithic levels 
of Arene Candide. 

Chronologically the Cortaillod culture, at least in its Late phase, 
can be conclusively equated with the R5ssen culture, again mainly 
with its later manifestations, 1 thus giving a partial synchronism between 
Swiss Lower Neolithic and Danubian II. A knobbed battle-axe, how- 
ever, from the Late Cortaillod layer at Seematte, 1 must mean that 
Swiss Lower Neolithic lasts into Danubian III and Northern E.N.c. 
A radio-carbon estimate for the pre-R6ssen Cortaillod of Egolzwil 3 1 put 
the oldest tangible phase of Lower Neolithic at 274Ogo B.C. a figure 
that would be perfectly reasonable for Danubian II too, but only on a 
"long" chronology. 

In the Cortaillod culture such elements as mounting celts with 
antler sleeves, antler harpoons, microlithic arrow-heads, can econ- 
omically be derived from the mesolithic heritage. Of the constituents 
that make it neolithic, one-corn wheat must be Danubian. But it could 
have been introduced by the Rttssen colonists (pp. 117-18), for it is 
not yet attested before their influence becomes perceptible, and no 
distinctively Danubian artifacts, necessarily older than R&ssen, have 
yet been found in the West Alpine area. So it still seems most likely that 
the primary impulse i.e. the cereals and domestic stock together with 
a tradition of leathery vessels, cranian amulets, hares' phalange pend- 
ants that engendered the pre-lake village cultivations and the pre- 
R6ssen Cortaillod culture of Egolzwill 4 came up'the Rhdne despite the 
ambiguity of the analogies in South France. 

THE MICHELSBERG CULTURE 

North of the Cortaillod province, in lake-side villages on the Lake of 
Constance, in moor villages in northern Switzerland and Wiirttemberg, 
in hilltop camps in South-West Germany, and at the flint-mines of 
Spiennes in Belgium, the place of Cortaillod is taken by a quite different 
culture named after the hilltop camp at Michelsbeig* in Baden. 

1 von Gonzenbach, 68*76; Kimmig, Bid. F6. (1948-50), 58-64. 

von Gonxenbach, 47; Vogt. Act* Arch., XXIV (i933). *&>, Abb. 2, , 

* Das Pfahlbwprobbm, 113. 

* The culture of this (Vogt, Ztsckr. f. sckwtis. Atortum. , Kunst, XII (1951) * 205-15) 
and other villages in Middle Switzerland diverges from that familiar on Lake NeuchAtel; 
it might be Cortaillod still quite uninfluenced by ROssen (von Gonxenbach, op. c&> ax). 

* Buttler, DonauUhtdische, 79-91; Baer, A., Di* Micktlsbtrgtr Kultur in to Sckwfit. 
(Monographic JUT Ur- und FHikgisMchto, BAle.) 

291 



AWH OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 
The moo* villages may comprise up to 24 housfes grouped along regular 



recorded, tout, since a hut might be pulled down at its owner's death, 
they cannot all be regarded as contemporary. The houses themselves 
were again rectangular, varying in size from 6 by 3-6 m. to 5-3 by 3-2 m. 
or less, but normally divided into two rooms with a hearth in the inner 
and an oven in the outer (like Fig. 137). The dry land stations in 




FIG. 137. Plan of a house at Aichbiihl ( T 4 V ). 

Germany were generally defended by flat-bottomed ditches and 
palisades; the ditches of many camps are interrupted by frequent 
causeways as in England. 

The rural economy seems very similar to that of the Cortaillod and 
First Northern A cultures. But there are some hints of more pastoral 
dans separating out from the mass of Michelsberg villagers and pre- 
sumably allowing their stock to graze freely. The principal crop in 
Wtirttemberg* was barley, but wheats (T. monococcum, dicoccwn, speUa, 
and compactom) too were grown, and apples, strawberries, and other 
frtttts collected. Flour was not, accoiding to Guyan,* converted into 



* See al*> R. K. 

1930 ff.; Paret, Das Sttinxt 

* Paret. 06. cit.. 60. 



1 Paret, op. cit., 60. 



292 



F***r***moor, Tubingen, 
, 1955). 
t 26$ 



WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE 2ONE 

bread, but eaten as a sort of gruel, but the ovens* so conspicuous in 
most villages, must surely have served for baking bread. Guyan 1 
believes that the villagers practised shifting cultivation, deserting their 
homes at intervals but returning to the same site as soon as the scrub 
had grown up again on their old clearings. The villages were certainly 
occupied over considerable periods, during which the house floors at 
least had to be renewed more than once at Ehrenstein near Ulm as 
many as thirteen times. 2 The evidence here suggests not reoccupation 
but continuous habitation on the same site for fourteen years or 
probably longer. Finally, hunting played a far more prominent rdle in 
the Michelsberg subsistence economy than it did in that of the Cortaillod 
farmers; bones of game animals, including horses,* form a relatively 
high proportion in the food refuse. 

Secondary industry and trade played a recognizable part in the 
Michelsberg economy. Thus at Spiennes in Belgium 4 lived a com- 
munity of specialized flint-miners skilled at sinking shafts and digging 
out subterranean galleries. Indeed, the Michelsberg settlers there con- 
stituted a specialized industrial community, supplementing their liveli- 
hood by exporting the products of their mines and workshops and 
Spiennes was no isolated phenomenon within the Western complex. It 
implies also the development of hunting expeditions and transhumance 
into something like regular commerce. Hoards of Western axes in 
Southern Germany may belong to Michelsberg traders. As a result of 
such trade some communities, like that at Weiher near Thayngen, 
eventually obtained copper axes and amber beads. 

But on the whole Michelsberg equipment is typically neolithic and 
agrees generally with that of Cortaillod; axes were preferred to adzes 
and often mounted in antler sleeves. The pots are generally plain and 
many could be called leathery in shape. But many have flat bases and 
jugs have genuine handles. Supposedly distinctive forms are "tulip 
beakers" (Fig. 138, i, 12, 14) and flat round plates, reputedly used for 
baking cakes, which, however, recur in a First Northern context 
(Fig. 91). A few contemporary sites in Wiirttemberg have yielded vases 
of more or less Michelsberg shapes but decorated with fine incised 
patterns reminiscent of Chassey (p. 303). These represent the "Schus- 
senried" style, but do not suffice to define a distinct culture.* For 
leather-dressing, bunched antler combs were employed at Spiennes as 
in Southern England. 

The dead were normally buried, contracted or extended, within the 

1 Ibid., 261. ' Paret, op. tit., ao. 

Ibid., 66. 

4 Loft, La Belgique ancitnne, 1, 100 ff.; and Maiin,t>s4**Xfs!, 59-79- 

* Kimmig, JSGU., XL (1950). 1,50, regards it as a Michelsbcrg-R6en hybrid. 

293 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

confines of the settlements, but small cemeteries comprising up to seven 
graves have been recorded. On the other hand, at Ottenbourg and 
Boitsfort in Belgium 1 cremations have been reported under long mounds, 




16 



FIG. 138. Michelsberg pottery. 



but the latter may be the ramparts of fortified villages rather than 
barrows. The skulls examined proved to be dolichocranial to mesati- 
cranial, none brachycranial. 
In Switzerland, Michelsberg 2 is partly parallel to Cortaillod, and both 



1 Lo, La Belgiqu* ancienne, 235, 241; Marten, Oud-Belgil. 53-83: L'Anthr LVII ^10 
von Gonrenbich, 35, 76; Vo|t, C/SPP. (Zurich); A#a Arc *.f XXIV? i8 5 T ' 4 

294 



WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE 

overlap locally with Rossen. But farther east on the Goldberg in 
Wiirttemberg 1 the Michelsberg settlement succeeded the fortified 
R6ssen village. Thus in the Danubian sequence Michelsberg could not 
be placed before the final phase of period II. Its persistence well into 
period III can be deduced from polygonal battle-axes and even copper 
celts from Michelsberg settlements. 1 Indeed, Baden influence has been 
recognized in the pottery from some eastern sites. 8 

The main concentration of Michelsberg settlements lies on the 
Neckar and the Middle Rhine. 4 There are outposts on the Saale, in 
Bohemia, and near Salzburg. Settlements in Belgium and in the Aar 
valley likewise look peripheral. This distribution might well prompt 
doubts as to the Western origin traditionally attributed to our culture. 
Indeed, Vogt has argued that the Michelsberg culture is just a south- 
western extension of the First Northern culture of (Northern) Early 
Neolithic times (p. 191). The Michelsberg rural economy is in fact 
strikingly like that of the A group of First Northern as described by 
Troels-Smith, and the ceramic agreements are even closer than Vogt 
imagined. All might perhaps be explained more simply by positing an 
acculturation of Forest hunter-fishers in Western Germany by im- 
migrant Danubian peasants, parallel to that assumed farther east to 
account for the First Northern itself. But if the latter originated 
farther south-east, Vogt's account would seem the most probable, at 
least until a primary Western Neolithic immigration be better 
documented. 

THE MIDDLE NEOLITHIC HORGEN CULTURE 

On Lake Neuchatel, after a flood which overwhelmed the Early 
Neolithic stations, many sites were reoccupied and new ones founded 
by people of a quite different culture 6 the Horgen culture. It is re- 
cognizable too above a Michelsberg settlement at Greifensee, on many 
lakes and probably also in land stations. 6 Economically the Middle 
Neolithic witnesses a cultural regression. On Lake Neuchitel agri- 
cultural equipment is poorer (no more "plough-shares"); hunting con- 
tributes more to the meat supply than stock-breeding, the percentage 
of bones of game as against those of domestic beasts rising from 30 to 
45 per cent; local flint replaces the imported material. But triangular 
perforated axes now reach the Rh6ne valley, copper double-axes were 

Germania, XX (1936), 230. 

E.g. JSGU. (1944), 32. 

Germania, XXXIII (1955), 166-9. 

JSGU., XL, 149. 

Childe, Danube, 171-3; Vouga, AsA., XXXI (1929), 167-70; Vogt, ib. t XL, J93 *-M- 

Germania, XVIII, 92-4; AsA., XL, 2-4. 

295 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

copied in stone and unbored Western celts were mounted as axes in 
perforated or heeled antler sleeves and as adzes in socketed ones 
(Fig, 139, B). Continued inter-communal specialization is illustrated by 
an axe-factory at Mumpf, Aargau. The pottery is coarse, badly baked, 
and ornamented only with raised cordons (what used to be regarded as 




FIG. 139. Types of antler sleeves for axes: A-B, Lower; C, first in Middle' 
D, first in Upper Neolithic; Lake Neuchatel (f). 

early because crude), but the vases have flat and even splayed bases 
(cf. Fig. 146). Spindle-whorls of stone, however, came into use. 

Even architecture declines; while some Horgen houses from the Lake 
of Constance are long rectangles, as at Aichbiihl, the occupants of other 
sites, like Dullenried, were content with small rectangular houses with 
a peaked roof, more suited to pastoral nomads than sedentary 
cultivators. 1 

Such a reversion to hunting and pastoralism was formerly attributed 
to adversities overtaking the West Alpine farmers. Really it reflects the 
advent of fresh settlers with stronger mesolithic traditions. Judged by 
its pottery, its perforated antler sleeves, its arc pendants, and other 
artifacts, the Horgen culture is only an aspect of that which we shall 
meet (p. 312) in the collective tombs of the Seine-Oise-Marne basins. 2 
Moreover, even gallery graves of the Paris type were built near Lake 
NeucMtel and on the Upper Rhine, while 'five megalithic cists are 
known in the area. 

The Altheim culture of the Upper Danube basin may be regarded as 
an eastern extension of the Horgen culture. On the Goldberg' in 
Wiirttemberg the Altheim village, consisting of one-roomed huts like 

* Germania, XXI, 155-8; Buttler, Donaul&ndisthe, 76. AsA., XL 2-IA 

Qtrmama, XXI (1937), '49; cf. von Gonzenbach, Cortoilhdkul^.76. 

296 



WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE 

those of Dullenried grouped in clusters of four or five, was super- 
imposed on the ruins of the Michelsberg settlement and thus occupies 
the same stratigraphical position as Horgen layers in the Swiss sites. It 
too belongs to period Ilia, but the Altheim culture is so closely linked 
with the East Alpine that it can best be considered on pages 299 ff. 
below. 

UPPER NEOLITHIC AND CHALCOLITHIC PERIODS 

Though separated by a "flood layer" from the Middle, the Upper 
Neolithic strata on Lake Neuchatel 1 exhibit essentially the continued 
evolution of the Horgen culture; there are new types of antler sleeve 
(Fig. 139, D) and tanged-and-barbed or hollow-based arrow-heads. But 
battle-axes indicate that warlike tribes were already reaching the 
western lakes. On Lake Zurich 2 typical corded ware from the im- 
mediate successor of a Horgen village attests already the sway of 
Battle-axe warriors. 

In the Chalcolithic phase on Lake Neuchitel 8 their sway was extended 
westwards; for cord-ornamented sherds and fine battle-axes are found 
in the Chalcolithic villages. The barrows of the invaders covering 
cremation burials were raised in the interior. But in the western lake- 
villages the native tradition is presumably illustrated by coarse wares 
decorated with finger-printed cordons. This decoration at the same time 
recalls that of some pottery in North Spain, South 
France, and Liguria. On the Lake of Geneva south- ^"^ ^^ 

polypod bowls, 4 like the Pyrenaean vase of Fig. 144. 
A surplus, perhaps exacted by Battle-axe chieftains, 
was now available to purchase foreign material; rare 
objects of metal including flat axes and riveted 
daggers, Grand Pressigny flint from Central France, 
and, on the Lake of Geneva, winged beads (like Fig. 
143, j, n) from the Midi 5 occur in the lake-dwellings. 
But not till the Late Bronze Age did bronze-smiths, 
supplied with raw materials by regular commerce, _ G ' X 1" . 

5 uv v xu i xv i A -11 CM Bone copies of 

establish themselves in the lacustrine villages. Stray unStidan pins (j). 
axes and triangular and rhomboid daggers, appro- 
priate to periods IV and even V, together with bone copies of UnStician 
pins (Fig. 140), have indeed been collected from many "neolithic" (in 

1 Antiquity, II, 398; AsA. t XXXI, 171. Germania, XVIII, 94. 

Antiquity, II, 401; VIII, 38; Childe, Danube, 175-6. 

* AltscMes., V (1934), 102. 

Altschles., V., pi. XVIII, 5. 

297 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Vouga's sense Chalcolithic) lake-dwellings. 1 But the economy remained 
formally neolithic. 

THE WEST ALPINE BRONZE AGE 

But to prosperous villages on dry land must belong cemeteries of richly 
furnished flat graves in the Rh6ne and Aar valleys. 2 In them the 
deceased, buried contracted, were equipped with flanged axes, triangular 
or ogival daggers, ingot torques, and ring-head, trilobate, trefoil, 
racket, bulb-headed, or even knot-headed and Bohemian eyelet pins. 
All types can be derived from Central European models and disclose the 
extension westward of the Danubian traditions of metallurgy. Indeed, 
two currents from that quarter can be distinguished 8 : the one charac- 
terized by classical UnStician pins, ingot torques, and axes brought 
Bohemian traditions via the Upper Danube and the Aar to the Rh6ne 
valley; the other, distingushed by a preference for ornaments of sheet 
metal (Vogt's "Blechstil"), brought the traditions of Kisapostag and 
Straubing through Upper Austria and Bavaria to the Upper Rhine and 
to Vallais. 

Copper was won from small local lodes to exploit which metal- 
lurgists penetrated far into the high Alps. They based their operations 
on tiny fortified villages like Mutter-Fellers, 4 Crestaulta, 6 and Borscht 
in Liechtenstein. 6 The villagers were primarily farmers who cultivated 
wheat and barley and bred cattle, sheep, cows, pigs, and goats, and 
perhaps horses, 7 and who must have devised a rural economy almost as 
well adapted to the Alpine environment as that practised there to-day; 
for the villages seem to have been permanently occupied. They included 
also metallurgists who smelted the local ores and developed from 
Danubian models local types spatulate axes, bronze hilted daggers of 
Rhdne type, a variety of handsome engraved ornaments. Such were 
exported to Upper Italy and France. In return, amber and glass beads 
reached Crestaulta, while a quoit-shaped fayence pendant was acquired 
by a resident in the contemporary village of Bleich-Arbon in North- 

1 AsAg., IV, 2 ff., Viollier in Opuscula arch&ologica 0. Montelio dicata, 126 ff.; 
MAGZ. t XXIX. 200. 
Kraft, AsA., XXIX (1927), 5 ff. 

* Vogt in Tschumi Festschrift (Frauenfeld, 1948), 54-68. 

* ZfoAK.. VI (1944), *5 ff. 

* Burkart, Crestaulia (Monographien zur Ur- und FrUhgeschichte, V), Basel, 1946; 
JSGU. (1947), 4*. 

* The Early Bronze Age village succeeded Horgen and Michelsberg settlements, all 
stratified; D. Beck in Vols. 47 and 48 of Jahrbuch des historischen Vereins fUr das 
Filrstenlum Liechtenstein. 

1 The bones of 22 bovids, 22 sheep, 22 pigs, 10 goats, and 71 horses were recognized 
at Crestaulta. 

298 



WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE 

Eastern Switzerland. Judged by the types produced, this brilliant Swiss 
bronze industry flourished mainly in the latter part of period IV and in 
period V. But despite their enterprise and originality, the Swiss smiths 
seem to have remained content with supplying a local market. Cut off 
from the great trade-routes to the Mediterranean, the West Alpine 
Early Bronze Age culture did not progress so far towards urbanization 
as did the North Italian or Hungarian. 

THE EASTERN ALPS 

Altheim 1 near Landshut, Bavaria, Mondsee* in Upper Austria, Vufiedol 8 
on the lower Drave in Slavonia, and Ljubljansko Blat (Laibach Moor) 4 
in Slovenia are patent stations for a series of related cultures extending 
along the eastern slopes of the Alps from Goldberg ui Wurttemberg to 
Debelo brdo on the Bosna near Serajevo. They are lake-dwellings or 
fortified hilltop camps; at Altheim three concentric rings of ditches and 
palisades enclosed an area 40 m. in diameter. Their occupants lived 
by cultivating cereals which they reaped with crescentic sickles made 
from a single flint flake and, on the Austrian lakes, also apples and 
beans, by breeding cattle, sheep, pigs, and horses, by hunting and by 
fishing in Upper Austria using double-pronged fish-spears of bone. 
Stone was still used for axes which might be mounted with antler 
sleeves and sometimes notched at the butt* and for weapons knobbed 
polygonal battle-axes, spheroid mace-heads, daggers, hollow-based 
arrow-heads, and sling bullets. 

But copper was generally used, too, both for flat axes and rhomboid 
daggers, like Fig. 121, c t and for ornaments. On the Austrian lakes and 
Ljubljansko Blat and at Vufiedol it was also worked locally; for moulds 
have been found in the settlements (one from Ljubljansko Blat would 
yield an axe like Fig. 64, 3) as well as grooved hammer-stones. Indeed, 
the Austrian lake-villagers, living at the head of navigation on the 
Traun, 6 were supplementing the products of farming by smelting copper 
ores and shipping their winnings down the Danube's tributaries. So, 
too, Ljubljansko Blat lies at the head of navigation on the Save and 
may have been the precursor of the Roman station of Nauportus for 
trade from the Middle Danube basin to the Adriatic. Intercommunal 

1 Bayerische Urgeschichtsfreund, IV (Munich, 1924), 13 ft.; Childe, Da*ub*> 125-8. 

1 Franz, "Die Funde aus den prahistorischen Pfahlbauten im Mondsee" (Materialien 
xur Urgeschickte Osterrtichs, III), Vienna, 1927; Willvonseder, Oberdstorrtick in for 
Vorteit, Vienna, 1933, *o-8 (Attersee); WPZ., XXVI (1939), 135; Pittioni, Urgeschickie. 

Chflde, Danube, 210-12; Schmidt, Vuledol', Patay, "Korai Bronxkori", 24-8 ("Zok" 
culture). 

4 Childe, Danube, he. tit. 

MAGW., LXI, 75-80. Fran*, "Mondaee", 11-12. 

299 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

specialisation is further illustrated by "axe-factories" on the Enns 1 
and elsewhere. 

Everywhere, many of the vases are coarse and decorated only with 
cordons though they have flat bases and include handled cups and jugs. 
But on the Attersee and Mondsee and in land stations in Salzburg, 
vases were decorated with concentric circles incised in stab-and-drag 
technique and filled with white paste (Fig. 141). 






FIG. 141. Mondsee Pottery (J). 

In the Vutedol or Slavonian ware 2 of the Lower Drave, the Save, 
and the Bosna the same magical motives were combined with excised 
patterns that imitate the chip-carving of wooden vessels, and dis- 
tinctive shapes, proper to the latter, were reproduced in pottery. 
Among these are bowls or lamps on a cruciform foot, like those of the 
StariSevo culture, but even closer to the lamps from the Pontic Cata- 
comb Graves (pp. 86, 156). But some vases from Ljubljansko Blat 
are provided with tunnel-handles just as in Maltese "Neolithic B", 
in Piano Conte on Lipari, and in Sardinia. 

Models of animals were moulded in day on the Austrian lakes; 
., V,i9. * Schmidt, Vutedol. 

300 



WESTERN CULTURE IN THE ALPINE ZONE 

Slavonian ideology 1 was expressed in the production also of figures of 
human beings fully dressed, of vases in the shape of a bird, and of 
models of huts, tables, and perhaps in "horns of consecration". At 
Vufiedol itself the dead were buried in Idss-cut "cellars", formally like 
the pit-caves of the Mediterranean and the Pontic "catacombs". 

On the Drave, Save, and Bosna, VuCedol ware, being exclusively 
associated with the assemblage just summarized, may serve to define 
a distinct Slavonian culture. But vases, decorated in the same style 
and including cross-footed lamps, have been unearthed at many 
points usually fortified hilltop settlements in Hungary, 1 Austria, 8 
Slovakia, Moravia, and Bohemia, 4 but always associated with relics 
proper to some other culture, generally Baden. Still, in a small 
cemetery at Caka in Slovakia, 6 Slavonian vases alone furnished the 
graves, one serving as a cinerary urn. For here the burial rite was 
cremation. 

At the Goldberg, the Altheim settlement succeeded an occupation 
by Michelsberg folk, and at VuCedol Slavonian pottery was stratified 
above Baden wares. Hence the East Alpine neolithic cultures cannot 
well begin before period III. On the other hand, though ingot torques 
and even metal types of period V have been found in and around the 
Austrian lakes, the abundance of well-made polygonal battle-axes 
from the lake- villages suggest that their foundation should be put early 
in that period. Allied types occur in Slavonian contexts and in the 
Rinaldone culture of Italy. The latter should give a partial synchronism 
between East Alpine and Italian Chalcolithic. 

Now, the symbolic patterns adorning Mondsee pottery are notori- 
ously identical with motives popular on Early Cypriote Bronze Age 
vases, while the Mondsee daggers are at least East Mediterranean in 
form. If, then, Central European metallurgy were initiated by Torque- 
bearers from the Levant coasts (p. 134), these patterns may well be 
an ideological reflection of the arrival of a few Asiatic prospectors 
among a native Baden-Horgen population whose labour they enlisted 
in the exploitation of the adjacent copper lades. Analogies to Slavonian 
ceramic decoration at Pescale in Upper Italy (p. 246) and to Vuiedol 
tombs in the Central Italian Rinaldone culture (p. 241) might even, if 
less plausibly, be interpreted as indicators of the prospectors' route, 
but even closer analogies in the Pontic Catacomb graves and the cross- 

1 Schmidt, VuUdol. 
Patay, "Korai Bronzkori", 24-8. 
WPZ., XXVI (1939). 135-47- 

4 Novotny, Slav. Arch., Ill (1955)* 7-22, lists and maps 15 sites in Bohemia, 3 in 
Moravia and 22 in Slovakia. 
Ibid., 16. 

3OI 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

footed lamps therefrom (p. 156)* might just as well mark a circuitous 
route from the Black Sea coasts. 

In any case, if a trading-post were early established on the Mondsee 
during period III, it declined in importance during period IV. Trade 
southward was diverted to the Brenner route. 1 Carinthia, Slovenia, and 
Slavonia lay outside the system that distributed the metal types of 
period IV to Upper Italy and to the Maros valley. The Slavonian 
culture presumably lasted through that period, but as none of the 
constitutive metal types reached the province, it still looks neolithic. 
Even in the Eastern Alps it is not till period VI that the rich graves 
of the H6tting umfield culture attest a local prosperity based on 
mining for copper and salt and a rural economy adapteckto take full 
advantage of Alpine conditions. No counterpart of the West Alpine 
Early Bronze Age, described in the last section, is discernible in the 
Eastern Alps nor in the North-West Balkans. 

1 As far as the shape is concerned, both groups could be derived independently from 
the Star&evo types of period I, but the decoration of the Slavonian and the Catacomb 
lamps is also very similar. 

1 The porterage (from the Adige to the Inn) is much shorter on the Brenner route 
than on that across the Julian Alps which replaced it when the Romans had built a road 
to Nauportus. 



302 



CHAPTER XVII 
MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

THE corridors of the Garonne and the Rhone valleys offer passage from 
the Mediterranean to the Atlantic West, traversed in historical times 
by the trade-route that carried Cornish tin to the Greek colonies round 
the Gulf of Lions. Along it perhaps had spread a millennium or so 
earlier the megalithic religion in the wake of prehistoric trade from 
colonies on the same shores. But still earlier the Western farmers whose 
arrival and spread to the north-east were postulated in Chapter XVI 
should have expanded also north-westward to Central France, Nor- 
mandy, and Brittany. It is convenient to consider the results attribut- 
able to such an expansion before describing the impact of megalithic 
ideas on South France. 

CHASSEY AND FORT HARROUARD 

The famous but badly excavated station of the Camp de Chassey 
(Sadne-et-Loire) 1 certainly ought to mark a stage in the assumed 
expansion of Western neolithic culture. It is a fortified hilltop, and 
from it have been gathered many objects distinctive of the West Swiss 
Lower Neolithic Cortaillod culture plain leathery pots, tapering 
antler sleeves for axes, segmented tine pendants. But collections from 
the site include also types that are not older than Middle or even 
Upper Neolithic on Lake Neuchitel, such as sleeves like Fig. 139, B, 
perforated stone axes, and tanged arrow-heads. If these denote a 
second phase of occupation, there are no stratigraphical observations 
to decide to which the decorated pottery, often called simply Chassey 
ware, 2 belongs. This ware bears hatched rectilinear patterns scratched 
on the surface after firing or on the hard-dried clay just before (Fig. 
142, 2).* The "vase-support" is a distinctive shape. 4 Such decoration is 
missing from Cortaillod sites in Switzerland, but finds analogies in 
Schussenried pottery farther east (p. 293). In Liguria, scratched 
decoration was Middle Neolithic. 

1 D&helette, Manuel, I, 559; Baffloud and Mieg, 9? ; Piggott, L'Antkr., LVII 
(1953), 410-32. 

1 Many authors thus describe all plain Western pottery from France; Arnal and 
Benazet distinguish therefrom "Chasseen decori" which they consider earlier than the 
plain ware; BSPF., XLVIII (1951), 552-5. 

1 BSPF., XLVIII, 555. BSPF., XXVII (1930), 268-76. 

303 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

After crossing the Massif Central the neolithic colonists would reach 
the downlands of Northern France, an area rich in flint 1 and already 
inhabited by mesolithic hunter-fishers, probably of the Forest culture. 
In the oldest recognizable neolithic settlements the farmers appear 
to have adopted much of the food-gatherers' equipment core and 
flake axes, transverse arrow-heads, and other items giving the local 
cultures a hybrid, "secondary neolithic" aspect. Their neolithic ele- 






FIG. 142. Vase-supports in Chassey style: i, Le Moustoir, Carnac; 2, Motte 
de la Garde, Charente. 

ments might have been contributed by Rossen farmers, spreading 
through the Belfort Gap as far as Yonne 2 or Danubians advancing 
from the Meuse to the Somme and the Marne as well as by Westerners. 
The best picture available of the ambiguous result is provided by Fort 
Harrouard 8 (Eure-et-Loire), a promontory camp about 17 acres (7 hr.) 
in extent, where Father Philippe could distinguish two neolithic strata. 
The villagers lived by cultivating indeterminate grains and breeding 
mainly horned cattle; they kept also some pigs and goats and a very 
few sheep too, but relied very little on hunting or fishing. 4 They lived 

1 This is the truth underlying Bosch-Gimpera's thesis of the existence in North 
France of a "culture de silex" just another way of saying that in this area rich in 
flint but poor in fine-grained rocks, flint was the normal material even for axes cf. 
Rev. Anthr., XXXVI (1926), 320. 

1 At Nermont, Danubian pottery seems to precede Western, Bailloud and Mieg, 50. 

Philippe, "Cinq annes de fouilles au Fort Harrouard" (Socie*te" normande d'^tudes 
prhistonques, XXV bis), Rouen, 1927. 

* The actual proportions are: cattle 68 per cent, swine 18 per cent, sheep 10 per cent, 
goats x-5 per cent, game 2*5 per cent; L'Anthr., XLVII (1937), 292. 

304 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

in irregular oval huts partly excavated in the ground 1 and dressed in 
woven fabrics, using whorls for spinning and clay loom-weights in 
weaving. The carpenter used polished axes of imported stone occasion- 
ally, but relied mainly on the "mesolithic" flint tranchets and "picks", 
together with rare antler axes. 2 Besides transverse arrow-heads the 
bowman sometimes used triangular ones. Before the end of the period 
Grand Pressigny flint was imported, as were amber beads and arc- 
shaped pendants of schist. 8 

The pots, baked in the fort in tiny kilns, are typically Western, but 
include, besides simple leather forms, baking plates as in the Michels- 
berg complex, vessels with pan-pipe lugs perforated vertically and 
horizontal tubes expanding at the ends like the trumpet lugs of 
Troy I, and vase-supports and other vessels decorated in the Chassey 
style. 

Though there are a megalithic tomb and some small long barrows in 
sight of the camp, villagers were buried extended, or in one case con- 
tracted, within the enclosure. 4 Female figurines were modelled in clay, 
a quite exceptional cult practice within the Western cycle. 

Judging by the pottery, other sites in North France, notably the 
celebrated fortified station at Le Campigny (Seine Infferieure) (once 
made the patent station for a mesolithic culture) and the Camp de 
Catenoy (Oise) 6 were occupied at the same time as Fort Harrouard I. 
At that station the second neolithic stratum illustrates a development 
of the older culture. While cattle-breeding predominates, a large breed 
of Bos brachyceros now co-existed with the small cattle of the older 
herds. Goats had died out, but game bones now amount to as much 
as 8 per cent of the total. And oysters and other shell-fish were imported 
from the coast. Finished implements, such as daggers and lance-heads 
of Grand Pressigny flint, were also obtained by barter. But the old 
types of tools, including the "mesolithic" core and flake-axes, were still 
retained. The pottery shows a development of the Chassey style with 
much coarser incisions combined with rusticated wares. 

Since the late Chassey style inspires the decoration of "Incense 
Cups" at the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age in Southern England, 
it must follow that Fort Harrouard II falls at least into the "Beaker" 
period of the West; it may indeed outlast it, since, as on the Swiss 
lakes, the record of settlement is continued only by the Late Bronze 
Age occupation of Fort Harrouard III. 6 For all we can tell, the pastoral 

1 L'Anthr., XLVI, 270-1. L'Anthr., XLVI, 559. 

1 L'Anthr., XLVI, 604. L'Anthr., XLVI, 541 f. 

* L'Anthr. t XII (1901), 359 and 354; LVII, 441-2. 

But besides Late Bronze Age pins the crutch-head type occurs, as in the Copper 
Age lake-dwellings, Philippe, "Cinq Annies," pis. XI, u. and XVIII, 19. 

305 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

communities of Northern France preserved their neolithic economy 
unaffected by the cultural impulses that crossed South- Western France. 

So even Fort Harrouard I may begin relatively late; Grand Pressigny 
flint in Switzerland is Middle Neolithic, so are arc-pendants in both 
the Swiss and the Ligurian sequences. In other words, Fort Harrouard I 
is not demonstrably pre-megalithic or anterior to the earlier SOM 
tombs. Even the ceramic evidence for a pre-megalithic Western colon- 
ization is no more explicit at Fort Harrouard than at Michelsberg. An 
acculturation of Forest hunters by Danubians in North France, 
parallel to that suggested as a possible explanation of Michelsberg, 
cannot be ruled out. Indeed, if Michelsberg represent a south-western 
extension of First Northern, Fort Harrouard I could be*claimed as an 
outpost still farther west (p. 291 ff.). Still, in 1956 the best authori- 
ties consider the neolithic elements of North French culture Western. 

Brittany, too, may have been reached in pre-megalithic times by 
Western neolithic herdsmen-cultivators who would have joined forces 
with survivors of the Teviec strand-loopers. The stone-walled "camps" 
of Croh Colte and Lizo have indeed yielded pottery of the channelled 
and later Chassey styles common in the peninsula's megalithic tombs. 
But leathery vases, generally plain, rarely decorated with scratched 
patterns and sometimes provided with trumpet lugs, found in small 
cist graves, 1 conform to the standard Western neolithic types. The 
cists recall the mesolithic sepulchres of Teviec, but contain cremated 
human bones. Some groups of cists, e.g. at Manio, were covered by 
elongated mounds of earth and stones which in plan offer the closest 
West European analogy to the British long barrow. 2 

THE MEGALITHIC CULTURE OF SOUTH FRANCE 

If the megalithic religion were implanted round the Gulf of Lions by 
colonists from the East Mediterranean, a cemetery of monumental 
collective tombs on an island in the Rhone delta near Aries might well 
belong to a bridgehead station comparable to Los Millares. The tombs, 
cut in the rock but roofed with lintels and covered by round barrows, 
are in plan long galleries 8 and might have provided the models for the 
built gallery graves which constitute the majority of the megalithic 
tombs in South-West France and, south of the Pyrenees, in Catalonia 
and the Basque Provinces. 4 Segmented cists occur in Catalonia (Puig 



r., XUV (1934). 486-9. 

Antiquity, XI (1937). 44-5*. 

* Casalis de Fondouce, L*$ AUto* couverUs d* la Provence (1878), describes the 
"grottes" de Bounias, Castellet, and des F6es; cf. Hemp., Arch., LXXVI, 150. 

4 Pericot, Stpulcros mtgaliticos (1950), Rives a comprehensive survey of tombs and 
grave goods from South France as weU as from Spain. 

306 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

Rode), in the Basque Provinces and at La Halliade 1 near Tarbes; that 
at La Halliade was 14*2 m. long, divided by septal slabs into seven 
compartments with a lateral compartment added at one and and 
covered with a cairn of stones. Others like St Eugenie near Carcassonne 
are subdivided by internal portals. 1 

On the other hand, passage graves in the area might be inspired from 
Spain. A group of corbelled passage graves in Provence 8 and Gard might 
be connected directly with Los Millares. A series of rectangular ortho- 
static chambers entered by dry-stone walled passages is strung out 
significantly along a line from the coast to the copper and lead deposits 
near Durfort, 4 Gard. Architecturally these resemble Puglisi's Tuscan 
"dolmens" (p. 240), and their builders seem to have been pastoralists. 
Finally, many caves in the area were still used as collective ossuaries in 
megalithic, as in Early Neolithic, times. If burial in megalithic tombs 
were the prerogative of aristocratic clans, commoners may have been 
interred in caves. 

The furniture of these various sepulchres is the principal source for 
any picture of the cultures of North Spain and South France during a 
long period, traditionally termed Chalcolithic, but certainly capable of 
subdivision. Two phases stand out clearly: during the first (Pericot's 
Bronze I) Bell-beakers were generally current; they had gone out of 
fashion by the second (Pericot's Bronze II and III), which might last 
down to the advent of Urnfield invaders with an equipment of 
Danubian VI types. Near Narbonne, Helfena 6 claimed to distinguish a 
pre-Beaker megalithic phase (Chalcolithic I), two phases with Beakers 
(II and III), and two later. Other authorities, 6 however, do not accept 
his separation of Chalcolithic I from II. It is therefore a disputed issue 
whether the transformation of the neolithic cultures, described in the 
last chapter, into a "Chalcolithic" one were due to the simultaneous 
arrival of megalith-builders and Beaker-folk or whether the latter 
arrived only after the former and in either alternative precisely what is 
to be attributed to the newcomers and what to the earlier neolithic and 
mesolithic groups. 

In any case the subsistence economy of the Chalcolithic as thus dis- 
closed appears more pastoral and less sedentary than the previous 

1 Mat. (1881), 522. 

1 BSPF., XXVII (1930), 536-9; the tomb contained "300" skeletons, at least 7 
beakers, 12 palettes, gold beads, tanged arrow-heads. 

9 Goby "Lea Dolmens de Provence", Rodania: Congrts de Cannes-Grass* (1929). 

4 Arnal, Ampurias, XI (1949), 29-44. 

f Les Origines de Narbonne (1937). * Bernabo Brea (A.C. II, 232) only some aherda 
from the Aries tombs might be (Upper) Neolithic; the pottery from all other tombs 
should be Chalcolithic in the Ligunan sequence. 

9 Bailloud and Mieg (1955). T 63-79; Pericot, Sepulcros megal.; Piggott, L'Antkr., 
LVIII (1954), 7-22. 

307 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

"Western NeoEthie". Apart from inhabited caves, only two settlements 
are known Fontboulsse in Card 1 a disorderly cluster of round and 
rectangular huts on stone foundations and La Couronne a fortified 
site near the Rhone delta that might be comparable to Los Millares or 
Vila Nova de San Pedro. 

But food-production was now certainly combined with some secondary 
industry and trade. Local ores of copper, lead, and perhaps even tin 2 
were probably worked. They do not seem to have formed the basis for a 




FIG. 143. Late ChalcoUthic types from Cevennian cists: a-e, Liquisae; 
H Grotte d'en Quisse, Gird; j-o, "dolmens" of Aveyron (f). 

metal industry capable of satisfying local demand such as arose in the 
Alpine valleys (p. 298), and only elementary techniques of casting are 
illustrated by local finds. West European daggers 8 were no doubt manu- 
factured for the Beaker-folk, and several notched daggers with a mid- 
rib on one face only (cast in an open-hearth mould) were found in a 

1 Louis, Peyrolle, Arnal, Gallia, V (1947), 235-57. 
I/4fHftr./XXII (19x1). 413. 

Arch., 



* Listed by Sandars, 



308 



AR., VI (1950), 44 ff. 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

curious crematorium near Freyssinel in Loz&re. 1 Otherwise metal was 
used mainly for ornaments. Metal daggers were replaced by bifacially 
flaked flint copies some polished on one face to enhance the siaularity.* 
Only in the postrBeaker phase, Helena's Chalcolithic IV, do a few 
Bronze Age types appear, and these daggers, trefoil, 8 bulb-head, 4 and 
racket pins 8 are imports from Central Europe or Switzerland, not East 
Mediterranean (Fig. 143). 

Gold was obtained in Beaker times and used to cover wrist-guards 
(like Fig. 113, 4), and for other purposes. Callals was imported at the 
same time, but earlier in Catalonia. Amber arrived still later, in Chalco- 
lithic HI according to Helena, only in Bronze II on Pericot's 8 division. 
The sole recognizable Mediterranean import found in any context is a 
segmented fayence bead from the sepulchral Grotte du Ruisseau, 
Aude. 7 To this may be added a Middle Cycladic jug 8 (Fig. 41, 3) dredged 
up from Marseilles harbour and two contemporary Cypriote daggers 
found stray in Provence. 9 All three could, with the bead from Almeria, 
be accounted for by coastwise traffic with the West as well as by a trans- 
peninsular tin-trade with Cornwall. Yet in the first millennium the 
Greek and Sicilian manufactures that should mark archaeologically that 
historic route are sparse enough. 10 If the Cycladic jug be accepted as a 
counterpart of the Classical vases, it means that the route was open 
before 1600 B.C. 

Most Chalcolithic pottery is based on older native traditions, but 
bell-beakers are of course intrusive; those of Pan-European type are 
presumably the oldest, but several local variants grew up. 11 With the 
latter are associated 12 polypod bowls with grooved shoulders (Fig. 144), 
inspired by wooden models, but at least indirectly related to British 
food-vessels (p. 337) on the one hand, to the Central European and 
Sardinian associates of beakers (pp. 224, 258) on the other. Well-made 
bell-beakers, decorated by wrapping a cord spirally round the vase 18 

1 Morel, "Sepultures tumulaires de la Region de Freyssinel", Bui. Soc, des Lettres, 
Sci., Art. du Lozere (1936), 17-23. 
L'Anthr., LVIII, 7 and 27. 
Rev. 6l. Anc., XIII, 435. 
Helena, Origines, fig. 64. 
Mat. (1869), 328. 
Sepulcros megal., 122, 131. 

Helena, Les Grottes sepulchrales de Monges (Toulouse, 1925), pi. V, 49; wrongly 
termed "stone"; a segmented bone bead from the "dolmen" of Cabut, Gironde, may be 
a copy, Bailloud and Mieg, 190. 

Cuadtmos, III, 37-42; Prehistoire, II (i933) 37- 
Ibid. 

" Ibid.} ct. Hawkes, Ampurias, XIV, 90 ff. 
Bailloud and Mieg, 190; BSPJP. t XLIX (1952), 158; (i953) So. 
" At La Halliade and other sites in Acquitaine, Fabre, t*s dviHsaiions protokistonauts 
de I' Acquitaine (Paris, 1952); a similar bowl was found in a Hallstatt grave in Cdte d Or. 
Act. y Mem. t XXI (1946), 196; UAntto., LVIII, 6. 

309 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

may reflect a reaction from the corded ware of Central Europe; a few 
stone battle-axes 1 might be connected therewith. Vases decorated with 
incised and punctured patterns should be related to those of Los 
Millares and the later Chassey style. But channelled ware, adorned with 




FIG. 144. Polypod bowl, La Halliade (}). 

concentric circles, might be of Early Minoan ancestry (p. 32) and 
parallel to the Portuguese. It would on Helena's view be associated with 
the first megaliths in Chalcolithic I, but at Fontboulsse it is said to be 
later than Beakers and so Bronze II. 2 

In this latter period emerged flat-bottomed vases, sometimes 
decorated with applied ribs and presumably related to Horgen ware. 
To much the same phase might be attributed carinated cups with axe- 
handles, ancestral to, or derived from, those of the South Italian 
dolmens 8 (Fig. 116, 3). A few specimens, decorated with excised 
patterns identical with those on Apennine ware, 4 may be actual imports 
from Italy. 

If they created no novel industrial types, the Pyrenaean and Provencal 
societies did develop distinctive toilet articles and ornaments that were 
exported to or copied by other groups. For fastening their garments 
Beaker-folk, as elsewhere, used V-perforated buttons, but local 
variants 6 were devised and exported. Thus an elongated prismatic type 
was preferred round the Eastern Pyrenees, particularly in Bronze II, 
while Aude may have been the cradle of tortoise beads which were 

1 Pericot, Sepulcros, 190. 

L'Anthr., XLVIII. 8-10; BSPF., XLVIII, 557. 

1 Riv. St. Lig., XV (1949), 42-4; Pericot, Sepulcros meg. t 125-6, and map 84. 
4 Maluquer de Motes, "Yacimientos postpaleoliticos", Monografias de la E station de 
Estudios Pyrcnaicos, I (Zaragoza, 1948), 22 and n. i. 

BSPF., LI (1954). 355-66- 

310 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

diffused thence to Sardinia and Portugal. Winged beads of East 
Mediterranean ancestry found a secondary centre of manufacture in 
South France, while some bone tubes from the cave of Treille, Aude, 1 
and the dolmen of Cabut, Gironde, are vaguely like the Early ^Egean 
type of Fig. 27, I. 

The main creative impulses of Pyrenaeic-Provenal societies were 
diverted to ideological ends. The overwhelming importance attached to 
the funerary cult is patently displayed in the innumerable megalithic 
tombs and cave ossuaries. But no rigid orthodoxy prevailed. Some 
clans adopted cremation at an uncertain date; a sort of collective 
cremation is reported from some caves, 2 while under a cairn near 
Freyssinel 3 (Lozfere) fifty corpses had been burned on the spot. 

South France was certainly one, and perhaps the primary, centre of 
the practice of ritual trepanation, though the superstition was potent 
also round the Tagus estuary 4 and in the SOM culture. Certainly an 
astonishingly large number of the skulls from the Cevennian megaliths 
and from the caves 5 had been trephined, some while their owners were 
still alive! As the cranian amulets produced by this operation were 
found in Cortaillod sites in Switzerland, the practice presumably goes 
back to premegalithic times in South France, though it persisted like 
so much else. In Aveyron, Gard, H6rault, and Tarn monoliths were 
carved with representations of a female divinity armed with an axe 6 ; 
one such statue-menhir was used as a lintel in a corbelled megalithic 
tomb at Collorgues, Gard (Fig. I45a). 7 Clearly this is no "portrait statue 11 
but represents the same deity as the citizens of Troy I carved also on a 
monolithic stele. We shall meet her again in the Maine valley. Pre- 
sumably these statue-menhirs mark her route northward, unless her 
journey should be reversed; with a change of sex the deity was carried 
eastward to Upper Italy (p. 250), presumably by immigrants from 
South France. The latter, though recognizable in pottery too, are not 
likely to have made contributions, such as ploughs and halberds, to 
the material culture of the Apennine peninsula. Sculpture and surgery 
in South France developed outside the frame of urban life and with- 
out relation to practical ends, as we understand them, in a society 
whose material culture remained fossilized for perhaps a thousand 
years. 

1 Ampurias, XI (1949), 29. ' Helena, Origines, 80. * See p. 309, n. i. 

4 MacWhite (Cuadernos, I (1946), 61-9) enumerates 15 trepanned skulls from this 
region. 

* In Lozere 52 cases come from "dolmens", 105 from caves, D6chelette, Manuel, I, 
474 f.; cf. AsAg., XI (1945), 56; E. Guiard, La trepanation cranienne chez les ntolithiques 
et chez les primitifs modernes (Paris), 1930. 

Rev. Anthr., XLI (1931), 300 ff. 

7 Afas., 1890, 629; Rev. Anthr., XLI, 362; the usual plans are wrong. 

3" 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 



THE SEINE-QISE-MARNE (SOM) CULTURE 

The adoption of themegalithic faith by a Forest population on the chalk 
downs of Champagne and round the Paris basin produced a remarkable 
culture, known almost exclusively from collective tombs and termed 
the Seine-Oise-Marne culture (abbreviated SOM). 1 The burial-places 
may be natural caves, 8 artificial caves hewn in the chalk, 8 or "Paris 
cists", a specialized type of gallery grave. In the Marne 4 the rock-cut 
tombs form regular cemeteries; there are some fifty in the valley of 
Petit Morin alone. All are rectangular chambers entered by a descending 
ramp like the dromos of a Mycenaean tomb. A few are more carefully 




a b c 

FIG. 145. Statue-menhirs from Card and sculptured tomb (b), Petit Morin (Marne). 

excavated than the rest and are provided with an antecella on the walls 
of which may be carved or sketched in charcoal representations of the 
same funerary goddess, bearing an axe, 5 as appears on the statue- 
menhirs of the Midi (Fig. 145). While the smaller tombs contain forty 
or more corpses (including some cremated bones), not more than eight 
bodies were deposited in the more elaborate chambers, but the funerary 
furniture in them is much richer. They accordingly belong to "chiefs", 
while poorer common-folk were crammed into family ossuaries. The 
gallery graves in the valleys of the Aisne, Seine, Oise, and Eure 6 (Paris 
cists) are generally built of slabs erected in a long trench, a compart- 

1 General review Childe and Sandars, UAnthr., LIV (1950), i ff., and Bailloud and 
Mieg, 190-9. 

1 E.g. Vaucelles, Namur, Loe, La Belgique ancienne, I, 144. 

_ In Marne and also Oise, Mem. Soc. acadtmique d'Archtol. du Dtp. de I'Oise IV 
(Beauvais, 1860), 465. 

( Pari8 ' I88 4)i ct also BSPF. f VIII (1911), 



), 465. 
L 



T * 397 *; R*>. Arch., XXVII (1928), 1-13; Forde, Am. Anthr.. 
, 63-6; A$A., XL (1938), 1-14. 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 



ment at one end, divided from the rest by a porthole slab, serving as the 
entrance (cf. Fig. 100). The funerary goddess 1 reappears in the entrance, 
generally more conventionalized than on the Marne, so that only her 
breasts are recognizable. 
The grave goods disclose a warlike population living by stock-breed- 





FIG. 146. Horgen pot from Paris cist (Mureaux) (t), and channelled vase 
from Conguel, Morbihan (J). 

ing and hunting, but almost certainly also tilling the soil. Its r61e in 
flint-mining is uncertain, but Grand Pressigny flint was obtainable, and 
the chieftains of the Marne secured even beads of amber, callais and 
rock-crystal and small copper trinkets. Even flanged axes of bronze 
have been reported from SOM gallery graves. 2 The grave gear consisted, 
however, of polished flint axes, normally mounted in perforated antler 




FIG. 147. 
Arc-pendant of stone (). 

sleeves, antler axes with square-cut shaft-holes, very numerous trans- 
verse arrow-heads together with a very few leaf-shaped ones, daggers of 
Grand Pressigny flint and characteristic splay-footed vases of rather 
coarse ware (Fig. 146, i). 8 The ornaments include shells, bracelets, rings, 
and arc-pendants (Fig. 147) of stone, a leg amulet of antler, 4 axe- 

* Rev. Antto., XLI, 371-3. * Breuil in Afas. (1899), 590. 

See also BSPF. (1934). *S*-5I (WO- 558; L'Antkr., LVIII, 18-20. 
GaUi*, I (1943), *4- 

313 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

amulets, and cranian amulets. Nearly a third of the population was 
round-headed, less than a quarter really dolichocranial. Quite a large 
number of individuals had undergone ritual trepanation as in South 
France. 

The tomb plans and sculptures and the trepanned skulls suggest that 
the megalithic religion had reached the Seine-Marne basins from the 
lower Rhone. Paris cists, as slab-lined trenches, reproduce .most faith- 
fully the plan of the rock-cut tombs near Aries, and the chalk-hewn 
tombs of the Marne are the most Mediterranean chamber tombs north 
of the Pyrenees and the Alps. The missionaries who introduced the faith 
must have travelled fast and kept it fresh. But the SOM culture pre- 
serves so many mesolithic traits that the bulk of their converts must 
have been descendants of native Forest-folk. The transformation of 
these "savages" into farmers may be attributed not so much to the 
"missionaries" as to Danubian peasants who had established colonial 
outposts on the Somme, the Marne, and the Seine, 1 or to less well- 
documented Westerners (p. 304). 

The composite warlike population thus unified by the megalithic 
faith soon embarked on a crusade of conquest and colonization, in the 
course of which some items of the faith, or at least their durable ex- 
pressions, were lost or distorted. Westward the whole complex with its 
specialized gallery graves, porthole slabs, and splay-footed vases reached 
Brittany, 2 Normandy, and Jersey but not Guernsey while Beakers 
were still current there. Even the funerary goddess, albeit degraded to 
a mere pair of breasts, was thus carried to the Atlantic coasts. To the 
north-east the culture is classically represented in Belgian caves, 8 while 
Paris cists were built in Belgium, Westfalia, and Hesse. Finally the 
long cists of South Sweden (p. 198) not only reproduce the Paris plan 
but also contain splay-footed pots of SOM form. To the south-east 
the Horgen culture (p. 295) must be attributed to a similar colonization, 
though relatively few tombs were built for its spiritual leaders. Even to 
the south the grave goods from Bougon (Deux Sfevres) unmistakably 
mark the site of a SOM colony, while a couple of "porthole dolmens" 
in the Cevennes and the pottery already mentioned from South France 
and the Baleares might denote a return of the faith in a barbarized 
version towards its assumed starting-point. 4 

From this expansion chronological limits for the rise of the SOM 

1 Bailloud and Mieg, 48. 

E.g. Tregastel, BSPF., XLIII (1946), 305. 

* Marien, Oud-Belgie, 142-5; 152 ff. 

4 But if the megalithic religion were introduced into the Seine-Marne basins from 
the Loire, from the coasts of Normandy (Piggott, L'Anthr., LVIII, 20), or from the 
Caucasus via Hesse, the Paris cists and the Marne carvings must represent the germs 
from which evolved the rock-cut tombs and statue-menhirs of South France! 

314 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

culture can be more precisely deduced. Not only have Beaker sherds 
been found in three tombs in the Paris basin, 1 but also in those of its 
colonial outposts in Brittany. Thus in the French sequence the culture 
goes back at least to Chalcolithic II or Pericot's Bronze I. So its arrival 
in Switzerland initiates Middle Neolithic there. Collared flasks appro- 
priate to Northern Neolithic II occur in the Paris cists of Westfalia 
and of Brittany, 2 while, judging from a couple of tiny Rossen sherds 
from their counterparts in Hesse (p. 190), the culture should have 
arrived there near the beginning of Danubian III if not in Danubian II. 
The SOM culture must then be among the earliest manifestations of 
the megalithic religion in temperate Europe. Yet it lasted a long time 
with no recognizable progress or change. It reached Scandinavia only 
in Northern Neolithic IV i.e. Danubian IV, the Early Bronze Age. 
In its homeland there are no other burials save those in Paris cists and 
SOM caves to represent the Early and Middle Bronze Ages in the 
funerary record, while types of these periods are inordinately scarce. 
The region remained isolated from the great currents of Bronze Age 
trade, and its population, absorbed in cult practices, was content to 
subsist in. a neolithic stage. 

THE ARMORICAN MEGALITHIC CULTURE 

In megalithic times the Armorican Peninsula with its extension to the 
Channel Islands became a goal of pilgrimage so that a bizarre assort- 
ment of cultures was superimposed on the primary Western neolithic 
described on p. 306. Brittany offers the first land-fall on the northward 
voyage from the Iberian Peninsula to Cornish tin-lodes and Irish gold- 
fields and sets the limit to terrestrial wanderings in search of isles of the 
blest beneath the setting sun. Moreover, its old rocks contain gold, 
perhaps also tin and callais. 8 The densest and most varied concentration 
of collective tombs in Europe is to be found round the Gulf of Morbihan, 4 
but from this centre the tombs spread coastwise to the mouth of the 
Loire and to Jersey (still perhaps joined to the Continent in megalithic 
times) and Guernsey. The diverse tomb plans and the heterogeneous 
articles constituting the furniture of every sepulchre indicate the 
varied traditions that went to make up the Armorican culture and the 
complexity of their interweaving. 

i Sievekng, Inst. Arch. AR., IX (1953). 60-7; L'Antkr., LVIII, 20. 

* BSPF., XLIII, 307. 

8 Forde, Am. Anthr., XXXII, 85. 

* Typed summarized by le Rouzic, L'Antkr., XLIII (i933). *33-48; for Guernsey, 
T. D. Kendrick, Archaology of the Channel Islands, I (1928), lor Jersey, J. Hawkes, 
Archeology of the Channel Islands, II (1939)- 

315 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Corbelled passage graves are concentrated on the coasts and Islands 
and are obviously inspired by Iberian, immediately by Portuguese, 
models. Their counterparts in the orthostatic architecture, more suited 
to the local rocks, are megalithic passage graves, often P-shaped in 
plan (Fig. 148), rarely with a lateral cell, as the standard type for 





FIG. 148. Passage grave, Kercado, Morbihan, 

Morbihan, while undifferentiated passage graves, like the South 
Spanish, are commoner in the Channel Islands. The gallery grave, 1 on 
the other hand, exhibits a more inland distribution and does not cross 
the sea to Guernsey. Accordingly the idea was brought by land from 
the Paris basin by migrant pastoralist families. Divergent variations 
on the exotic models were devised locally. Undifferentiated passage 
graves with one or two pairs of lateral chambers, arranged like tran- 
septs on either side of the principal gallery, may be derived from tholoi 
with lateral cells, as at Los Millares, and are common to the peninsula 2 
and the Islands (La Houge Bie, Jersey, 8 and D6hus, Guernsey*). 
Passage graves with a bent corridor and gallery graves similarly 
"angled" are peculiar to Armorica. 

1 Forde, Man, XXIX, 80; Am. Anthr., XXXII, 74, 

U Anthr.. XLIII, 242; Antiquity, XI, 455. 

* Soctete Jersiaise, Bulletin (St. Helier, 1925). 

4 V. C. C. Collum, "Re-excavation of Dennis", Trans. Soc. Guernesiaise (1933) 

316 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

Most tombs were covered by a cairn or barrow, generally round and 
carefully constructed, but sometimes two or even three tombs are 
covered by a single mound which may then be oblong. Elaborate 
carvings, including representations of hafted axes and human feet, are 
a feature of the megaliths of Morbihan. 1 And in Brittany the tombs 
often contain remains of cremated skeletons. The same heretical rite 
is associated with other equally novel manifestations of the megalithic 
cult that are peculiar to the extreme west, but common to Brittany 
and Britain. Oval or horseshoe settings of megalithic uprights on the 
islet of Er Lannic, 2 now half submerged, were associated with vase 
supports decorated with punctured patterns in late Chassey style. But 
at the feet of the orthostats were little stone cists containing cremated 
bones almost certainly human; these must be compared to the 
cremations in pits within British "henge monuments" (p. 325). So, too, 
alignments of huge upright stones, one of which runs across one of the 
long barrows described on p. 306, might be Armorican equivalents 
of the English cursfis which too are associated with long barrows. 

Most tombs have been violated in Roman times and further dis- 
turbed in the nineteenth century, so that the grave goods do not 
contribute as much help as might be expected to unravelling the com- 
ponents of the megalithic complex and establishing the sequence of 
events. Tombs of most types contain Beaker ware, proving that the 
Paris galleries had arrived and the local variants been elaborated 
during the Beaker phase. But the number and variety of the beakers 
prove that this period was a long one. Z. le Rouzic 8 and Jacquetta 
Hawkes 4 assign to a pre-Beaker phase the corbelled passage graves 
of Morbihan and Jersey; they certainly contain no Beaker ware. That 
some megaliths are really pre-Beaker is established by the succession 
of burials in the passage grave (one wall of which was formed of natural 
rock) at Conguel, 6 Quiberon. There the later interments only were 
accompanied by beakers, the earlier by vases bearing channelled 
semicircle patterns as in Portugal and South France (Fig. 146, 2). 
This fabric is found in other tombs too, and in the fortified settlement 
at Croh Coll6. 6 It links the Pyrenees or Portugal with the Beacharra 
culture in Scotland. 

Chassey pottery, chiefly in the form of vase-supports, is represented 
in many tombs on the Mainland and in Jersey (Fig. 142). In that 

1 Pecquart et le Rouzic, Corpus des signes graves, Paris, 1927; Prehistoire, VI (1938), 

1 Z. le Rouzic, Les Cromlechs de Er Lannic (Vannes, 1930). 

8 UAnthr.. XLIII, 233-5; XLIV, 490-2, so Breuil, Prihistoire, VI, 47. 

4 CISPP. (Oslo, 1936); Archaol. Channel Islands, II, 90, 248. 

1 BSA. (Paris, 1892), 41. 

L'Anthr. t XLIV (1934), 496, fig. 9, numbers 8, and 12-16. 

317 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

island it was found below the Beaker layer in the stratified settlement 
at le Pinnacle. 1 It was presumably introduced by land from Central 
France, and the first connections with Grand Pressigny were probably 
established at the same time. Neither Chassey ware nor Grand Pressigny 
flint reach Guernsey. 

The Beaker-folk seem to have come by sea, like the first megalith- 
builders from Portugal; they reached even Guernsey, but on land have 
left only one grave between the Garonne and the Loire, and^that not 
far from the coast. 8 Besides the classic rouletted style, cord ornament 
is common on Breton beakers, while specifically South French variants 
are missing. Wrist-guards 8 are represented by a gold strip from Man6 
Lud, like the South French ones, and a few doubtfjil stone specimens 
which may really be whetstones. Two West European daggers have 
been found in Brittany 4 and one on Guernsey. 6 

From the Paris basin came the SOM gallery grave, the porthole 
slab, carvings of a funerary goddess, characteristic splay-footed vases 6 
and arc-pendants. 7 Finally, from the North came an amber bead and 
a boat axe. 8 But "collared flasks" 9 may be local SOM pots rather than 
First Northern vessels. 

The culture which blended all these foreign elements preserved a 
rigidly neolithic aspect in Morbihan. Axes with pointed butts were 
made of fibrolith and greenstone. Large, thin and superbly polished 
specimens, obviously ceremonial and perhaps late, 10 are surprisingly 
common and were exported to Portugal and England. Celts with a 
knob at the butt end found stray in Morbihan seem to copy Egyptian 
adzes, 11 while double-axes of stone 12 imitated the Minoan metal form or 
the "ingot axes" from Vogtland. 18 For arrows, transverse and tanged- 
and-barbed heads were preferred; leaf-shaped forms are exceptional. 14 
In addition to the foreign pottery absorbed, carinated bowls adorned 

CISPP. (London, 1932), 140; Hawkes, Channel Islands, 7, 162. 
In a "small dolmen" near Trizay, Charente Inferieure, with a West European 
dagger, tanged-and-barbed arrow-heads and gold ribbon; BSPF., XXXVIII (1041), AS: 
cf. VAnthr., LVIII, 26. ** ' 

L'Anthr., XLIV, fig. 19, ; Rev. Arch. (1883), pi. XIV. 
Inst. Arch., AR. VI (1950), 49- 

V. C. C. Collum, " Re-excavation of Delius", Trans. Soc. Guernesiaise (1933). 
Kendrick, Axe Age, 34. 
Jersey, Kendrick, Channel Islands, 94. 
L'Anthr., XLIV, 504, figs. 14, 5 and 15. 

From an angled passage grave at Lann Blaen (Morb.) and a SOM gallery at TreVastel 
(C6tes du Nord); BSPFTXLIII (1946). 306. * y iregaswi 

lf Some have expanded blades imitating copper axes, Am. Anthr., XXXII 87 
Petrie, Tools and Weapons, Z., pi. XVII. '" 

" L'Anthr., XLIV, figs 14, n and 16, i; Ant. /., VII. 17. 

" Copper double-axes with a hole too small to take a shaft occur in Central France 
Switzerland, and Southern Germany, ZfE., XXXVII, 525; Childe, Danube 177 lov 
BSA., XXXVII, 152-6. ' 77 ' 93 ' 

" L'Anthr., XLIV, 500. 

318 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

with pairs of vertical ribs are a distinctively Breton variant on the 
West European tradition, replaced in Jersey by similar shapes decor- 
ated with horizontal lines and punctuations. 

As charms were worn rather simple beads of talc, callals, rock- 
crystal, or gold, axe-amulets and bracelets of hammered gold. The 
callals and gold may have been obtained locally, but Grand Pressigny 
flint was certaihly imported. Unless the Portuguese and South French 
callals be of Armorican origin, the peninsula's exports must have been 
immaterial goods. Whatever they were, they were employed to obtain 
magical rather than practical materials. The whole society was so 
obsessed with funerary cult that material advancement was neglected. 

The chronological criteria applicable to more materialistic societies 
cannot then be used for dating the megalithic culture in Brittany. 
Despite its neolithic exterior it may have lasted well into the Bronze 
Age elsewhere. In fact, in Guernsey some megalithic tombs do contain 
"incense cups" and cinerary urns of types appropriate to the mature 
Bronze Age of England. In Morbihan closed megalithic chambers under 
gigantic barrows at Tumiac, Mont St Michel and Man6 er Hroek are 
assigned to the Bronze Age by le Rouzic on typological grounds. 1 But 
they contained ceremonial axes of greenstone, greenstone bracelets 
and beads of callals and rock-crystal that can be matched in more 
normal megalithic tombs. 

THE ARMORICAN BRONZE AGE 

Throughout the Atlantic megalithic province, desire for a good burial 
stimulated production of surplus wealth; the erection of gigantic 
tombs and the importation of magic substances kept accumulated 
wealth in circulation. But it was not used to support professional smiths 
nor to purchase ores. In France, graves furnished with bronze tools 
and weapons and hoards of bronzes begin in general only during the 
Middle Bronze Age when Tumulus-builders from Central Europe spread 
along the Massif Central. Only in Armorica is there a group of graves 8 
richly furnished with weapons of Early Bronze Age type. 

The tombs in question are closed chambers of dry masonry, some- 
times roofed by corbelling and always surmounted by a cairn. The dead 
were buried in them, generally but not always after cremation, on 
wooden planks (remains of coffins ?), with arms and ornaments. The 
armament consisted typically of one or two flat or hammer-flanged 

1 V Anthr. t XLIII, 251-3; Forde, Am. Anthr., XXXII, 76-9, notes that the supports 
are sculptured like those of normal collective tombs. 

V Anthr. t XI, 159; XLIV, 511; LV, 425-43; Bui. Soc. Arch. Finistire, XXXIV (1907), 
125; Ant. J. t VII, 18; Les Trtsors arcUologiques de I'Armorique occidental*. 

319 




DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

axes, several daggers and superb arrow-heads with squared barbs and 
tangs. The daggers are either round-heeled and strengthened with a 
midrib or triangular with grooves parallel to the edge and sometimes 
a rudimentary tang. In eight cases the wooden hilts 
(or scabbards) had been adorned with tiny gold nails 
forming a pointill pattern. Ornaments include a 
ring-head pin 1 and some spiral rings of silver, beads 
of amber, and one segmented fayence bead, 2 Pottery 
is represented by biconical urns with two to four 
handles joining rim and shoulder (Fig. 149). 

*** I49< Evidently these graves belong to rich and war- 

Breton Bronze Age . ^ _, , ft . 

vase, like chiefs. They are concentrated 8 in the north 

and interior of the peninsula and in general avoid 
the principal megalithic centres, where the old family vaults were 
presumably still in use. The Bronze Age war-lords can therefore 
hardly be descendants of the old megalithic chiefs or Beaker-folk, and 
owe nothing of their equipment to these. Their silver probably came 
from Almeria or Sardinia. The ring-head pin is a Central European 
type. The grooved daggers seem related most closely to those of the 
Saale-Warta culture (p. 200). But the chief source of metal and the 
dominant inspiration in metal-work must have been in the British 
Isles, where for instance gold-studded dagger hilts also occur. Relations 
with Britain were indeed so close that for a while Armorica and Wessex 
became a continuous cultural province. 

Piggott 4 explained this continuity by an invasion of Southern 
England from Brittany. Cagn6 and Giot 6 would reverse the process 
or postulate parallel occupations of both regions by seafarers, coming 
like the Vikings from farther North. Actually the last-named view 
is the most likely and the Saale-Warta area the ultimate starting-point. 
To link the Armorican with the West German Tumulus culture, 
Hawkes* can cite only two isolated "Bronze Age 11 barrows between 
the Rhine and the Atlantic. 7 Relations with the Saale-Warta culture, 
on the contrary, are clear but direct. While these give a limiting date 

Bui. Soc. Arch. Fin., XXXIV. 

From the tholos of Pare Guerin which had been converted into a single grave of 
Bronze Age type, L'Anthr., LV (1952), 427. 

See maps in PPS., IV (1938), 65, and L'Anthr., LV, 428. 

PPS., IV (1938), 64 ff. 

L'Antkr., LV (1952), 44*'3- 

Foundations, 312-14. 

Apart from these barrow graves in AUier and Dordogne (Dechelette, II, 142, 147), 
the poor non-megalithic cists in Vienne, Charente, and Lozere (de Mortiilet, Origine du 
culte d*s marts (Paris, 1921), 79 f.) might be "Bronze Age" though only one contained 
any metal. East of the Sadne, of course, there are Early Bronze Age graves, related to 
the Swiss though several contained polished flint or greenstone axes (Dechelette II 
136 ff.). ' ' 

320 



MEGALITH BUILDERS IN ATLANTIC EUROPE 

for the rise of the Armorican Bronze Culture, its strict parallelism with 
the Wessex culture equates it with Early Bronze Age 2 Danubian 
IVb which, judging by the fayence beads, should last down to 1400 
B.C. The conquering aristocrats may have freed the local population 
from excessive devotion to megalithic rites, but the metal industry 
that flourished under their patronage failed to develop. The leaders 
sailed away or were absorbed. No graves in Brittany are furnished with 
types of my period V, and it is not till the Late Bronze Age or perhaps 
even Iron Age I that large hoards reveal the inclusion of Brittany 
in a commercial system guaranteeing regular supplies of metal gear. 



321 



CHAPTER XVIII 
THE BRITISH ISLES 

Aix routes from the South hitherto considered converge on Britain. 
It is the northern terminus of the "megalithic" seaway along the 
Atlantic coasts from Portugal; the land route across France is con- 
tinued beyond the Channel by the South Downs; the Danube thorough- 
fare and the wide corridor formed by the North European plain con- 
verge on the North Sea coasts to be continued in Keftt and East Anglia. 
And the British Isles offers to voyagers, migrants, and prospectors 
inducements to settlement downs and moors swept bare of trees, 
excellent flint, copper, and gold, and above all tin. But islands they were 
already in neolithic times. Would-be colonists embarking in frail craft 
must discard unessential equipment and relax the rigid bonds of tribal 
custom. Any culture brought to* Britain must be insularized by the 
very conditions of transportation. Many streams contributed to the 
formation of British culture, but the blending of components already 
insularized inevitably yielded a highly individualized resultant. 

Nor is Britain a unity. The Highland Zone of mountains and ancient 
rocks to the West and North is contrasted with a "Lowland Zone" of 
more recent formation in the South-East. 1 And beyond the Highland 
Zone lies Ireland. It is the Highland Zone with Ireland that yields tin, 
copper, and gold. But'the megalithic route alone leads thither directly. 
Cultures and peoples, desiring "short sea crossings", must land in the 
Lowlands and reach the Highland Zone only after crossing them and 
absorbing their already insular cultures. 

Cultures arriving from the Continent often preserve their ancestors' 
lineaments recognizably in the Lowland Zone; in the Highlands they 
assume a mask of stubborn insularity. 

Great Britain and Ireland were relatively well populated with meso- 
lithic hunters and fishers. But a neolithic culture 2 of distinctive Western 
type was first introduced by peasants who crossed to Southern England 
from North France or Belgium and did not mingle with the pre-existing 
food-gatherers. In Sussex the latter occupied the greensands, the 
neolithic peasants colonized the chalk. 8 The neolithic farmers owed 

1 Fox, The Personality of Britain (Cardiff, 1938). 

1 For Neolithic Britain sec Piggott, The Neolithic Cultures of the British Isles (1954), 
unless other reference is given. But on relations with Northern Europe see now PPS., 
XXI (i955) 96-101. Clark, Mesolithic Britain, 90. 

322 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

hardly an item in their equipment to their mesolithic forerunners and 
competitors. 

WINDMILL HILL CULTURE 

The oldest neolithic culture is best known from a series of hilltop 
encampments strung out all along the downs and uplands of Southern 
England from Eastern Sussex at least to Devon and probably to 
Cornwall. The classic site where this culture was first really defined 
as recently as 1925! Windmill Hill, near Avebury, Wilts, must serve 
hereafter as the patent station. The hilltops are girt with a system of 
three or four flat-bottomed ditches, interrupted at frequent intervals 
by causeways, as in Michelsberg camps, and supplemented by palisades. 
The areas thus enclosed are often small: the diameters of the inner 
ring lie between 250 ft. at Windmill Hill and 400 ft. at the Trundle, 
though there is room for settlement beyond it, and Maiden Castle 
covered 12 acres. It is not yet clear how far the "camps" should be 
regarded as permanent villages. Piggott regards them rather as en- 
closures where cattle were rounded up in the autumn. No houses have 
been identified inside them, but in Devon, Wales, and Ireland a few 
isolated neolithic houses are known most rectangular in plan. 1 

The camps' occupants lived principally by breeding cattle of a 
robust breed, perhaps a cross between imported short-horns and native 
oxen of Bos primigenius stock. But they kept a few sheep, goats, and 
pigs, and cultivated crops principally wheat (emmer with 
proportion of one-corn), but also a little barley. 2 And naturally 
hunted deer and collected nuts and shell-fish. The huntsman used leaf- 
shaped arrow-heads, Fig. 150, 3. Axes were made of flint where this 






I 2 3 

FIG. 150. i, lop-sided, 2, Tanged-and-barbed, 3, leaf-shaped, and arrow-heads 

from Britain (J). 



Piggot, op. cit.;cf. PRIA. t LVI (195^), 3-6, 447'7; Arch. Canto., CII, (1953), 24-9- 
len and I" " " " " ' ~* " 

194-200. 



4. AKKVSVf v*^. vrr.j ***. .* **.*.**., M~I T M. y*^jwj, jw~wj TT I / **" virrv.j V^~A, V 7%/J/' T if* 

lessen and Helbaek, Del kong. danske Videns. Selskab, Bio I. Skrifter, III, 2; PPS., 
XVIII 



323 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

material is abundant and then include archaic "picks" as well as 
polished implements. Elsewhere, in Devon for instance, polished celts 
of fine-grained stone competed with flint axes. In Southern England 
and Norfolk flint was systematically mined by specialized groups of 
highly skilled miners, who must have lived largely by exporting the 
products of their industry. But while flint-mining began early in 
Neolithic times, it flourished more in the subsequent Beaker period. 
And in Norfolk and even Wiltshire "Peterborough folk" (p. 331, below) 




FIG. 151. Windmill Hill pot-forms. After Hggott. 

were associated with its exploitation. A textile industry is not clearly 
attested but flint scrapers and bunched combs of antler emphasize 
the importance of leather-dressing. 

The earliest Windmill Hill vases (Fig. 151) are leathery round- 
bottomed pots with simple rims and sometimes vertically pierced lugs. 
Thickening of the rims by pressing down or rolling over the wet clay 
is thought by Kggott to mark a later phase in Southern England and 
is more prominent in the Highland Zone. To an equally late phase 
should belong incised and channelled decoration and shallow flutings 
produced by drawing the finger-tips over the moist clay. Trumpet 
lugs, confined to Dorset and Devon, denote specially close relations 
with Brittany (p. 306). 

324 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

A few figurines and phalli, carved in chalk so rudely as to be almost 
dubious, are all that survives of ritual paraphernalia. Windmill Hill 
ideology found more durable expression in funerary monuments. Most 
authorities believe that Windmill Hill fanners or their "chiefs 11 were 
buried under "unchambered long barrows". These are pear-shaped 
mounds reaching the extravagant length of 300 feet though the inter- 
ments occupy only a small space near the wide end. The corpses, from 
one to twenty-five in number, had been interred disarticulated or 
cremated on chalk platforms or in crematorium-trenches. In two cases 
a timber revetment at the wide end looks like an attempt to reproduce 
the forecourt of the chambered long barrows of Highland Britain 
(p. 326). So it has been suggested that unchambered long barrows are 
just substitutes for the megalithic tombs of the Atlantic coasts in 
stoneless regions. However, the extravagantly long mounds seem alien 
to the general megalithic tradition while the plans and the arrangement 
of the interments within them find surprisingly close parallels in the 
long dolmens and Kuyavish graves of the German and West Polish 
tracts of the North European plain of which Lowland England is just 
the westernmost section. 

If such monumental sepulchres were reserved to families of special 
rank or sanctity, commoners perhaps were buried, after cremation, 
in pits, arranged in a ring in a cemetery surrounded by a penannular 
bank and internal ditch. For a few of these so-called "class I henges" 
have yielded pure Windmill Hill relics though most contain also 
"Secondary Neolithic 11 types. 1 But even these henges may not have 
been primarily constructed as cemeteries and to the same periods 
belong certain non-funerary but ceremonial monuments, traditionally 
known as "cursfis", 2 enclosures varying from one to six miles in length 
and defined by banks and ditches. Association with long barrows 
justifies their attribution to the Windmill Hill culture. 

No causewayed camps have been identified north of the Thames. 
But judging from pottery finds and long barrows, Windmill Hill 
farmers colonized East Anglia and the Yorkshire Wolds and spread 
over Northern England and Eastern Scotland as far as the Moray 
Firth. In the Highland Zone their culture is known only from mega- 
lithic tombs. 

MEGALITHIC TOMBS IN BRITAIN 

Apostles of the megalithic faith presumably arrived by the Atlantic 
seaway; for the tombs they should have introduced fan out from land- 

1 Atkinson et at., Excavations at Dorchester, Ox on. (Oxford, 1951). 
1 Atkinson in Antiquity. XXIX (i955), 4' 10 - 

325 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

falls on the west coasts and round the Irish Sea. More or less close 
parallels can be found in Western Europe to the plans of these tombs, 
but their furniture and the long cairns that cover them seem distinc- 
tively British. So in Britain the megalith-builders do not appear so 
much as fresh contingents of neolithic farmers as a spiritual aristo- 
cracy who may have led Windmill Hill farmers to the colonization of 
the rugged coasts of Scotland and Ulster and the adjacent islands. 
Peculiarities of sepulchral architecture allow of the recognition of at 
least three groups of missionaries in Great Britain. 

The Bristol Channel would have been the entry for the designers of 
the Cotswold-Severn tombs. All are covered by long cairns with a 
cuspidal, rather than semicircular, forecourt. Typologically the oldest 
chambers are long galleries with one or more pairs of transepts or 
lateral cells opening off them and roofed by corbelling. Cairns, termin- 
ating in a dummy portal in the wide end but with small chambers 
opening on to their sides, twice through porthole slabs, should be later 
degenerations. Tombs of this family occur on both sides of the Bristol 
Channel and spread across the Cotswolds to the chalk downs of North 
Wiltshire and Berkshire. The finest of them all was built under a 
typically English long barrow at West Rennet near. Avebury and 
Windmill Hill, and the first interments were accompanied by Windmill 
Hill vases though the tomb remained open till Beaker and Peterborough 
wares had come into fashion. 

Segmented cists characterize the Clyde-Carlingford group of tombs 
that spread inland from these sea-inlets in South- West Scotland and 
Northern Ireland but occur also in Man, in Wales, and on the limestone 
plateau of Derbyshire. Two tombs of this group in Man and Stafford- 
shire were entered through porthole slabs. The tombs contain up to 
sixteen corpses, normally inhumed but occasionally cremated. In 
addition to classical Windmill Hill pottery and arrow-heads, the 
grave goods comprise vases of Beacharra ware, decorated with semi- 
circles arranged in panels and executed by channelling or cord- 
impression as at Conguel in Brittany (Fig. 146, 2), but also types to 
be classed as "Secondary Neolithic"; Beakers accompanied the latest 
interments in three cases. The sepulchral architecture of the tombs 
and the semicircular forecourts on to which they open (Fig. no), but 
not the long cairns that cover them, seem to be inspired by Pyrenaeic 
or even Sardinian traditions. Beacharra ware too might have been 
introduced from the same quarter, but since its decorative technique 
was used also in the non-megalithic province of Southern England, 
only the magic semicircle motive need be regarded as a fresh contribu- 
tion from the south-west. 

326 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Neolithic types. Here, too, cases of cremation have been reported, but 
inhumation was the normal practice. 

Judging from the dispersal of the tombs, each, if it were a communal 
ossuary, might correspond to a single homestead. But such a unit and 
the number of burials would be too small to provide the manpower 
for the erection of such monuments. They should rather be, like un- 
chambered long barrows, the family vaults of the leaders of small 
local groups. These remained simple farmers. The multitude of bones 
of calves, sheep, and game animals including horses even in the 
Cotswolds 1 imply an economy based primarily on stock-breeding and 
hunting. But barley (not, however, wheat) was demonstrably culti- 
vated in Orkney and one-corn wheat in Ulster. 8 Metal is totally absent 
from the grave goods. A few beads of soft stone Can be paralleled in 
the causewayed camps of Southern England. The only imports are 
products of axe-factories not far away. Chronologically these mega- 
Uthic tombs had demonstrably been built before the arrival in the 
province of Beaker-folk and no fresh ones were built thereafter. These 
round-headed invaders replaced the megalithic aristocracy. If, then, 
the latter came from the Armorican or Iberian peninsulas, they must 
have set out before the rise of Beaker-folk there. On the other hand, 
the secondary neolithic types, so prominent in the Clyde-Carlingford 
and Pentland tombs, may be little, if at all, older than the Beaker 
invasion of Southern England; some indeed occur in graves of Early 
Bronze Age II. 

On Ireland a direct impact of megalithic culture from the south-west 
can be detected only after the island had been colonized from Britain 
by neolithic fanners of the Clyde-Carlingford and other groups, and 
hardly before bands of Beaker-folk had established themselves in 
Limerick and Sligo. The recognizable result of that impact was the 
erection of passage graves under round cairns that constitute the sole 
monuments of a Boyne culture. 

The standard and most widespread type of Boyne tomb is cruciform 
in plan a corbelled chamber entered through a long passage with 
three cells grouped symmetrically round the remaining sides. Such 
tombs, generally located on conspicuous heights, form scattered 
cemeteries, notably on Carrowkeel and other limestone mountains 
in Sligo, along the Boyne, and on the Lough Crew hills. The stones 
walling the tomb and supporting the cairn are often adorned with 
elaborate incised or pecked patterns, including stylized boats, spirals, 
and distorted conventionalizations of the funerary goddess of Los 

1 Crawford, Long Borrows of the Cotswolds (Gloucester, 1925), 26; AntJ., XV, 435. 
1 Janet! and Helbaek. see p. 323, n. 2. 

328 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

Millares and Palmella. Most tombs had been plundered. In the finest, 
large stone basins alone survive of the original furniture. At Carrowkeel, 
cremated bones, resting on stone slabs but originally enclosed in hide 
bags fastened with skewer pins of bone or antler, shpuld represent 
primary interments while cremations in food-vessels may be intrusive. 
Of the furniture survive stone balls, V-perforated buttons and beads, 
including hammer beads, of hard stone, small scraps of ill-fired pottery, 
but not a scrap of metal. 

It is assumed that these magnificent sepulchres were built for aristo- 
cratic lineages. A few decorated tombs in Anglesey and Antrim indicate 
an extension of their sway to the coasts of Wales and the shores of 
the North Channel. A spread thence may be denoted by some simpler 
tombs in Galloway and round the Moray Firth. Most authorities agree 
that the founders of the Boyne culture came by sea from Portugal and 
with less unanimity that they started after, rather than before, 
the Beaker phase there. 1 In their wake should have come prospectors 
and metallurgists who initiated the exploitation of Irish copper and 
gold and introduced Hispanic types and techniques. In Britain their 
products decorated axes and basket-shaped gold earrings were 
purchased first by Beaker-folk, while the most significant British 
parallels to the furniture of the Boyne tombs are hammer-beads from 
Wessex graves of the succeeding period, but British B Beaker sherds 
were found in an atypical Boyne tomb at Moytirra, Sligo. Such are the 
rather slender grounds for believing that the Boyne culture began as 
early as the Beaker period of England. Raftery has found evidence 
that at least one decorated tomb at Lough Crew was built as late as 
Iron Age II! 



THE EARLIEST BRONZE AGE AND SECONDARY NEOLITHIC PHASE 

The Bronze Age of the British Isles is traditionally considered to begin 
with the arrival in England and Eastern Scotland of bands of round- 
headed invaders who buried their dead individually in single graves, 
generally under round barrows and accompanied by some kind of 
Beaker. Variations of the latter and of the associated grave goods 
allow us to distinguish three or even five main groups of invaders. The 
earliest arrivals used Bi Beakers, decorated with simple zones of 
rouletted patterns and preserving the profile of Pan-European beakers. 
They used West European daggers, tanged-and-barbed arrow-heads 

1 The sole probable Hispanic import found in a Boyne tomb is matched in a Spanish 
sepulchral cave, JSEA. (1929), pi. VII, 11-12; Rev. Guim. (1948), 12. 




DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

and stone wrist-guards, as on the Continent, and wore as ornaments 
basket-shaped earrings (Fig. 154) and sun discs bearing a cruciform 
pattern of gold. 1 63 Beakers, of the same shape but decorated with 
a spiral cord impression, have close analogies in 
Western Europe (p. 224) and the Rhineland, and may 
denote a distinct invasion from the latter quarter 
unless they spread from Britain. 8 A second major 
group of invaders, coming this time from Holland 
and landing on the coasts of Northern England and 
Scotland, introduced the same arrow-heads and 
FIG. 154. wrist-guards, but coarser and more angular Beakers, 

Gold earring (f). labelled C. But perhaps the most prominent group 
of Beaker-folk are characterized by A Beakers, gen- 
erally decorated with metopic patterns and in profile more like corded 
than bell-beakers. These vases have no Continental counterparts and 
are associated with stone battle-axes and flint, or rarely round-heeled 
bronze daggers. So the A-Beaker culture is believed to be due to a 
local fusion of intrusive North European Battle-axe with established 
C and perhaps also B Beaker traditions. 

From their landing-places on the south and east coasts Beaker-folk 
must have spread rapidly across Britain and even sent out contingents 
to Ireland. 8 The latter are just as likely as the Boyne megalith-builders 
to have organized the exploitation and export of Irish copper and gold, 
but must have been quickly absorbed in the native populations; for 
they are scarcely represented in the funerary record in which in Britain 
the Beaker-folk figure so conspicuously. But even in Britain Beaker- 
folk must have formed a small ruling class, or a succession of ruling 
classes, among the already heterogeneous Neolithic population, 
replacing the "Megalithic aristocracy". Their advent accelerated a 
general trend towards pastoralism and promoted the cultivation of 
barley in preference to wheat. 4 But no pure Beaker settlements are 
known; Beaker pottery is always mixed with Late Neolithic pottery 
and flints whether in secondary occupation levels of South English 
causewayed camps, in coastal encampments in the Highland zone, or 
in hut-villages in Western Ireland. 6 
The surplus they appropriated enabled them to become the first 

1 Childe, PCBI., 92-4; add Arch. Aeliana (1936), 210, and Oxoniensia, XIII (1948), 
1-9; the earrings are associated with 83 rather than Bi beakers. 

1 Childe, Act. y Mem., XXI (1946), 196; Kggott, L'Anthr., LVIII, 6; Fox, Arch., 
LXXXIX (1943). 100-4. 

To Co. Limerick from the Bristol Channel (PRIA., XLVTII (1942), 260-9); LIV. 
(rQS?). 5<>-9 7~ 2 ; to Ulster from Southern Scotland (UJA., II, 264; III, 79). 

4 PPS., XVIII, 204. 

PRIA., LVI (1954), 343. 379; PPS., XVII, 53. 

330 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

purchasers of metal gear in Britain. But metal is found in only 5 per 
cent of the known Beaker graves, and their bronze axes came from 
Ireland while the round-heeled daggers should be of Central European 
manufacture. In addition to the metal trade, Beaker-folk may have 
organized the distribution of axes from flint-mines and from factories 
at Langdale in the Lake District, Penmaenmawr in North-West Wales, 
and Tievebulliagh in Antrim, 1 and elsewhere; these factory products 
were distributed all over England and Scotland, but always turn up 
in a Secondary Neolithic context. 

By displacing the spiritual aristocracy, the invaders liberated 
farmers and herdsmen in Britain but not in Ireland from the Mega- 
lithic superstition, but they patronized native cults or gave them a 
new celestial, rather than chthonic, orientation. Circles of great stones 
were set up, sometimes in old class I henges or in those of the new 
class II, with two entrances, 2 that the Beaker-folk had begun to con- 
struct. From the Presely Mountains in South- West Wales huge blocks 
of spotted dolerite (Bluestone) were transported to Salisbury Plain 
for erection in a Secondary Neolithic class I henge to become Stone- 
henge II. 8 This fantastic feat, like the construction of the huge class II 
henge (diameter 1400 feet!) at Avebury (North Wilts 4 ), must illustrate 
a degree of political unification or a sacred peace guaranteed by the 
Beaker aristocracy or by the spiritual leaders of the Cotswold-Severn 
culture before them, and reflects the resources at their disposal but 
produced by the neolithic farmers of the Wiltshire Downs. 

The round-headed invaders did not exterminate the native neolithic 
population or replace their culture by a new one, brought ready made 
from the Continent. Yet, while they were establishing themselves as a 
ruling class, the old Windmill Hill culture changed into, or was replaced 
by, what Piggott terms "Secondary Neolithic" cultures. In all these, 
animal husbandry plays a more prominent part in the subsistence 
economy than even in the older "Western" Neolithic, and in sympathy 
therewith ceramic technique declines. Types of mesolithic ancestry, 
such as lopsided arrow-heads (Fig. 150, i), derivatives of the petit 
tranchet (cf. Fig. 3, 6-7), re-appear as if the traditions of autochthonous 
hunter-fishers were being incorporated in those of neolithic societies. 
Novel types narrow flint knives with polished edges, antler mace- 
heads and cushion or pestle-shaped mace-heads of stone, bone pins, 
some with a lateral loop or bulb, boars'-tusk pendants came into 
use. These, though missing from primary Windmill Hill sites in Southern 

1 PPS., XVII, 1951, 100-59; UJA. t XV, 1952, 3*-48. 
1 Atkinson, Excavations at Dor Chester, I, 84 ff. 
1 Atkinson, Stonekenge (London, 1956), 63 ff. 
Childe, PCBI., 102-4. 

331 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

England, are found in long barrows in Northern England, in Clyde- 
Carlingford and Pentland tombs, and in class I henges, but also alone 
in single graves under round barrows or at the centre of a ring ditch. 
Yet none are regular components of the Beaker culture nor of any 
other assemblage outside Britain. So all may be accepted as insular 
products of native genius. 1 

Even the new pottery styles were not introduced ready made from 
the Continent. With Peterborough ware 2 no assemblage of distinctive 
types is exclusively associated. Three consecutive styles can now be 
recognized under this head. In the earliest, Ebbsfleet, style the rather 
ovoid pots have distinct necks but simple rims; they are decorated 
with a row of pits below the rim supplemented at times with an incised 
lattice band above the pits or vertical cord impressions. In the deriv- 
ative Mortlake style the rims are thickened and the pits are supple- 
mented by a lavish decoration of "maggot" imprints or the impressions 
of a "comb" or a bird's leg bone that covers the whole vase surface 
(Fig. 155). Vases of the still later Fengate style are the immediate 
forerunners of the Overhanging Rim Urns of the "Middle Bronze Age". 
Ebbsfleet pottery is found, alone or associated with normal Windmill 
Hill ware, in two causewayed camps in Sussex, in one Cotswold-Severn 
tomb, and with normal Windmill Hill pottery and arrow-heads in a 
barrow on the Chilterns. 8 Mortlake pottery recurs repeatedly together 
with Windmill Hill, and usually also Beaker, wares in causewayed 
camps, megalithic tombs and around long barrows, but always in 
strata later than the primary occupational or burial deposits. Hence, 
despite the really surprising similarity of Peterborough pottery to 
that of the Swedish "dwelling-places" and to pit-comb ware beyond 
the Baltic, no invasion from the Baltic need be postulated to explain it. 
It may more economically be regarded as the product of the established 
Windmill Hill farmers, now mixed with descendants of mesolithic 
stocks and, in the Mortlake stage, subject to the Beaker aristocracy. 

Rinyo-Clacton pottery, found in East Anglia in pits submerged 
by the subsequent "Lyonesse transgression" and in henge monuments 
in Wiltshire sometimes with, never demonstrably before, Beaker 
ware does characterize conveniently a distinctive culture, 4 best 
known from the Orkney Islands, 6 created by a tribe of sheep- and 
cattle-breeders who had reached Orkney before the first Beaker-folk 



ie pins with lateral loops occur in a boat-axe grave in Sweden and in another in 
(Fv. (1956), 196-207); all may be copies of rare metal UnStician pins of like 



1 Bone i 
Estonia i 
form. 

1 Piggott, op. cit., 315, must be revised in the light of Isobel Smith's researches. 

* Smith, PPS., XX (1954), 7> 

* Piggott, op. cit., 321-40. 

* Childe, Skara Brae (London, 1931); PSAS., LXXIII, 6-31 (Rinyo). 

332 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

arrived there. On those wind-swept islands they found ideal pasture 
for their flocks and herds, but were forced to translate into stone, 
dwellings and furniture elsewhere made of wood. Their huts, grouped 
in hamlets of seven or eight, and several times rebuilt on the old site, 
were some 15 ft. square. On either side of the central hearth were 





FIG. 155. Peterborough bowl from Thames (}), and sherds from West Kennet 
Long Barrow. By permission of Trustees of British Museum. 

fixed beds framed with stone slabs on the edge and covered with 
canopies of hide. A dresser stood against the back wall, there were 
cupboards above the beds and tanks let into the floor. As clothing, 
skins were worn, for the dressing of which innumerable scrapers of 
flint and awls and other bone tools were made. Adzes, of polished stone, 
were mounted in perforated antler sleeves. The pots, though badly 
fired, were flat-bottomed and decorated with grooved 01 applied ribs 
and knobs forming lozenges, wavy lines, and even spirals. 

333 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Personal ornaments, ingeniously made entirely from local materials, 
include beads of bone, cows' teeth, and walrus ivory, arc-pendants of 
boars' tusk laminae and bone pins with lateral loops. 

The Rinyo-Clacton culture was an insular British creation, but 
doubtless incorporates fresh Continental traditions. So Rinyo houses 
are stone versions of the Horgen huts (p. 296), and antler sleeves and 
arc-pendants again point to Horgen. The patterns adorning the vases 
can be paralleled in late Cave pottery from Catalonia, 1 in the Late 
Chassey ware of Brittany, and its Wessex derivatives and in the 
carvings on Boyne tombs. But in the earliest habitation level at Rinyo 
"Western" Unstan pottery was still current side by side with the local 
ware as if the latter had grown up out of the former. Though in Essex 
Rinyo-Clacton ware is older than the Lyonesse transgression and in 
Orkney than the oldest local Beaker, the similarity of its decoration 
to that of Wessex incense cups has convinced Scott 2 and others that 
the Rinyo-Clacton culture need be no older than the Wessex culture 
in Southern England, i.e. Early Bronze Age II. In any case, its tradi- 
tions live on in the Encrusted and Cordoned Urns of our Middle and 
Late Bronze Ages. 

THE WESSEX CULTURE AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE 

If the Beaker culture represent the first phase of our Early Bronze 
Age (E.B.A.I), that phase ended with the emergence of a new warrior 
aristocracy in Wessex and Cornwall and of more isolated warrior 
chieftains in East Anglia, Yorkshire, and Scotland, known exclusively 
from burials under elaborate barrows. The Wessex chieftains 8 dominated 
the chalk downs from Sussex to Dorset, but established outposts on 
both sides of the Bristol Channel. Their bones or ashes were buried, 
sometimes in coffins hollowed out of a tree-trunk, 4 with extravagantly 
rich furniture handled cups of gold, amber or shale, grooved triangular 
or, later, 5 ogival daggers (some with gold-studded hilts or amber 
pommels), tanged spear-heads (Fig. 156, 2), flat or low-flanged axes, 
but also superb flint arrow-heads tanged and barbed in the Breton 
manner, arrow-shaft straighteners, and stone battle-axes (derivable 
from the A Beaker type, but absurdly like the Northern Middle Neo- 
lithic type of Fig. 95, 4). Their ladies wore gold-bound discs and 
crescentic necklaces with pattern-bored spacers of amber, halberd 

1 PSAS., LXIII (1929), 273. 

PS^S..LXXXII (1950), 44 ff. 

1 Piggott, PPS., IV (1938), 52-106; cf. ibid.. 107-21; Inst. Arch. AR., X, 107-21. 
PJPS.. XV (1949), 101-6. 

Ap Simon, Inst. Arch. AR., X (1954), 107-10. 

334 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

pendants of amber, gold, and bronze, double-axe, hammer and other 
beads of jet and amber and of fayence imported from the Mediterranean. 
The vases distinctive of the Wessex graves (domestic pottery is 
unknown) are "incense cups" decorated with punctured ribbons or 
knobs admittedly inspired by the Late Chassey tradition of Brittany, 
but contemporary Cinerary Urns reflect the Secondary Neolithic 




FIG. 156. Evolution of a socketed spear-head in Britain after Green well: 
i, Hintelsham, Suffolk; 2, Snowshill, Glos.; 3, Arreton Down,*, o W. (J). 

traditions of the subject population. Though they are not found in the 
aristocratic Bronze Age barrows there, the Armorican parallels to 
Wessex funerary pottery are the strongest arguments for regarding 
the Wessex chiefs as immigrants from Brittany (p. 320); the rest of 
their equipment cannot be derived thence, but, in so far as it is not 
of British origin, is based on UnStician (Saale-Warta) models. 1 If the 
Wessex rulers be not just aggrandized A-Beaker-Battle-axe folk, they 
are most likely to have come immediately from the Saale valley. 
Wherever the chiefs themselves came from, their wealth was prim- 

1 For instance, the earlier Wessex daggers seem derivable from tfce Elbe-Oder type; 
the halberd pendants reproduce the Saale-Warta bronze-shafted type. 

335 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

arily based on the produce of flocks and herds grazed on the chalk 
downs. But it was greatly augmented by the profits of trade. For the 
chieftains controlled trade in Irish gold and copper and Cornish tin 
with the Baltic, Central Europe, and even the ^Egean. In return they 
secured lumps of amber and late Ungtician pins like Fig. 71, 6, 8, and 9. 
Their wealth enabled them to enlist the services of highly skilled 
craftsmen who devised original British products. Smiths, who had 
learned core-casting in Bohemia, developed for instance a distinctively 
British type of socketed spear-heads (Fig. 156). Jewellers translated 
Highland crescentic necklaces into amber and bound with Irish gold 
amber discs. Such products found a market even in the civilized ^Egean; 
the amber disc from Knossos (p. 33) and the necklaces from Mycenae 
and Kakovatos (p. 80) must rank as "made in England". In return, 
the Wessex chieftains were of course given segmented fayence beads, 
(Fig. 157), trinkets suitable for barbarians. But surely they acquired 



FIG. 157. Segmented fayence beads, Wilts (i). By permission of the Trustees 
of the British Museum. 

more enticing rewards. A dagger, carved on a trilithon in Stonehenge 
III, may represent an imported Mycenaean dirk. The hilt of an actual 
imported Mycenaean L.H.IIIb sword (like Fig. 15, i) was in fact 
recovered from a barrow at Pelynt near the south coast of Cornwall 
though not from a typical Wessex grave 1 . 

At the same time the Wessex chieftains devoted part of their wealth 
to sanctifying their power by transforming and enriching the grandest 
sanctuary of their predecessors. Stonehenge HI 8 combines a new 
arrangement of the holy Bluestones with the trilithon horseshoe and 
circle of sarsen blocks, dragged some twenty-five miles from Marl- 
borough Downs; the well-dressed uprights are consecrated and dated 
by carved representations of the axes found in Wessex graves and of a 
dagger, possibly imported from Greece. 

Meanwhile in the Highland Zone of Britain the absorption of the 
Beaker aristocracy is symbolized by the gradual replacement of their 
lordly drinking-cups by humble Food Vessels as the appropriate 
funerary vessels. For these can be derived from Secondary Neolithic 
vases though sometimes hybridized with Beaker or Battle-axe types. 
At the same time individual interment finally replaces collective burial 
in megalithic tombs. But the single graves are often grouped in little 

i Childe, PPS., XVII (1951). 95- f Atkinson, Stonektnge, 68-77. 

336 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

cemeteries, as in class I henges, and inhumation slowly gives place to 
cremation, a change that once more documents a revival of Neolithic 
rites and ideas. Food Vessels of the Yorkshire vase form with a 
sharp, generally grooved shoulder (Fig. 158, 2) were introduced into 
Ireland, presumably by a fresh wave of immigrants from Great Britain. 
As a result, there too collective burial gradually gave way to individual 




I 2 

FIG. 158. Food Vessels, Argyll and East Lothian (J): i, Bowl; 2, Vase. 

interment; in several Boyne tombs Food Vessels accompanied intrusive 
secondary cremations. But in Ireland and Western Scotland 1 developed 
a bowl type of Food Vessel (Fig. 158, i) as a substitute for wooden 
bowls, the form and decoration of which may also be inferred from the 
Pyrenaean polypod bowls like Fig. 144 and Beaker associates like 
Fig. in, 2. 

The predominantly pastoral economy favoured by the Beaker-folk 
was maintained by Food Vessel societies. Though the latter are less 
obviously stratified than that of Wessex, industry and trade flourished 
among* them too. Halberds and decorated axes made in Ireland 2 were 

1 Childe, PCBI., 119-34; SBS., 8-10, 51-62, 105-18. 

1 PPS., IV, 272-82; Arch., LXXXVI, 305 ff.; Childe, PCBI. t 115-17. 

337 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

transported across North Britain for shipment to Northern Europe 
without paying tribute to the chieftains of Wessex. Direct maritime 
intercourse with the Atlantic coastlands as far as Portugal may be 
deduced from a cylinder-headed pin, like Fig. 131, found with a 
Yorkshire Food Vessel in a grave in Galway, from the exact agreement 
of the cup-and-ring marks, carved on the slabs of such graves with the 
petroglyphs of Galicia and Northern Portugal 1 and from the distribu- 
tion in Brittany and Normandy (and perhaps the imitation in Portugal, 




FIG. 159. Gold lunula, Ireland. By permission of Trustees of British Museum. 

p. 285) of gold lunulae like Fig. 159. For the latter, if inspired in the 
last resort by gold collars worn by Egyptian nobles, are immediately 
Irish translations into sheet gold of the crescentic jet necklaces, 
repeatedly associated with Food vessels in Scotland, 2 which were 
copied in amber in Wessex. 

Finally cremationists, 8 of Secondary Neolithic stock, using as Ciner- 
ary Urns derivatives of Peterborough vases, were spreading from 
South-East England into the Highland Zone. They had reached Ireland 

1 MacWhite, Estudios, 42-3; Sobrino Buhigas, Corpus Petroglyphorum Gallacia 
(Compostella, iQ45)> 

i Childe, PCBI., 123-4. Note that the 8 old lunute found in Northern Europe are not 
of Irish manufacture. 

Childe, PCBI., 145-59- 

338 



THE BRITISH ISLES 

while segmented fayence beads were still current, 1 while another 
party, crossing the North Sea, colonized the Low Countries. 2 Burials 
in Cinerary Urns, like the urns themselves, preserve even more clearly 
than those with Food Vessels the native neolithic traditions. For they 
cluster in small cemeteries or urnfields, some enclosed in a penannular 
bank and ditch like a class I henge. 8 They are still poorer and less 
aristocratic. Nevertheless, contemporary hoards of Middle Bronze Age 
II show that, though the Wessex chieftains had been expelled or 
absorbed, the established bronze industry continued to flourish, 
creating novel types distinctively British spear-heads with a loop at 
the base of the blade, palstaves, and rapiers, while goldsmiths devised 
a variety of splendid ornaments, culminating in the superb tippet of 
sheet gold richly embossed, found in a grave at Mold in Flintshire. 4 

The widespread diffusion of Britannico-Hibernian metal-work, and 
the variety of products that reached the British Isles in exchange, 
not only illustrate the leading role of these islands at the dawn of the 
Continental Bronze Age and the diverse influences that fertilized 
insular culture; they also provide a unique opportunity for corre- 
lating several local sequences and assigning to them historical dates. 
The crescentic amber necklaces from the Shaft Graves of Mycenae and 
from Kakovatos (p. 79) give a terminus ante quern not later than 1600 
B.C. for the rise of the Wessex culture, though the imported segmented 
fayence beads probably indicate that it lasted till 1400. Danubian and 
North European chronologies can be checked against this dating. 

The pins of late Ungtician form from Wessex graves (p. 336) on the 
one hand. Irish axes, halberds, and even a gold ornament of the bar-style 
from the UnStician hoards on the other 5 prove that our Early Bronze 
Age 2 falls within period IV of the Danubian sequence. The Early 
Bronze Age I round-heeled daggers, associated here with A Beakers, 
are typologically parallel to the earliest UnStician forms and can 
in fact be matched in late Bell-beaker graves in Bohemia and the 
Rhineland. The earlier Bi beakers should then be contemporary with 
their Central European counterparts and go back to late Danubian HI. 
A synchronism with Northern Neolithic IHa-b (M.N. Ill) can in fact 
be established by J. J. Butler with the aid of the sun-disc mentioned 
on p. 330. Northern Neolithic IV is substantially parallel to our Wessex 
culture. But it is itself equivalent to Montelius' Northern Bronze 

1 Such a bead was discovered in a secondary grave in the Mound of the Hostages at 
Tara by Prof. O'Riordain in 1955. 

* Glasbergen, "Excavations in the Eight Beatitudes" (Pal&ohistoria, II-III), Gron- 
ingen, 1954, es P- PP- I2 7-3*> 168-70. 

Childe, PCBI., 151-3. 

4 PPS., XIX (1953), 161 ff- * Germania, XXII (1938). ?-" 

339 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

Age I, though metal was locally too rare to be buried in its characteristic 
Long Cist tombs. But one of the earliest Northern graves, furnished 
with metal gear and so representative of Montelius 1 Bronze Age Ha 
at Liesbiittel in Schleswig 1 contained an imported British spear-head 
of the type distinctive of our Middle Bronze Age 2. In the opposite 
direction a synchronism between Northern Neolithic II (E.N.C.) and 
some phase of our Clyde-Carlingford (Megalithic) culture may be 
deduced from the adoption of the Western semicircle motive, prom- 
inent on Beacharra vases, on C funnel-beakers in Denmark and Sweden, 
and the application of the Northern device of cord impression to the 
decoration of some Beacharra vases. 2 

Correlations with the Iberian Peninsula are not quite so conclusive. 
Segmented fayence beads no doubt prove an <?Verlap between the 
Wessex culture and the El Argar culture of South-Eastern Spain 
Spanish Bronze II. But the cylinder-headed pin found with a Food 
Vessel in Ireland should belong there to Bronze I while the incense 
cups from Wessex graves and associated with Cinerary Urns have 
significant parallels in the incised pots and stone vessels of Los Millares 
and contemporary sites. So, too, daggers with a midrib on one face only, 
as at Los Millares and Alcali, have been found with Cinerary Urns 
in Scotland and Southern Ireland. 8 This phase of the Los Millares 
culture should then on the British evidence be assigned to Bronze Ib 
(Los Millares II) and later than the popularity of at least Pan-European 
Beakers in the Peninsula. These would have to be assigned to Bronze la 
(Los Millares I as Leisner put it), which would be roughly parallel to 
the Beaker period in England. Even so, the neolithic passage graves 
of Portugal maybe at least as early as the Northern ones of Neolithic III. 

1 Kersten, Zur alteren nordischen Bronxezeit (Neumiinster, n.d.), 65; cf. also Broholm, 
Danmarks Bronzealder, I (Copenhagen, 1944), 223. 

Childe in Corolla archcsologica in honorem C. A. Nordmann (Helsinki, IQ5 2 ). 8 - 
Childe, APL., IV (1953), 182-4. 



340 



CHAPTER XIX 
RETROSPECT: THE PREHISTORY OF EUROPEAN SOCIETY 

WHAT meaning can be extracted from the intricate details compressed 
into the foregoing pages? What patterns unify the fragmentary archae- 
ological data? To clarify the issue the abstract results have been 
schematized into tables and maps. These present the distribution in 
time and space of cultures, assemblages of archaeological phenomena 
that should reflect the distinctive behaviour patterns of human societies. 

The maps at first sight present a very complicated mosaic of con- 
temporary cultures. But historical reality was certainly more compli- 
cated still. So many pieces of the mosaic are missing that even the 
spatial pattern is blurred. Here it has been deliberately simplified 
by the omission of a number of assemblages, some of which have been 
mentioned in the text but most of which in 1956 are little more than 
pottery styles. This bewildering diversity, though embarrassing to the 
student and confusing on a map, is yet a significant feature in the 
pattern of European prehistory. Across it another pattern may be 
discerned. The first two maps exhibit quite clearly the gradual spread 
of neolithic farmers, or at least of farming, from the south-east during 
two consecutive periods of uncertain duration. (But even here there is 
some doubt as to the right of "Western cultures'* to a place on map II!) 
Map III should suggest the groups, the complex relations between 
these and the impact upon them of alien or peripheral cultures in a 
period not necessarily longer than I or II, but more crowded with 
archaeologically recognizable events. The main cultures distinguishable 
at the opening of the period are designated by letters, their boundaries 
defined by solid lines. Different hatchings denote cultures that subse- 
quently arose from, or were superimposed upon, the foregoing. Finally, 
map IV displays the main areas that benefited from the Early Bronze 
Age economy, their interrelation and their dependence on Mycenaean 
Greece. 

The distribution of entries on the several maps is based on the 
chronological discussions included in all the preceding chapters and 
summarized in the following tables. In most of the columns the actual 
order of the entries, the sequence of cultures, is reasonably well- 
established, though here again a reference to the text will disclose 
doubts as to the order both in the extreme West and in the East. 

341 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

But each column is virtually independent and should be regarded 
as a single scroll hanging freely from its own roller. The lower end is 
always loose, so that, as far as pure archaeology is concerned, each 
scroll could be rolled up at least to the 1400 notch deduced from 
segmented fayence beads. Nuclear physicists have indeed diffidently 
offered some provisional radio-carbon dates 1 that might act as pins 
to keep some scrolls extended. So in column 15 the Windmill Hill 
culture (at Ehenside Tarn in the Lake District!) might be pinned about 
3000 B.C. 2 and the Secondary Neolithic of Stonehenge I at 1850; in 
column 7 Early Cortaillod about 2740,8 and in column 14 the earliest, 
A, funnel-beakers at 2650, while in column 2 Danubian I (in Germany!) 
might go back before 4000.* But radio-carbon dating proves to be 
infected by so many potential sources of error that European pre- 
historians accept its results with as much reserve as the physicists 
offer them. In any case the available dates do not suffice to decide 
between the competing archaeological chronologies of the European 
Bronze Age set out on pp. 135. The Stonehenge figure perhaps makes 
the extreme dates for the beginning of the Untician culture before 
2000 and after 1600 B.C. respectively less likely, but any year between 
1950 and 1650 B.C. would still be equally defensible. Fortunately, for 
some positive conclusions at least, these uncertainties do not matter. 

Whichever chronology be eventually vindicated, the primacy of 
the Orient remains unchallenged. The Neolithic Revolution was 
accomplished in South-Western Asia; its fruits cultivated cereals 
and domestic stock were slowly diffused thence through Europe, 
reaching Denmark only three centuries or so after the Urban Revolu- 
tion has been completed in Egypt and Sumer. Ere then the techniques 
of smelting and casting copper had been discovered and were being 
intelligently applied in Egypt and Mesopotamia, to be in their turn 
diffused round the Mediterranean during the third millennium, but 
north of the Alps only at its close, if not already in the second. The 
development of industry and commerce in Greece and subsequently 
in Temperate Europe was as much dependent on Oriental capital as 
the industrialization of India and Japan was on British and American 
capital last century. 

On the other hand, European societies were never passive recipients 
of Oriental contributions, but displayed more originality and inventive- 

1 The method is explained by Zeuner, Dating the Past (1952), pp. 341 if. 

1 Libby, Radio Carbon Dating (Chicago, 1953), 75. British prehistorians unanimously 
reject this date. 

1 See p. 291, n. 3. 

4 These figures have frequently been mentioned by archaeologists, but not formally 
published by the responsible physicists. 

342 



THE PREHISTORY OF EUROPEAN SOCIETY 

ness in developing Oriental inventions than had the inventors' more 
direct heirs in Egypt and Hither Asia. This is most obvious in the 
Bronze Age of Temperate Europe. In the Near East many metal types 
persisted unchanged for two thousand years; in Temperate Europe an 
extraordinarily brisk evolution of tools and weapons and multiplication 
of types occupied a quarter of that time. 

The startling tempo of progress in European prehistory thus docu- 
mented is not to be explained racially by some mystic property of 
European blood and soil, nor yet by reference to mere material habitat, 
but rather in sociological and historical terms. No doubt the Cro- 
Magnons of Europe created a unique art in the Upper Palaeolithic 
Age while their mesolithic successors devised and bequeathed to con- 
temporary Europe much ingenious equipment for exploiting their 
environment (p. 14). No doubt, too, its deeply indented coastline, 
its propitiously situated mountain ranges and navigable streams, and 
its resources in tin, copper, and precious metal have conferred on our 
continent advantages possessed by no other comparable land mass, 
while the Mediterranean was a unique school for navigators. But the 
creative utilization of these favours of Nature must be interpreted in 
sociological terms. 

The bounteous water-supply and seemingly unlimited land for 
cultivation allowed Early Neolithic fanners an unrestricted dispersion 
of population; dense aggregations had to grow up in the arid cradle of 
cereal cultivation where settled farming was possible only in a few 
oases or in narrow zones along the banks of permanent rivers. Hence 
Jericho, the earliest known neolithic settlement in the Near East, 
probably contained ten times as many inhabitants as any Early 
Neolithic village in Europe. But such aggregations require rigid dis- 
cipline which the scarcity of water enables society to enforce. So from 
the first the Oriental environment put a premium on conformity. In 
Europe it was always feasible, however perilous, to escape the restraints 
of irksome custom by clearing fresh land for tillage; indeed, such an 
escape was actually imposed on the younger children of a village in 
historical times, at least in Italy, by the Sacred Spring. But such dis- 
persion under neolithic conditions of self-sufficiency encouraged 
divergence of traditions and the formation of independent societies. 
Just that is imperfectly reflected during our period II in the multi- 
plication within a comparatively small area of cultures distinguished 
by differences in ceramic art, burial rites, equipment, and even economy. 
Thereby even on our simplified map Europe appears in contrast to 
Hither Asia where the Halafian and Ubaid cultures are successively 
but uniformly spread over a vast area. Again in the ideological sphere 

343 



DAWN OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION 

the variations in megalithic architecture really far greater than 
could be indicated here should be the counterpart of the fission of a 
single and presumably Oriental orthodoxy into a myriad local sects. 
It might then be compared to the disruption of Christianity after the 
Reformation and contrasted with the faithful repetition of temple 
plans from the Persian Gulf to the Orontes in the third millennium. 
In short, a multiplicity of neolithic societies, distinguished by divergent 
traditions but never completely isolated one from the other, offered 
a European peasant some possibility of comparison and free choice. 

The observed diversity was, of course, due not only to the splitting 
of a few immigrant societies and foreign traditions. Divergence was 
accelerated and emphasized also on the one hand by the multiplicity of 
pre-existing mesolithic groups who absorbed the ^neolithic techniques 
or were absorbed in the neolithic societies, on the other by the plurality 
of external stimuli that impinged upon them from Africa, the Levant, 
Anatolia, and perhaps Central Asia. 

Still, material progress was impossible without an accumulation of 
capital, a concentration of the social surplus. This was effected in 
Early ^Egean times and during period III of the temperate zone by the 
emergence of chieftains or aristocracies, spiritual or temporal; it made 
effective a demand for reliable metal weapons promoted by the con- 
commitant intensification of warlike behaviour. Yet the small inde- 
pendent groups of herdsmen, cultivators, and fishers, owing allegiance 
to such rulers, just could not by themselves accumulate resources 
sufficient for the development of a metallurgical industry and of an 
efficient machinery for the distribution of its products. That had 
demanded the Urban Revolution, the concentration of the surplus 
produced by thousands of irrigation-farmers in the hands of a tiny 
minority of priests, kings, and nobles in the valleys of the Nile, the 
Tigris-Euphrates, and the Indus. Fortunately the effective demands 
of the masters of this concentrated wealth in Egypt and Mesopotamia 
enabled ^Egean farmers and fishermen to secure a share in the surplus 
thus accumulated without themselves submitting to the same degree 
of political unification and class division. The archaeological picture 
of Bronze Age Greece at its most prosperous period corresponds well 
with Homer's description of many independent but loosely federated 
principalities, smaller but more numerous than even the Temple 
States of pre-Sargonic Mesopotamia. 

In the sequel, Minoan and Mycenaean demand for tin, gold, and 
eventually amber, created a reliable market for the peculiar products 
of Temperate Europe. Thus indirectly the barbarian societies of Central 
Europe and the British Isles obtained a share in the capital accumu- 

344 



THE PREHISTORY OF EUROPEAN SOCIETY 

lated through the Urban Revolution for the development of their own 
extractive, manufacturing, and distributive industries without sub- 
mitting to the repressive discipline of urban civilization or suffering 
the irrevocable class division it entailed. Specialist craftsmen were 
liberated from the absorbing preoccupation of food production, but 
yet were not dependent on a single despot's court, temple, or feudal 
estate. They must no doubt sell their products and their skill to patrons, 
but whether these were classless societies, as perhaps in Bohemia and 
on the Middle Danube, or chieftains, as in the Saale-Warta province 
and in Wessex, there was plenty of competition for their services. As 
in Homeric Greece, a craftsman was welcome everywhere. So they had 
every inducement to display their virtuosity and inventiveness. In 
the European Bronze Age metal-workers were in fact producing for an 
international market. 

In the ancient East the Urban Revolution had finally divided the 
societies affected by it into two economically opposed classes and had 
irretrievably consigned craftsmen, the pioneers of material progress, 
to the lower class. In prehistoric European and Mycenaean societies 
the cleavage was never so deep, if only because of their smallness and 
poverty. Craftsmen at least were not depressed into a class of slaves 
or serfs. 



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352 



NOTES ON TERMINOLOGY 

Definitions of certain terms, descriptive of ceramic decoration, here used in a 
special or restricted sense. 

Cardial decorated with lines executed with a shell edge. 

Channelled with relatively wide and shallow incisions, round-bottomed. 

Cordoned with applied strips of clay in relief. 

Crusted with colours (paints) applied to the vase surface after the firing of 

the vessel. 
Excised with regular small triangular or square hollows made by depressing the 

surface or actually cut out ("fret-work" or "chip-carving" or "false relief"). 

Fluted with flutings separated only by a sharp narrow ridge. 

Grooved with broad incisions, not normally round-bottomed. 

Incrusted with incised lines filled with white or coloured paste. 

Maggot with the impressions of a loop of whipped threads, see Fig. 155. 

Particoloured by firing the vessel so that part is reddened by the oxidization 
of the iron oxides exposed to a free access of air while part is blackened by 
the reduction of these oxides. (Egyptian black-topped ware is one variety.) 

Rusticated by roughening the surface, generally covered with a thick slip, by 
pinching with the fingers, brushing, etc. ("barbotine"). 

Rouletted as described on p. 224. 

Stab-and-drag decorated with continuous lines formed by jabbing a pointed 

implement into the soft clay, then drawing the point backwards a short 

distance and stabbing it in again, and so on. 

Celt, a term formerly used to describe chopping implements of stone or metal 
that could be used as axes, adzes, gouges, chisels, or even hoe-blades. Here we 
distinguish, where possible, between the several types and in particular describe 
as 
Adze a celt that is asymmetrical about its major axis so that it could not 

possibly be used as an axe (Fig. 29, D, B). When hafted the handle is 

perpendicular to the plane of the blade. 
Axe therefore describes a celt that is symmetrical about its major axis even 

though such a celt could often be used as an adze. 

An axe (or adze) provided with a hole for the shaft, like a modern axe-head, is 
termed a shaft-hole axe (or adze), but, if the butt end is elongated and 
carefully shaped, the term battle-axe is conventionally used. 

Burials should be described as contracted when the knees are drawn up towards 
the chin so as to make an angle of 90 or less with the spinal column. When 
the angle is more than a right angle, the term flexed should be used. Owing 
to ambiguities in the authorities followed, it has not been possible to main- 
tain this distinction strictly here. 



353 



ABBREVIATIONS 



PERIODICALS AND COLLECTIVE WORKS 

A AH. A eta Arch&ologica Hungarica, Buda-Pest. 

"Aamose" "Stenalderbopladser i Aamosen," by T. Mathiassen, J. Troels- 

Smith, and M. Degerb01, Nordiske Fortidsminder, iii, 3, 
Copenhagen, 1943. 

Aarbeger Aarbeger for Nor disk Oldkyndighed og Historic, Copenhagen. 

A eta Arch. A eta Archaologica, Copenhagen. * 

Act. y Mem. A etas y Memorias de la Sociedad Espanola de Antropologia, 

Etnografia y Preistoria, Madrid. 

AA Apxcno\oyiKov AfXriW, Athens. 

AE. Archaologiai Ertesitd, Buda-Pest (A Magyar Tudomanyos 

Akademia). 

AfO. Archiv fiir Orientforsehung, Vienna. 

AfA. Archiv fur Anthropologie, Brunswick. 

Afas. Association fransaise pour 1'avancement des Sciences (Reports 

of congresses). 

A] A. American Journal of Archeology (Archaeological Institute of 

America). 

Altschles. Altschlesien, Breslau (Schlesische Altertumsverein). 

Am. Anthr. American Anthropologist (New Haven, Conn.). 

AM, Mitteilungen des archdologischen Instituts des deutschen Reiches, 

Athenische Abteilung. 

Ampurias Ampurias t Barcelona. 

Antiquity Antiquity, Gloucester. 

Ant. J. Antiquaries' Journal, London (Society of Antiquaries). 

Anuari Anuari de I'lnstitut d'Estudis Catalans, Barcelona. 

Arch. Arch&ologia, London (Society of Antiquaries). 

Arch. Camb. ArchcBologia Cambrensis, Cardiff. 

Arch. Ert. See A.E. 

Arch. Hung. Archaologia Hungarica, Buda-Pest. 

Arch. J. ArchcBological Journal, London (R. Archaeological Institute). 

AR. Archeologiske Rozhledy, Praha (Ceckoslovenska Akademie 

V6d). 
Arh. Vest. Arheoloski Vestnik, Ljubljana (Slovenska Akademija Znanosti) 

Arkh. Pam. Arkheolog. Pamyatki U.R.S.R., Kiev (Ukrainian Academy of 

Sciences). 

Arsberattelse. Arsberdttelse K. Humanistiska Vetenskapssamfundets i Lund. 
A PL. Archivo de Prehistoria Levantina, Valencia. 

As A. Anzeiger fur schweizerische Alter turns kunde, Zurich. 

354 



ABBREVIATIONS 



AsAg. Archives suisses d'Anthropologie generate, Geneva. 

A SPRB. American School of Prehistoric Research, Bulletin, New Haven , 

Conn. 

Bad. Fb. Badische Fundberichte, Baden-Baden. 

BCH. Bulletin de correspondence helUnique. 

Belleten Belleten, Ankara (Turk Tarih Kurumu). 

Bl.f.d.V. Blatter fur deutsche Vorgeschichte, K6nigsberg. 

Bol.R.Acad.Hist. Boletin de la R. Academia de la Historia, Madrid. 

BP. Bullettino di paletnologia italiana, Parma, Roma. 

BRGK. Bericht der rdmisch-germanischen Kommission des arch. 

Instituts des deutschen Reiches, Frankfurt. 

BSA. Annual of the British School at Athens. 

BSR. Papers of the British School at Rome. 

BSABrux. Bulletin et Memoir es de la Societe d'Anthropologie de 

Bruxelles. 

BSAPar. Bulletin de la Societ6 d'Anthropologie de Paris. 

BSPF. Bulletin de la Societ< prehistorique frangaise, Paris. 

CIIA. Institut international d'anthropologie, Congres. 

CIPP. Comisi6n de investigaciones paleonto!6gicas y prehist6ricas, 

Madrid (Junta para Ampliaci6n de estudios cien tineas). 

CIS PP. Congres international des sciences pr6historiques et proto- 

historiques. 

Cuadernos Cuadernos de Historia Primitiva, Madrid. 

Dacia Dacia: Recherches et Decouvertes archologiques en Roumanie, 

Bucuresti. 

Dolg. Dolgozatok a m. kir. Ferencz J6szef-tudomanyegyetem 

archaeologia intezetebol, Szeged. 

E<. 'A/j^. 'E.<f>r)ptpis 'Ap^atoXoyiKf/, Athens. 

ESA. Eurasia septentrionalis antiqua, Helsinki. 

FA. Folya Archceologica, Buda-Pest. 

FM . Finskt Museum, Helsinki. 

FNA. Fra Nationalmuseets Arbejdsmark, Copenhagen. 

Fv. Fornvdnnen, Stockholm (K. Vitterhets, Historic och Anti- 

kvitets Akademien). 

Gallia Gallia, Paris. 

Germania R6misch-germanische Kommission des archaologischen Insti- 

tuts des deutschen Reiches. 

IGAIMK. Izvestiya Gos. Akademiya Istorii Materialnol Kultury, Lenin- 

grad-Moskva. 

Inst. Arch.AR. Annual Report of London University Institute of Archaeology, 
London. 

IPEK. Jahrbuch fur prdhistorische und ethnographische Kunst, K61n. 

IPH.M^m. Institut de Paleontologie humaine, Memoir c, Paris. 

Iraq Iraq, London (British School of Archaeology in Iraq). 

355 



ABBREVIATIONS 



JHS. Journal of Hellenic Studies, London (Society for Promotion of 

Hellenic Studies). 

JNES. Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Oriental Institute, Chicago. 

JRAI. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, London. 

JRSAI. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 

Dublin. 

JSEA. Junta superior para excavaciones archeo!6gicas, Madrid. 

JST. \ (Jahresschrift fur die Vorgeschichte der sdchsich-thuringische 

I 1 Lander, continued as 

JMV.) (Jahresschrift fur Mitteldeutsche Vorgeschichte, Halle. 

KS. Kratkie Soobshcheniya o dokladakh i polevykh issledovaniyakh 

Instituta Istoril Materialnol Kultury, Moskva-Leningrad. 

KSU. Kratkie SoobSteniya, Arkh. Institut, Ukrainian Academy of 

Sciences, Kiev. 

LA AA. A nnals of A rchceology and A nthropology, Liverpool . 

MA. Monumenti Antichi, Rome (Accademia del Lincei). 

MAGW. Mitteilungen der anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien. 

MAGZ. Mitteilungen der antiquarischen Gesellschaft in Zurich. 

Man Man, London (Royal Anthropological Institute). 

Mannus Mannus, Berlin-Leipzig (Gesellschaft fur deutsche Vor- 

geschichte). 

Mat. Materiaux pour I'histoire primitive et naturelle de I'homme, 

Paris. 
MIA. Materialy i Issledovaniya po Arkheolgii SSSR., Institut Istoril 

Materialnol Kultury Akademiya Nauk, Moskya-Lenhigrad. 

MDOG. Mitteilungen der deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft, Berlin. 

MS AN. M6moires de la Societ6 des Antiquaires du Nord, Copenhagen. 

MusJ. Museum Journal, Philadelphia (University of Pennsylvania 

Free Museum). 

Nbl.f.d.V. Nachrichtenblatt fur deutsche Vorzeit, Leipzig. 

NNU. Nachrichten aus Niedersdchsens Urgeschichte, Hannover. 

Not. Sc. Notizie degli Scavi di Antichitd, Rome (Accademia dei Lincei). 

Obzor Obzor prahistoricky, Praha. 

OAP. O Archaologo Portugues, Lisbon. 

QIC. Oriental Institute, University of Chicago (Communications, 

Publications, or Studies in Oriental Civilization). 

Oudh. Med. Oudheidkundige Mededeelingen uit 's Rijksmuseum van 

Oudheden te Leiden. 

PA . Pamatky archeologiskt a mistopisnt, Praha. 

PDAES. Proceedings of the Devon Archaeological Exploration Society, 

Exeter. 

PGAIMK. Problemy Istorii Mat. Kult., Leningrad. 

PPS. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, Cambridge. 

Prthist. Prehistoire, Paris. 

PRIA. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin. 

356 



ABBREVIATIONS 



Przeg.A. 
PSAS. 

PSEA . 

PZ. 
RAZ. 
Raz. i. Pro. 

Rev. Anthr. 
Rev. Arch. 
Rev. EC. Anthr. 

REG. 
Real. 

Rev. Guim. 
Rivista 
Riv. Sc. Pr. 
Riv. St. Lig. 
RQS. 
SA. 
SAC. 

SGAIMK. 
Slov. Arch. 
Slov. Dej. 
SM . 
SMYA. 

St. s. Cere. 

Swiatowit 

TGIM. 



UJA. 
WA . 
WPZ. 
ZfE. 



Przeglad Archeohgiczny, Poznan. 

Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edin- 
burgh. 

Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia, Ipswich 
(continued as PPS). 

Prahistorische Zeitschrift, Berlin. 

Russ. Antropologicheskii Zhurnal, Moskva. 

Razkopki i ProucVaniya Sofia (Naroden Arkheologieski 
Muzel). 

Revue Anthropologique, Paris. 
Rivue Archeologique t Paris. 

Revue de VEcole d'Anthropologie de Paris (continued Rev, 

Anthr.). 

Revue des Etudes grecques, Paris. 

Reallexikon der Vorgeschichte, edited by Max Ebert, Berlin. 

Revista Guimardes, Guimaraes. 

Rivista di Antropologia, Rome. 

Rivista di Scienzepreistoriche, Florence. 

Rivista di Studi liguri, Bordighera. 

Revue des Questions scientifiques, Bruxelles. 

Sovietskaya Arkheologiya, Moskva-Leningrad. 

Sussex Archaological Collections, Lewes. 

Soobshcheniya GAIMK., Leningrad. 

Slovenskd Archeol6gia t Bratislava (Slovenska Akademia Vied). 

Slovenskd Dejiny, Bratislava (Slov. Akad. Vied) 1947. 

Suomen Museo, Helsinki. 

Suomen Muinaismuistoyhdistyksen AikakauskirjaFinska 
Fornminnesfdreningens Tidskrift, Helsinki. 

Studii $i Cercetdri de Istorie Veche, Bucuresti. 

Swiatowit, Warsaw. 

Trudy Gosudarstvennogo Istoricheskogo Muzeya, Moskva. 

Trudy Setksii Arkhehgii RA NION, Moskva. 

Ulster Journal ofArchaology (3rd ser.), Belfast. 

Wiadomosci arckeologiczne, Warsaw. 

Wiener Prdhistorische Zeitschrift, Vienna. 

Zeitschrift fur Ethnologie, Berlin. 



357 



BOOKS 

(Only books mentioned in more than one chapter are mentioned here.) 

Aberg, N. Bronzezeitliche und fruheisenzeitliche Chronologic, Stockholm, 1930-5. 

Alaca, See Arik and Kosay. 

Arik, Remzi Oguz. Les Fouilles d* Alaca Hdyuk, Ankara, 1937. 

Bagge and Kjellmark. Stendldersboplatserna vid Siretorp i Blekinge (K. Vitter- 

hets, Historic och Antikvitets Akademien), Stockholm, 1939. 
Bailloud, C., and Mieg de Boofzheim, P. Les Civilisation neolithiques de la 

France, Paris, 1955. 

Banner, J. Das Tisza-Maros-KdrQs-gebeit, Szeged, 1942. 
Berciu, D. Arheologia preistoricd a Olteniei, Craiova, 1939. 
Bernabo Brea, L. Gli Scavi nella Caverna degli Arene Candide t Bordighera, 



Blegen, Caskey, et al. Troy, Princeton, 1950, 1951, 1953. 

B6hm. J, Kronika Objeveneho Vlku, Praha, 1941. 

Bosch-Gimpera, P. Etnologia de la Peninsula Iberica, Barcelona, 1932. 

Brondsted, J. Danmarks Oldtid, Copenhagen, 1938-9. 

Brinton, G. The Badarian Civilization, London, 1928. 

Briusov, A. Oferki po istoril piemen evropalskol fasti SSSR. v neolititesku 
epokhu, Moskva, 1952. 

Buttler, W. Der donauldndische und der westische Kulturkreis der jungeren 

Steinzeit (Handbuch der Urgeschichte Deutschlands, 2), Berlin, 1938. 
Castillo Yurrita, A. del. La Cultura del Vaso campaniforme, Barcelona, 1928. 
Caton-Thompson, G. The Desert Fayum, London, 1935. 
Childe, V. G. The Danube in Prehistory, Oxford, 1929. 

- New Light on the Most Ancient East, London, 1954. 

- Prehistoric Communities of the British Isles, Edinburgh, 1940. 
Clark, G. The Mesolithic Age in Britain, Cambridge, 1932. 

- Prehistoric Europe: the economic basis, London, 1952. 

- The Mesolithic Settlement of Northern Europe, Cambridge, 1936. 
Coon, C. S. The Races of Europe, New York, 1939. 

Correia, V. El Neolitico de Pavia, Madrid, 1921 (CIPP. Mem. 27). 

Dechelette, J. Manuel d' Archeologie prthistorique, celtique et gallo-romaine , 
Paris, 1908-14. 

Ehrich, R. W. (ed.). Relative Chronologies in Old World Archeology, Chicago, 

1954- 
Engberg and Shipton, "The Chalcolithic Pottery of Megiddo", Oriental 

Institute Studies, 10, Chicago. 

Evans, Arthur. The Palace of Minos and Knossos, London, 1921-8. 
Forssander, J. E. Die schwedische Bootaxtkultur, Lund, 1933. 

- Der ostskandinavische Norden wdhrend der dltesten Metallzeit Europas, 
Lund, 1936 (Skrifter av K. Humanistiska Vetenskapssamfundet, XXII). 

358 



BOOKS 

Frankfort, H. Studies in the Early Pottery of the Near East, London, 1925-? 

(R. Anthrop. Institute, Occasional Papers, 6 and 8). 
Garrod, D. The Stone Age of Mount Carmel, I, Oxford, 193?- 
Gerasimov, M. M. Vosstanovlenie Litsa po derepu, Moskva (Trudy Instit. 

Etnografii, XXVIII), 1955 
Giffen, A. E. van. Die Bauart der Einzelgrdber, Leipzig, 1930 (Mannus-Bibliothek, 

44). 
Handar, F. Urgeschichte Kaukasiens, Vienna, 1937. Das Pfad im prdhistori- 

scher und fruher historischer Zeit t Vienna, 1956. 

Hawkes, C. F. C. The Prehistoric Foundations of Europe, London, 1940. 
Heurtley, A. W. Prehistoric Macedonia, Cambridge, 1939. 
Kosay, Hamit Zubeyr. Ausgrabungen von Alaca Hdyuk, Ankara, 1944* Alaca 

Hdyuk Kazisi, Ankara, 1951. 

Kostrzewski, J. Prehistoria Ziem Polskisch, Poznan, 1948. 
Loe, A. de. La Belgique ancienne, Brussels (Musees du Cinquantenaire), 1928. 
Laviosa-Zambotti, Le piu antiche Culture agricole Europee, Milano, 1943. 
Leisner, G. and V., Die Megalithgrdber der iberischen Halbinsel, I., Der Suden. 

(Romisch-germanische Forschungen, 17) Berlin, 1943. 
Mac White, Eoin, "Estudios sobre las relaciones atlanticas de la peninsula 

hispinica" (Dissertationes Matritenses, II), Madrid, I95 1 - 
Marien, M. E., Oud-Belgie 1 , Antwerp, 1952. 
Miloj6i6, V. Chronologic der jungeren Steinzeit Mittel- und Sudosteuropas, 

Berlin, 1949. 
Nordmann, C. A. "The Megalithic Culture of Northern Europe", Helsinki, 1935 

(SMYA., XXXIX, 3). 
Osten, H. H. van der. The Alishar Huyuk, Chicago, 1929-3? (Oriental Institute 

Publications, XIX-XX, XXVIII-XXX). 
Patay, P. "Friihbronzezeitliche Kulturen in Ungarn", Dissertationes Pan- 

nonica, S. II, no. 13) Buda-Pest, 1939. 
Pendlebury, A. The Archeology of Crete, London, 1939. 
Pericot, L. Espana primitiva e romana (Historia de Espana, I), Madrid, 1947- 

Los Sepulcros MegalUicos Catalanes y la Cultura Pirenaica, Barcelona, 195- 

Pittioni, R. Urgeschichte des dsterreichischen Raumes, Vienna, 1954- 
Schaeffer, C. F. A. Missions en Chypre, Paris, 1936. 

Stratigraphie comparee de I'Asie occidentale, Oxford, 1948. 

Schmidt, E. Excavations at Tepe Hissar, Damghan, Philadelphia, 1937. 

Schmidt, R. R. Die Burg Vutedol, Zagreb, 1945. 

Sprockhoff, G. Die nordische Megalithkultur (Handbiicher der Urgeschichte 

Deutschlands, 3), Berlin, 1938. 
Die Kulturen der jungeren Steinzeit in der Mark Brandenburg (Vor- 

geschichtliche Forschungen, I, 4), Berlin, 1926. 
Stock^, A. La Boheme prehistorique, Praha, 1929. 
Vaufrey, R. Prehistoire de VAfrique, I, Maghreb, Paris, 1955. 
Wace, A. J. B., and Thompson, M. Prehistoric Thessaly, Cambridge, 1912. 
Xanthudides, S. The Vaulted Tombs of the Mesard, Liverpool, 1924. 
Zeuner, F. E. Dating the Past, London, 1952. 



359 



INDEX 



Figures where a term is defined are printed in Clarendon type. 



Aberg, N., 49, 172 
adzes: antler, see axes 
copper, 91, 120, 139, 271, 275 

shaft-hole, 91, 99, 152 
stone, 11, 59, 62, 64, 65, 68, 84, 86, 89, 
91, 94, 96, 107, 110, 114, 122, 139, 
164, 166, 168, 205, 206, 208, 267, 
278 296 333 
^olian Islands, 81, 229-35, 237-8, 244, 

254, 257, 300 
air-photographs, 230-1 
Alaca HSyiik, 35, 38, 44, 54, 95, 152, 237 
Alapraia (Portugal), 275, 278 
Alcaide (Spain), 285 
Alcala (Portugal), 275, 280, 286, 340 
Alisar (Turkey), 36, 40, 44, 56, 67, 94, 95, 

157, 272 

Als6n6medi (Hungary), 124, 125 
altars (model), 60, 61, 97, 101 
Altheim (Bavaria), 296-7, 299 
amber, 11, 25, 33, 34, 41, 44, 79, 81, 119, 
127, 134, 145, 162, 165, 170, 178, 
181, 183, 187, 193, 194, 199, 208, 
220, 223, 226, 239, 240, 242, 243, 
271, 275, 278, 281, 293, 298, 305, 
309, 313, 318, 320, 334, 336, 344 
amulets, axe, 17, 19, 234, 235, 254, 260, 

274, 313, 319 

cranian, 290, 291, 311, 314 
hares' phalange, 244, 287, 291 
leg, 16, 69, 313 
rabbit, 278 

anchor ornaments, 71, 239, 257 
Anghelu Ruju (Sardinia), 258-9, 262 
animals, models of, 101, 116, 188, 209, 230, 

300 

see also zoomorphic vases 
Antequera (Spain), 274, 281, 285 
anthropomorphic vases, 17, 43, 46, 90, 91, 

101, 111, 118, 142 

Apennine culture, 239, 242, 250, 310 
arc-pendants, 244, 296, 305, 313, 318 
arcs, clay, 40, 271, 274, 275, 280 
areas and sizes of settlements, 27, 37, 41, 
46, 48, 60, 74, 81, 106, 113, 137, 231, 
235, 249, 270, 282, 292, 299, 304, 
313, 333 

Arene Candide (Liguria), 6, 244-5, 291 
Argaric, see El Argar 
Ariusd, 97, 113, 137, 139, 140, 142-3 
armlets, bone, 12, 123 
metal, 170, 183, 193, 200 
shell, 81, 65, 102, 123, 244, 266, 268, 

269 
stone, 61, 65, 118, 150, 260, 266, 268, 

313, 319 

arrow-heads: bone, conical, 11, 206-7 
double-pointed, 99, 289 



flint, hollow based, 27, 68, 118, 150, 197, 
224, 227, 233, 234, 248, 272, 275, 
278, 280, 290, 297, 299 
leaf-shaped, 152, 187, 207, 272, 278, 

278, 287, 313, 323, 327 
triangular, 99, 122, 139, 260, 289, 305 
tanged, 93, 194, 241, 247, 260, 269, 

278, 303 
tanged-and-barbed, 224, 260, 272, 

297, 318, 320, 329 

transverse, 9, 12, 27, 118, 180, 184, 
187, 191, 207, 241, 247, 267, 269, 
272, 278, 304, 305, 313, 318, 331, 334 
arrow-straighteners, 8, 74, 79, 114, 116, 
156, 163, 169, 180, 226, 248, 260, 334 
art: carvings and painting on stone, 190, 
209, 248, 250, 253, 259, 269, 278, 
317, 328, 336, 338 
naturalistic sculpture, 208, 209 
see also animal models, amulets, figur- 
ines, anthropomorphic vases, zoo- 
morphic vases, maeander, spiral, 
stelae 

Asine (Greece), 50, 67, 71, 74, 81 
askoi, 60, 69, 70-1, 98, 103, 104, 142, 241, 256 
Atlantic climatic phase, 2, 11, 13, 14, 177, 

289 

Avebury (England), 331 
axes: antler, 8, 14, 37, 44, 74, 86, 90, 99, 
110, 119, 121, 139, 191, 194, 203, 
289, 305, 313 
flint, tranchet, 11-13, 179, 191, 194, 234, 

305, 314 
polished, 9, 150, 167, 169, 178, 182, 

187, 194, 197, 290, 313, 323 
stone, polished, 4, 12, 17, 27, 37, 44, 64, 
68, 94, 99, 114, 125, 180, 193, 231, 
234, 235, 244, 246, 266, 267, 271, 
274, 276, 277, 282, 289, 293, 295, 
296, 298, 299, 305, 318, 324 
perforated, 74, 90, 94, 107, 114, 122, 

139, 165, 290, 295, 299, 303 
copper, flat, 17, 28, 38, 53, 64, 68, 145, 
154, 162, 167, 183, 201, 235, 241, 
243, 246, 256, 258, 260, 262, 276, 
282, 293, 299, 319, 334 
flanged, 38, 130, 246, 319 
shaft-hole, 19, 28, 95, 99, 130, 145, 

152, 154, 158, 169, 299 
bronze, flanged, 130, 132, 241. 248, 249, 

256, 262, 282, 297, 313, 319, 334 
winged, 83, 243, 250 
palstav, 199, 262, 339 
socketed, 47, 206, 211, 262 
double, 28, 26, 74, 78, 108, 184, 193, 

194, 262, 295, 318 
shaft-hole, 240 
see also adzes, battle-axes 



361 



INDEX 



axe-adzes, 28, 53, 08, 92, 99, 120, 121, 139, 

162, 157, 158, 262 
Azilian culture, 4 

Baalburg culture, 193, 196 

Baden culture, 92, 124-9, 132, 187, 196, 

242, 295 

baking plates. 177, 178, 293, 305 
Banyata (Bulgaria), 84, 94-6, 103 
Barkaer (Denmark), 180. 
barley, 13, 15, 37, 60, 106, 136, 177, 183, 

248, 266, 270, 276, 289, 292, 298, 

323 328 330 
barrows, long, 149, 181, 188, 190, 191, 213, 

259, 306, 317, 325 
round, 6, 72, 77, 80, 132, 145, 150, 156, 

159, 160, 167, 181, 185, 200, 213, 

226, 242, 247, 268, 274, 276, 297, 

306, 317, 319, 329 

basketry models for pots, 60, 62, 112, 116, 
116, 118. 184, 187, 190, 192, 193, 

227, 266 

battle-axes, antler, 121, 123, 146, 159, 161, 

164 

copper, 38, 68 n., 120, 125, 154, 161 
stone, 38, 44, 43, 67, 68, 71, 94, 99, 119, 

125, 139-54, 159 ft., 160, 169, 179, 

182, 187, 226, 242, 247, 291, 295, 

330, 318, 334 
model, 68, 139, 144, 169 
beads, disc, 118, 122, 260, 268, 272 
double-axe, 335 
hammer, 24, 329, 335 
segmented, 34, 128, 132, 147, 167, 199, 

239. 280. 282, 283, 309, 320, 336, 

339 

tortoise, 260, 278, 281, 310 
spacer, 79, 81, 135, 181 
winged, 54, 156, 254, 297 
Beaker culture, 119, 127, 130, 132, 147, 

162, 167, 185, 192, 221, 222-8, 234, 

247, 258, 261, 272, 276, 278, 279, 

307, 309, 318, 329 
beans, 106, 270, 289 

Becker, C. J., 13, 177, 191, 208, 210 

Bell Beaker, see Beaker 

binocular vases, 98, 142 

birch pitch. 10, 14, 290 

bits, bridle, 248 

block topped, see particoloured 

block vases, 19, 33, 113, 116, 114 

boats, 11, 51, 52, 125, 208, 259 

boat axes, see battle-axes 

Bodrogkeresztur culture, 92, 120-3, 126 

Boian culture, 94, 96-8. 143 

Boreal climatic phase, 3, 5, 9, 10, 203, 

208 

Bosch-Gimpera, P., 221 
bossed bone plaques, 44, 76, 285, 254 
bothroi, 37, 66, 125 
bottles, lopsided, 90, 94, 108 
bows, reinforced, 10, 211 
see also arrow-heads 



Brea, L. Bernabo, 229, 237, 244, 257 
Brenner Pass, 127, 128, 242, 249, 302 
Briusov, A. YA., 11, 147, 171, 210 
Brzes<5 Kujawski (Poland), 128, 144, 146, 

180 

Bubanj (Yugoslavia), 92, 93, 103 
Biiyiik Giillucek (Turkey), 36, 95 
burials: in caves, 4, 5, 17, 23, 226, 240, 241, 
242, 250, 258, 266, 278, 307, 311, 
312, 
in short cists, 51, 72, 73, 81, 245, 268, 

282, 290, 306, 317 

in jars, 24, 41, 72, 73, 77, 81, 239, 282 
in middens, 6, 7, 12, 87 
in settlements, 77, 87, 101, 282, 294, 305 
collective, 23, 24, 51, 72, 82, 91, 126, 165, 
182, 185, 188, 198, 219, 226, 233, 
235, 241, 242, 254, 266, 268, 270, 
306 
double, 116, 120, 125, 151, 156, 159 n., 

168, 200, 201, 283, 290 
contracted, 5, 6, 23, 101, 118, 125, 131, 
146, 159, 160, 166, 168, 226, 245, 
246, 259, 269, 290, 293, 297 
erect, 209 
extended, 5, 6, 9, 12, 14, 78, 160, 182, 

188, 191, 209, 250, 293 
flexed, 5, 112, 115, 125, 241, 246 
see also cemeteries, cremation, cists, 
gallery graves, passage graves, 
rock-cut tombs, tholoi 
of skulls, 4, 102 

animals, 124, 167 
Butmir (Yugoslavia), 98-4, 242 
buttons: shanked, 112, 118, 272 

V-perf orated, 226, 241, 248, 260, 263, 

291, 310, 329 
prismatic, 258, 261, 272 
Bygholm (Denmark), 183, 186 



C 14, see radio-carbon 

cairns, see barrows 

callais, 223, 268, 269, 271, 275, 278, 281, 

282, 309, 313, 315, 319 
Campigny, le (France), 14, 305 
cannibalism, 12, 102, 115, 290 
Capo Graziano (Italy), 288, 256 
Capsian culture, 7, 268 
Cardial ornament, 58, 184, 230, 268, 269, 

287, 353 

Castelluccio culture, 284-7, 254, 256 
Catacomb culture and period, 149, 154-6, 

169, 184, 300, 301 
cattle (bovids), domestic, 13, 22, 37, 60, 

85, 106, 124, 136, 145, 150, 166, 177, 

179, 201, 231, 248, 289, 298, 299, 

304, 323, 328, 332 

causewayed camps, 230, 292, 323, 332 
cavalry, 82, 269 
caves, inhabited, 4, 6, 85, 110, 266, 308 

sepulchral, see burials 
celts, see adzes, axes, chisels, gouges 



362 



INDEX 



cemeteries, 24, 27, 41, 48, 72, 115, 118, 120, 
123, 125, 131. 132, 144,^149, 164, 

166, 168, 204, 209, 226, 235, 239, 
246, 250, 258, 270, 274, 290, 298, 
301, 312, 337 

chamber tombs, see rock-cut tombs 
Chamblandes culture, 245, 290 
channelled decoration, 32, 96, 125, 278, 

306, 310, 317, 324, 326, 363 
chariots, 78 

Chassean or Chassey culture, 245, 287, 293, 

803, 305, 206, 310, 317 
chiefs, 37, 67, 78, 90, 119, 126, 144, 150, 

151, 156, 162, 165, 170, 188, 200, 

201, 209, 262, 281, 312, 320, 334 
chisels, socketed bone, 11, 208 

metal, 47, 130, 132, 154 
chronology, 9, 15, 21, 26, 37, 47, 49, 57, 78, 

80, 103, 110, 116, 126, 134, 136, 

167, 175, 176, 199, 202, 204, 233, 
238, 243, 247, 251, 283, 291, 321, 
339 342 

circles round graves, 78, 145, 161, 153, 162, 

167, 200 
cists, megalithic, 51, 72, 162, 165, 193, 195, 

213, 237, 274, 280, 296 
see also gallery graves 
climate, changes in, 2, 137, 167, 288 
collared flasks, 119, 126, 179-184, 190, 196, 

315 

combs, bone, 12, 44, 91, 272 
antler bunched, 293, 324 

wood, 289 
comb-ornament, 109, 140, 163, 170, 204, 

224, 332 

Conco d'Oro culture, 284, 238, 241 
Conguel (Brittany), 317, 326 
copper ores, 48, 121, 127, 220, 257, 270, 

276, 298, 307, 322, 336 
copper trinkets, etc., 97, 113, 122, 142, 164, 

167, 168, 180, 194, 198, 283, 290, 

313 
see also adzes, axes, battle-axes, daggers, 

etc. 
corbelling, 23, 27, 51, 78, 80, 213, 264, 270, 

307, 311, 316, 319, 327, 328 

cord ornament, 71, 96, 109, 133, 145, 151, 
156, 159, 160, 164, 166, 168, 179, 
184, 226, 297, 309, 318, 326, 330, 
332, 340 

core axes, see tranchet 

Cortaillod culture, 191, 244-5, 287, 288-90. 
294, 303, 311, 342 

cranial deformation, 156 

cranian amulets, see amulets 

cremation, 12, 46, 72, 109, 115, 117, 126, 
165, 167, 226, 239, 256, 259, 294, 
301, 306, 311, 317, 319, 325, 326, 
328. 329, 337 

crescentic necklaces, 79, 81, 200, 336, 
338 

crusted ware, 72, 91, 112, 114, 116, 126, 
231, 353 



Cucuteni (Romania), 136-9, 140 
cursus, 317, 826 

daggers, flint, 168, 184, 197, 224, 246, 247, 
330 

metal: bronze-hilted, 180, 198, 202, 248, 
298 

ogival, 29, 73, 298, 334 

Peschiera, 83, 248, 260 

rhomboid, 297, 299 

round-heeled, 79, 180, 167, 200, 228, 
243, 248, 262, 264, 320, 330, 334 

tanged, 36, 38, 52, 120, 154, 165, 241, 
247, 320 

triangular, 29, 53, 61, 235, 241, 256 

unifacial, 146, 183, 271, 276, 308, 340 

West European, 130, 224, 246, 268, 260, 

279, 308, 318, 329 
Deer Island, see OleniJ Ostrovo 
Dendra (Greece), 80 
depas, 48, 69 
diadems, 53, 283 
Diana style, 233, 241, 256 
Dimini culture, 68-4, 98, 112 
disks, metal, bossed, 123, 143, 202, 262 

amber, gold-bound, 33, 334, 336 
dogs, 3, 11, 203, 208 
dolmens, 181, 190, 216, 221, 269 
double-axes, 25, 74, 78, 108, 184, 193, 194, 
202, 262, 318 

see also ingot axes 
dove pendants, 25, 78, 116, 254 
dolmens, 181, 190, 216, 221, 269 
drill-bits, 164, 157 
drums, 196 
duck-vases, see zoomorphic vases 

earrings, 44, 129, 278, 283, 329 

earthquakes, 27, 47 

El Argar (Spain), 282, 340 

El Garcel (Spain), 267, 268, 283 

emery, 48 

Erteb011e culture, 12, 166, 177, 179, 192 

Eutresis (Greece), 50, 61, 57, 68, 69, 71, 

74, 76 

Evans, Arthur, 21, 23, 33, 238 
excised decoration, 54, 69, 94, 97, 100, 

242, 300, 310, 353 

face-urns, 17, 48, 46, 90, 118, 231 

see also zoomorphic vases 
family likeness between skeletons, 82, 219 
Fatyanovo culture, 164. 168-70, 211 
fayence, 25, 33, 128, 132, 147, 150, 167, 
199, 238, 239, 256, 282, 298, 309, 
320, 336, 339 

fibulae, 83, 135, 240, 243, 260 
figurines: female, clay. 17, 36, 39, 58, 61, 
65, 73, 84, 87, 91, 93, 100, 112, 117, 
142, 145, 244, 256, 301, 305 
bone, 101, 209, 274, 278 
ivory, 274 
gold. 101 



363 



INDEX 



figurines: female, stone, 25, 39, 46, 49, 51, 

69, 101, 254, 260, 268, 274, 278, 280, 

325 

male, 73, 101, 142, 209 
filagree, 41, 154 
fish-hooks, 10, 12, 37, 89, 110, 137, 206, 

207 

fish-traps, see weels 
flake axes, see axes, tranchet 
flax, 106, 108, 183, 270, 289 
fluted decoration, 65, 91, 103, 140, 353 
Fontboutese (France), 808, 310 
forecourts, 218, 236, 253, 269, 263, 274, 

275, 325, 326, 327 
forests, 1, 9, 148, 159, 177, 178 
Forssander, E. J., 172, 196 
Fort Harrouard (France), 804-6 
fortifications, 37, 41, 46, 48, 56, 63, 67, 78, 

82, 112, 118, 124, 137, 147, 230, 

231, 238, 239, 249, 264, 270, 382, 

291, 299, 301, 303, 304, 306, 308, 

323 

Fosna culture, 1 1 
fruitstands, 17, 36, 64, 97, 111, 122, 142, 

184, 186, 190, 235, 279 
frying pans, 50, 52, 54, 69 
funerary goddess, 236, 249, 278, 311, 313, 

314, 318, 328 
funnel beakers, 13, 162, 168, 166, 176, 

186, 190, 340 

Galid (Russia), 170 

gallery graves, 190, 196, 198, 214, 216, 221, 

226, 240, 263, 296, 306, 312, 314, 

316, 318, 340 
see also cists 
Garasanin, 84, 87, 89 
girdle clasps, 131, 194 
Globular Amphorae, 164, 158, 194-8 
goats, 13, 22, 37, 106, 136, 150, 177, 248, 

289, 298, 323 
gold, 25, 41, 64, 68, 70, 122, 128, 133, 142, 

198, 200, 220, 223, 238, 270, 278, 

283, 309, 315, 319, 322, 329, 334, 

344 

Goldberg (Germany), 295, 296, 299, 301 
gouges, copper, 74, 154 
stone, 160, 183, 208, 267 
see also drill-bits 

gourd models for pots, 39, 108, 110 
granaries, 67, 118, 231, 267 
Grand Pressigny flint, 207, 305, 306, 313, 

318, 319 

graphite painting, 97, 100, 103 
Gudenaa culture, 13 
Gumelnita culture, 63, 96, 98-102, 143 

HabaSefiti (Romania), 137, 139, 140, 142, 

143 

Hagia Marina (Greece), 60, 61, 71 
Hagios Kosmas (Greece), 67, 69, 72, 280 
Hagios Mamas (Macedonia), 68, 71, 155 
halberds, flint, 277 



metal, 56, 130, 183, 201, 202, 243, 246, 

282, 334, 337 
hammers, metal, 29, 56 

see also battle-axes; axes, perforated 

stone 

handles to pots: animal, 232 
axe, 240, 242, 245, 255, 310 
elbowed, 249 

flanged, 17, 39, 70, 125, 187 
horned, 75, 94, 249 

nose-bridge, 17, 234, 247, 249, 255, 260 
thrust, 89, 66, 95 
tunnel, 234, 256, 258, 300 
wishbone, 17, 70, 76 
see also lugs, subcutaneous 
hares' phalange, see amulets 
harpoons, 4, 5, 8, 13, 89, 98, 111, 150, 166, 

203, 289 * 
Hawkes, C. F. C., 281, 320 
Hawkes, J., 317 
hearses, 124, 125, 151 
Helena, 307, 309, 310 
helmets, 30, 79, 82, 132, 262 
Hemp, W. J., 218, 264 
Hencken, H. O., 132 
henges, 317, 326, 332, 339 
herring-bone masonry, 37, 66 
Heurtley, W. J., 65, 76 
Hissar, Tepe (Persia), 20, 77, 123, 164, 157 
Hluboke- MaSovky (Moravia), 113 
hoards, 31, 44, 98, 109, 121, 128, 170, 198, 
199, 202, 208, 211, 243, 249, 262, 
293, 339 
hoes, antler, 289 

see also mattocks 
Horgen culture, 198, 221, 263, 296-7, 310, 

314, 334 

horses, 46, 67, 71, 78, 79, 124, 136, 145, 
150, 158, 187, 201, 235, 248, 293, 
298, 299, 328 
see also cavalry 
houses: curvilinear, 22, 24, 67, 183, 238, 

239, 249, 262, 267, 305, 308 
rectilinear, 17, 26, 37, 46, 60, 63, 67, 74, 
85, 89, 94, 96, 102, 106, 132, 137, 
166, 180, 183, 192, 239, 282, 292, 
296, 308, 323, 333 
model, 60, 102, 111, 113, 138, 301 
human feet to vases, 39, 97, 111, 232 
Huns' Beds, 188, 192 

Indo-Europeans, 27, 46, 77, 123, 127, 172, 

190, 195 
ingot-axes, 199, 318 

torques, 125, 128-9, 133, 248, 249, 298, 

301 

iron, 28, 206, 264 
ivory, 29, 33, 109, 271, 278 

jet, 226, 271, 276, 281, 338 
Jordanova culture, 103, 123, 167, 196 
Jordansmiihl (Poland), see Jordanova 
jugs with cut-away necks, 89, 52, 66, 263 



364 



INDEX 



Kakovatos (Greece), 80, 336, 339 

Karanovo (Bulgaria), 84, 87, 94, 104 

Khirospilia, see Levkas 

kilns, potters', 32, 43, 46, 62, 73, 74, 139 

Kisapostag culture, 130, 132, 298 

knives, boars' tusk, 11, 208 

Knossos (Crete), M, 21, 26, 27, 33, 77, 81, 

127, 336 

Koln-Lindental (Germany), 106, 118 
KolomiScina (Ukraine), 142 
K6r6s culture, see Starievo 
Kossinna, G., 172, 190, 195 
Krazi (Crete), 23, 24, 51, 280 
Kri6evskil, E., 139, 147, 173 
Kuban culture, 151-5, 157, 158, 165, 195, 200 
Kum Tepe (Turkey), 36, 65, 92, 116 
Kuyavish graves, 188-9, 191, 195, 325 

ladles, clay, 17, 96 

socketed, 100, 114, 184, 186, 190, 244 
Lagazzi (N. Italy), 248-9 
Lagozza culture, 246, 249, 287 
Laibach, see Ljubljansko 
lake-dwellings, 165, 247, 248, 288, 299, 

291, 295 

lamps, cross-footed, see quatrefoil footed 
lapis lazuli, 41, 152 
lead, 25, 38, 41, 61, 68, 307, 308 
leather models for pots, 39, 194, 266, 267, 

287, 290, 293, 303, 305, 324 
see also askoi 

Ledro, Lago di (Italy), 248-9 
Leeds, E. T., 221 
leisters (fish-spears), 9, 14, 206 
Lengyel culture, 92, 112-5, 123 
Lerna (Greece), 67, 76, 235, 237, 254 
Leubingen (Germany), 200 
Levkas (Greece), 58, 69, 71, 72, 73, 76, 77 
Lipari, see Aeolian Islands 
Litorina Sea, 2, 204 
Ljubljansko Blatt (Yugoslavia), 299 
lock-rings, 44, 129, 150, 200 
loom-weights, 40, 86, 96 
Los Millares (Spain), 218, 266, 270-4, 285, 

306, 308, 329, 340 
lugs, animal-head, 23, 64, 108 

trumpet, 17, 80, 65, 66, 71, 96, 126, 233, 

306, 324 
see also subcutaneous string-holes, 

handles 

lunates, see microliths 
lunulae, 247, 285, 338 
Lyngby (Denmark), 7 

mace-heads, cushion, 331 
disk, 109, 118, 184 
knobbed, 122, 139, 150 
rhomboid, 207 
spheroid, 10, 17, 19, 38, 99, 114, 164, 

260, 266, 299 
spiked, 10, 164, 208 

maeander patterns, 64, 96, 98, 108, 122, 
231, 242 



Maglemose culture, 10-12, 116, 206, 210 

Maikop (S. Russia), 151-3, 167 

Marinates, S., 24 

Mariupol (Ukraine), 149, 160 

Matera (S. Italy), 232 

mattocks, see axes, antler 

megalithic tombs, see cists, dolmens, 

gallery graves, passage graves 
megaton houses, 41, 63, 183 
Michelsberg culture, 118, 191, 290, 201-5, 

306 
microliths, 4, 6, 6, 9, 10, 11, 13, 96, 98, 148, 

160, 152, 245, 266, 267, 269, 276 
see also arrow-heads, transverse 
Mikhallovka (Ukraine), 147 
Mikhalic (Bulgaria), 66, 68, 69, 71, 95 
Mikov, V., 94, 96 
Milazzo (Sicily), 239 
millet, 85, 96, 136, 150, 223, 248 
Milojdic, V., 66, 84, 87, 89, 90, 92 
mines, copper, 123, 128, 247, 282, 298, 302 

flint, 183, 187, 236, 293, 324, 331 
Minyan ware, 46, 47, 56, 73, 75, 77, 78, 79, 

92 n. 
models, see animals, basketry, altars, 

gourds, houses, leather, wooden 
Molfetta (S. Italy), 230-2, 234 
Mondsee (Austria), 247, 299 
Monte Bradoni (C. Italy), 241, 246 
Montelius, O., 175, 185, 198, 221, 339 
moulds (for casting metal), 38, 74, 83, 123, 

128, 223, 249, 299 
Mycenae (Greece), 29, 33, 73, 78, 127, 136, 

150, 190, 218, 219, 239, 243, 260, 

256, 336, 339 

Natufians, 16, 23, 64, 150 

Nestor, I., 142 

nets (fishing), 10, 85, 110, 111, 137, 207, 

289 

Nezviska (Ukraine), 110, 136, 143, 144 
Northsealand, 2, 13 

Novosvobodnaya (Russia), 163-4, 167, 195 
nuraghe, 262 

Obermaier, H., 221 

obsidian, 17, 27, 41, 48, 66, 68, 74, 76, 87, 
91, 110, 113, 122, 139, 229, 231, 
234, 238, 244, 245, 254, 257 

ochre, red, in graves, 6, 209, 264, 259 

ochre graves, 103, 168 

oculi motive, 185, 271 

Oder culture, 167-8, 198 

Of net (Germany), 4 

Olenii Ostrovo (N. Russia), 150, 204, 209 

olives, 22, 267 

Olynthos (Macedonia), 112 

Orchomenos (Greece), 69, 73 

Orsi, P., 229, 239 

orthostats, 213 

Ossarn (Austria), 124 

ostrich eggs, 271 



365 



INDEX 



Otzaki (Greece), 68 

ovens, 37, 46, 85, 89, 137, 292, 293 

ovoid vases, 151, 158, 167, 204, 210, 324 

paddles, 11, 208 

Paestum (Italy), 241, 256, 279 

palaces, 21, 26, 37, 56, 67 

palettes, 19, 53, 69 

Palmella (Portugal), 223, 275, 329 

Pantalica (Sicily), 240 

Paris cists, 312 

see gallery graves 

parti-coloured pottery, 58, 65, 90, 353 
passage graves, 182, 185, 193, 211 226, 
242, 269, 276, 307, 816, 328 

see also tholoi, rock-cut tombs 
Passek, T., 136, 147 
peas, 106, 289 
Pecel, see Baden 
Peet, T. E., 229, 240 
pedestalled bowls, see fruitstands 
Pericot, L., 269, 307, 309 
peristalith, 181, 218 

see also circles round graves 
Perjamos culture, 130, 134 
Pescale (Italy), 301 
Peterborough ware, 324, 882 
phalli, 25, 41, 46, 101, 142, 325 
Phylakopi (Greece), 48, 56, 75, 81 
Piggott, S., 320, 323, 324, 331 
pigs, 22, 37, 85, 106, 136, 145, 150, 166, 
177, 195, 201, 203, 231, 248, 289, 
298, 299, 304, 323 
pins: bird headed, 50, 53 

bulb headed, 309 

Bohemian eyelet, 182, 200, 201, 248, 298 

crutch headed, 193, 297 

cylinder headed, 272, 274, 278, 338 

double-spiral headed, 2, 44, 50, 53, 69, 98 

hammer headed, 44, 76, 151, 154, 157, 
165, 166, 169, 173, 183, 186, 247 

knot headed, 44, 45, 129, 132, 139, 144, 
201, 298 

racket headed, 129, 298, 309 

trefoil headed, 298, 309 

with lateral loops, 331, 334 

see also fibulae 
piracy, 48, 51, 238 
pit caves, 27, 51, 72, 91, 156, 167, 234, 241, 

301 

pit-comb ware, 204-210, 332 
pithos burials, see burial in jars 
pit ornament, 185, 204, 324 
Httioni. R., 125. 126, 247 
Honik (Yugoslavia), 90, 91 
plottadki, 137 
ploughs, 187, 248 
points, slotted bone, 5, 10, 207 
Polada (N. Italy), 246 
Poliochni (Lemnos), 36, 37, 41 
pollen-analysis, 1, 13, 178, 186, 206, 210, 

288 
polypod bowls, 309, 337 



population density, see areas, cemeteries 
portals, dummy, 23, 61, 72, 326 
porthole slabs, 152, 158, 165, 190, 195, 198, 

217, 237, 240, 254, 259, 273, 274, 

278, 313, 314, 318, 326 
Postoloprty (Bohemia), 106, 132 
Puglisi, 233, 240, 307 
Punto del Tonno (Italy), 243, 251 
pyxides, 19, 39, 54, 66, 122, 241, 272 

quadrilobate vases, see square-mouthed 
quatrefoil lipped cantharoi, 33, 132, 135 
quatrefoil footed bowls, 86, 166, 300 
querns, 85, 108, 138, 231, 254, 266, 267 

races: brachycranial, 4, 6, 72, 102, 126, 

156, 227, 241, 247, 260, 279, 283, 

314, 329 
dolichocranial, 72, 109, 126, 171, 241, 

247, 260, 283, 290, 294, 314 
Lapponoid, 158, 171, 203, 209 
Mongoloid, 203, 209 
radio carbon dates, 9, 15, 36, 109, 162, 177, 

269, 281, 342 

rapiers, 29, 72, 79, 82, 238, 339 
rattles, 112 

razors, 32, 240, 243, 250 
red-slipped ware, 44, 90, 276 
Remedello culture, 246-8 
ribbon decoration, 17, 93, 116, 122, 242 
Rinaldone culture, 126, 231, 241, 301 
ring pendants, 44, 64, 91, 98, 194, 198 
rings: bone, 111 

stone, 260, 313 
Rinyo-Clacton culture, 332-4 
rivets, silver, 29, 282 

lead, 38 
rock-cut tombs, 24, 27, 61, 72, 78, 82, 91, 

213, 215, 226, 233, 236, 239, 240, 

241, 264, 258, 263, 274, 276, 281, 

285, 312 

see also pit-caves 
rock engravings, see art 
Rossen culture, 113, 117-8, 187, 190, 290, 

291, 295, 304, 315 
Rouzic, Z. le, 317, 319 
rural economy, 68, 86, 105-6, 136, 177-8, 

295, 302, 330 
rusticated ornament, 68, 64, 86, 100, 108, 

230, 305, 353 

sacrifices, see votive offerings 

Saflund, G., 249, 250 

Salcuta culture, 91, 102-3 

Saale-Warta culture, 200-2, 320, 336 

"salt cellars", 284, 241 

sandals, 274, 278 

Sangmeister, 106, 108, 109 

satt, see burials, double 

sauceboats, 62, 70, 93 

saws, 29, 74, 271, 275, 276, 282 

sceptre-heads, 103, 142, 158 



366 



INDEX 



Unfitician culture, 30, 132-5, 170, 199, 249, 

283, 339, 342 
Urfirnis, 65, 69, 90 
urnfields, 46, 103, 126, 132, 162, 167, 239, 

250, 339 
Usatova culture, 144-7, 158, 167 

Vapheio cups, 33 

vase supports, 888-4, 317 

vases: ivory, 272 

metal, 33, 42, 70, 76, 152, 238, 334 
stone, 19, 25, 32, 60, 91, 152, 272, 275, 

334 

Vaufrey, R., 268, 269 
Vidra (Romania), 96, 98-104, 112, 143 
Vila Nova de San Pedro (Portugal), 276, 

278, 279 

Villafrati (Sicily), 258 
Vinca (Yugoslavia), 66, 84, 88-94, 100-1 

110, 112, 126 

Veselinovo (Bulgaria), 94-6, 104 
Vogt, E., 288, 295, 298 
votive deposits in bogs, 8, 177, 178, 185, 

188 

Vouga, P.. 288, 289, 298 
Vufcedol (Yugoslavia), 91, 124, 156, 242, 

299-301 

Walternienburg culture, 184, 198 
wedges, antler, 4, 208 

see also chisels 
weels, 11, 14, 289 



Weinberg, S., 54, 66 

wheats: one-corn, 15, 37, 85, 94, 96, 106, 

124, 136, 177, 183, 248, 289, 291, 

292, 323, 328 
emmer, 13, 15, 94, 96, 106, 124, 136, 177, 

183, 248, 270, 289, 292, 323 
hexaploid, 13, 106, 136, 177, 270, 276, 

289, 292 

wheel, potters', 26, 42, 46, 56, 75 
wheeled vehicles, 26, 78, 124, 126, 151, 154, 

166, 158, 187, 190, 249 
Windmill Hill culture, 323-5 
wooden models for pots, 54, 75, 95, 198, 

242, 249, 283, 300, 309, 337 
wrist-guards, 99, 162, 168, 226, 309, 318, 

330 
writing, 26, 27, 77, 239, 262 

Xanthudides, 6, 23 

Yamno graves, 149, 160-1, 157, 158, 79 
Yessen, 149, 161, 154 
Yortan (Turkey), 36, 38, 65 
yokes, 187, 289 

zinc, 139 

Ztota (Poland), 112, 166 

zoomorphic vases, 43, 60, 91, 115, 142, 301 

see also askoi 
Ziischen (Hesse), 190 
Zygouries (Greece), 50, 69 




Printed by The Murray Printing Company, Forge Village, 
Massachusetts, on paper supplied by Curtis Paper Com- 
pany, Newark, Delaware. Bound by H. Wolff, New York. 



26626