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Article Dans Une Revue Séances de la Société préhistorique française Année : 2015

Early Bronze Age Craftmanship in Britanny

L’artisanat à l’âge du Bronze ancien en basse Bretagne

Résumé

Large numbers Early Bronze Age barrows were excavated in Brittany from the second half of the 19th century. This flurry of activity produced various syntheses, published by the main excavators of the time (Aveneau de la Grancière, 1899; Martin, 1900; Du Chatellier, 1907). A century later, a new synthesis coupled with an inventory was published in 1984 by Jacques Briard, titled Les Tumulus d’Armorique. Despite a wealth of data, the different objects discovered in the tombs, whether craft goods or other items, have rarely undergone comparative analysis. A critical review of radiocarbon dates shows continuity between the Bell Beaker Culture (2500- 2150 BC; Salanova, 2011) and the Armorican Tumuli. There is clear contemporaneity between barrows containg arrowheads, called ‘Première série’, and barrows containing pottery, called ‘Seconde série’ (fig. 1). However, these terms and their chronological assumptions should be abandoned (Nicolas, 2011). For the moment, one can tentatively see an early phase (2140-1900 cal. BC) and a middle phase (2020-1750 cal. BC), even if there is much overlap. Re-examination of the artefacts discovered in Early Bronze Age graves shows different degrees of specialization, in relation to raw materials and technological know-how. The Armorican arrowheads appear to be the result of specialized crafting (Nicolas, 2011 and forthcoming), but this was not necessarily a full-time activity as raw material acquisition and flint knapping are easier during the summer (Pelegrin, 2002). Metal daggers reveal considerable expertise: mastery of alloys, large daggers, gold decoration, high quality sheaths. A majority of ornaments are of exotic origin (Briard, 1984a; Du Gardin, 1989; Sheridan and Shortland, 2004; Needham, 2009). The pottery, the typology of which has been revised (Stevenin, 2000), varies considerably in quality between different areas of Brittany. Stone tools (scrapers, points, grindstones) are present in the graves but are poorly documented. The distribution of funerary objects in Brittany shows geographical disparities: very few people were doted with arrowheads, however, daggers have a wider distribution and pottery is distributed uniformly throughout the area. The circulation of Breton objects over the channel in Britain shows the same reality: pottery circulates, daggers circulate and are copied, but arrows do not circulate but are copied. These three types of distribution reflect three different statuses, from common goods to inaccessible and copied goods. The presence of objects specifically intended for the elite indicates that the production of arrowheads, metal objects and related craft items is closely controlled. Exotic ornaments also seem to fit into this pattern as prestige goods. The various pottery vessels suggest a wide range of situations: domestic production, local or interregional workshops. Stone tools, such as scrapers or grindstones, could have been produced in a domestic context. This pattern, based on the burials, will have to be confronted with evidence from settlements, quarries and mines, as well as workshop sites if these do indeed exist.
Plus d’un millier de tumulus ont été fouillés depuis le xixe siècle en basse Bretagne. Ceux-ci ont fourni un important corpus mobilier (pointes de flèches, vases, poignards, haches, fourreaux en cuir, parures, outils en pierre). La chronologie de ces objets a longtemps été discutée, mais un examen critique des dates radiocarbone permet de s’assurer de leur contemporanéité et de leur datation aux débuts de l’âge du Bronze. La revue détaillée de ces objets funéraires permet d’observer différents niveaux de savoir-faire. Certains artefacts (flèches, poignards) ont nécessité une grande habileté technique suggérant l’existence d’artisans spécialisés. D’autres, comme les vases ou les outils en pierre, ont pu être produits dans un cadre domestique ou artisanal. La répartition de ces biens dans les tombes bretonnes et outre-Manche révèle l’existence d’objets communs, possédés par le plus grand nombre, ou d’objets prestigieux, détenus par quelques-uns. Cette distribution hétérogène reflète vraisemblablement une société hiérarchisée, où les objets signent le statut social. En retour, la valorisation des biens dans les sépultures permet de suggérer plusieurs modes de productions d’objets : activités domestiques ou artisanales, libres ou contrôlées, à diffusion locale ou interrégionale.
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Dates et versions

hal-01206613 , version 1 (06-10-2015)

Licence

Domaine public

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-01206613 , version 1

Citer

Clement Nicolas, C. Stevenin, Pierre Stéphan. L’artisanat à l’âge du Bronze ancien en basse Bretagne. Séances de la Société préhistorique française, 2015, Artisanats et productions à l'âge du Bronze, 4, pp.1223-153. ⟨hal-01206613⟩
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