TY - JOUR
T1 - The Strength of Diversity: Macrolithic Artefacts and Productive Forces During the Chalcolithic of Southern Iberia
AU - Eguiluz Valentini, Marina
AU - Delgado Raack, Selina
AU - Risch, Roberto
N1 - Funding Information:
The work herein presented is part of the ‘Kinship, population and production in El Argar (2200–1550 cal BCE): A genealogical approach to sex asymmetries and economic disruption’ (PID2020-112909GB-I00) project of the Ministry of Science and Innovation and has been supported by the SGR and ICREA Academia de la Generalitat de Catalunya programmes. We would like to thank Ana Catarina Sousa and Javier Jover Maestre for helping us in the selection of macrolithic assemblages from the Chalcolithic Age, as well as for the information provided on the archaeological contexts and for their comments on a first version of this text. Both of them, as well as Montserrat Menasanch and Rafael Micó have contributed valuable comments to this research. Thomas X. Schuhmacher has promoted and supported the creation of the inventory of macrolithic artefacts of Pabellón Cubierto in Valencina de la Concepción within the framework of the DFG project ‘Die chalkolithische Mega-Siedlung von Valencina de la Concepción bei Sevilla, Spanien’ (DFG SCHU 1539/4-1 und FA 390/12-1). We also want to mention Mercedes Ortega and Juan Manuel Vargas, the directors of Pabellón Cubierto excavations, for facilitating access to the materials and archaeological documentation of this site.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).
PY - 2023/10/10
Y1 - 2023/10/10
N2 - Any approach to the economic organization of a society depends on our knowledge of the productive forces and relations of production involved. In archaeology, this line of research requires an analysis of the technical quality and quantity of the means of production, as well as their spatial distribution and contextualisation. Macrolithic artefacts constituted the means of production in many of the productive processes of past communities, from the Neolithic period to the end of prehistory. This article seeks to utilize macrolithic data to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the economic organisation of the Chalcolithic communities in the southern half of the Iberian Peninsula between c. 3100 and 2200 cal BC. These communities produced one of the most outstanding, but at the same time puzzling archaeological records known in later prehistory. The main aim of this exploratory approach, the first of its kind, is to determine if the different forms of occupation of the Chalcolithic, namely monumental, ditched enclosures, fortified and unfortified hill-top settlements, and simple, open settlements were distinguished by specific modes of production. This issue is crucial to the on-going debate about the meaning and relevance of the notion of social complexity in the context of Chalcolithic societies and their political organisation. Our study describes the productive forces of the Chalcolithic settlements as highly variable, both in the type of productive tasks performed and in their intensity, and such variability is not explained by aspects like geographic location, form of occupation, or monumentality. The observed wealth and productive diversity, without signs of marked social hierarchies, emerge as a characteristic feature of what can be defined as cooperative affluent societies.
AB - Any approach to the economic organization of a society depends on our knowledge of the productive forces and relations of production involved. In archaeology, this line of research requires an analysis of the technical quality and quantity of the means of production, as well as their spatial distribution and contextualisation. Macrolithic artefacts constituted the means of production in many of the productive processes of past communities, from the Neolithic period to the end of prehistory. This article seeks to utilize macrolithic data to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the economic organisation of the Chalcolithic communities in the southern half of the Iberian Peninsula between c. 3100 and 2200 cal BC. These communities produced one of the most outstanding, but at the same time puzzling archaeological records known in later prehistory. The main aim of this exploratory approach, the first of its kind, is to determine if the different forms of occupation of the Chalcolithic, namely monumental, ditched enclosures, fortified and unfortified hill-top settlements, and simple, open settlements were distinguished by specific modes of production. This issue is crucial to the on-going debate about the meaning and relevance of the notion of social complexity in the context of Chalcolithic societies and their political organisation. Our study describes the productive forces of the Chalcolithic settlements as highly variable, both in the type of productive tasks performed and in their intensity, and such variability is not explained by aspects like geographic location, form of occupation, or monumentality. The observed wealth and productive diversity, without signs of marked social hierarchies, emerge as a characteristic feature of what can be defined as cooperative affluent societies.
KW - Chalcolithic Iberia
KW - Cooperative affluent societies
KW - Ditched enclosures
KW - Fortified settlements
KW - Macrolithic tools
KW - Prehistoric economy
UR - https://ddd.uab.cat/record/283589
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85173674007&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/52990ec6-3973-328e-a54d-e805f73a868e/
U2 - 10.1007/s10963-023-09178-2
DO - 10.1007/s10963-023-09178-2
M3 - Article
SN - 0892-7537
VL - 36
SP - 191
EP - 225
JO - Journal of World Prehistory
JF - Journal of World Prehistory
IS - 2-4
ER -