HOW ANCIENT EUROPEANS SAW THE WORLD This page intentionally left blank HOW ANCIENT EUROPEANS SAW THE WORLD Vision, Patterns, and the Shaping of the Mind in Prehistoric Times PETER S. WELLS Princeton University Press ◆ Princeton and Oxford Copyright © 2012 by Princeton University Press Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TW press.princeton.edu Jacket Photograph: Arm and neck rings. Gold. Iron Age. Erstfeld URRibitäler. Inventory number: A-52044-A-52050. Courtesy of the Swiss National Museum, Zurich. All Rights Reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wells, Peter S. How ancient Europeans saw the world : vision, patterns, and the shaping of the mind in prehistoric times / Peter S.Wells. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-691-14338-5 (alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-691-14338-2 (alk. paper) 1.Prehistoric peoples—Europe, Western. 2. Material culture—Europe, Western. 3. Antiquities, Prehistoric—Europe, Western. 4. Symbolism. 5. Bronze age—Europe, Western. 6. Iron age—Europe, Western. I.Title. GN803.W44 2012 936—dc23 2012001534 British Library Cataloging-in- Publication Data is available This book has been composed in Minion Printed on acid-free paper. ∞ Printed in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 CONTENTS List of Illustrations vii Preface xi Acknowledgments xvii Part I:Theory and Method Chapter 1: Of Monsters and Flowers 1 Chapter 2: Seeing and Shaping Objects 18 Chapter 3: The Visual Worlds of Early Europe 34 Chapter 4: Frame, Focus, Visualization 52 Part II: Material: Objects and Arrangements Chapter 5: Pottery: The Visual Ecology of the Everyday 72 Chapter 6: Attraction and Enchantment: Fibulae 99 Chapter 7: Status and Violence: Swords and Scabbards 112 Chapter 8: Arranging Spaces: Objects in Graves 131 Chapter 9: Performances: Objects and Bodies in Motion 155 Chapter 10: New Media in the Late Iron Age: Coins and Writing 176 Part III:Interpreting the Patterns Chapter 11: Changing Patterns in Objects and in Perception 188 Chapter 12: Contacts, Commerce, and the Dynamics of New Visual Patterns 200 Conclusion Chapter 13: The Visuality of Objects, Past and Present 222 Bibliographic Essay 231 References Cited 249 Index 281 This page intentionally left blank ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 1. (a) Bronze flagon with coral ornament from Basse-Yutz in eastern France. (b) Detail of the creature represented on the top of the handle. (c)Detail of the face at the base of the handle. 2–3 Figure 2. Map showing sites mentioned in the text. 4 Figure 3.Timeline from 2000 BC to AD 2000. 10 Figure 4. The field at Hascherkeller on the outskirts of Landshut, Bavaria, Germany, where a Late Bronze and Early Iron Age settlement was situated. 39 Figure 5. Bronze Age burial mounds at Västra Karaby, Scania, Sweden. 41 Figure 6. Megalithic tomb complex at Lindeskov, Fyn, Denmark. 42 Figure 7.Stonehenge, an exceptionally complex Neolithic stone circle on Salisbury Plain, southern England. 43 Figure 8. Grass-covered remains of the earth, timber, and stone wall at the oppidum at Altenburg, southern Baden- Württemberg, Germany. 44 Figure 9.Early Bronze Age ceramic vessel from Hascherkeller, Landshut, Bavaria, Germany. 53 Figure 10.Drawing of a scabbard from LaTène, Switzerland. 54 Figure 11.Schematic plan of the Late Iron Age grave at Boiroux in south- central France. 56 Figure 12.Rejoined sherds of an Early Bronze Age jar from Hascherkeller, Landshut, Bavaria, Germany. 73 Figure 13. Middle Bronze Age cup from Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany. 87 Figure 14.Sherd of a Late Bronze Age cup from Altdorf, Bavaria, Germany. 89 Figure 15.Late Iron Age pottery sherds from Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany, showing a variety of different kinds of comb decoration. 95 Figure 16.Drawing of an Early Bronze Age fibula from Bredsätra, Sweden. 106 Figure 17.Drawing of an Early Bronze Age fibula from Świdnica, south- western Poland. 106 Figure 18.Drawing of a Late Bronze Age fibula from Mörigen, Switzerland. 107 Figure 19.Drawing of an Early Iron Age fibula from Zirknitz, Austria. 107 viii LIST OFILLUSTRATIONS Figure 20.Drawing of an Early LaTène fibula from Panenský Týnec, Bohemia, Czech Republic. 108 Figure 21.Drawing of an Early LaTène fibula from Beilngries, Bavaria, Germany. 108 Figure 22.Drawing of a Middle LaTène fibula from Duchcov, Bohemia, Czech Republic. 109 Figure 23.Drawing of a Middle LaTène fibula from Münsingen, Switzerland. 109 Figure 24.Drawing of a Late LaTène Nauheim-type fibula, from Stradon- ice, Bohemia, Czech Republic. 110 Figure 25.Drawing of a Late LaTène fibula showing ornate openwork inside the opening on the foot. 111 Figure 26.Drawing of the scabbard from Bugthorpe, Yorkshire, England. 113 Figure 27.Sketch of a wooden scabbard containing a sword from Muldbjerg, Denmark. 113 Figure 28.Drawing of iron swords in scabbards, from earliest Iron Age (left) to the latest prehistoric Iron Age. 118–119 Figure 29.Drawings of the scabbard and sword from Hochscheid, tumulus 2, Rhineland- Palatinate, Germany. 124–125 Figure 30.Drawing of the top of a scabbard from LaTène, Switzerland. 126 Figure 31.Drawing of the scabbard from Amerden Lock, Berkshire, England. 127 Figure 32.Drawings of the top of the scabbard from Badenheim, Rhineland- Palatinate, Germany. 129 Figure 33.Schematic plan of an Early Bronze Age grave at Poing, east of Munich, Bavaria, Germany. 139 Figure 34.Schematic plan of a late Middle Bronze Age grave at Mannsdorf, Lower Bavaria, Germany. 142 Figure 35.Schematic plan of an Early Iron Age grave at Grosseibstadt, in Lower Franconia, northern Bavaria, Germany. 145 Figure 36.Schematic plan of a Late Iron Age grave at Welwyn Garden City, north of London, England. 150 Figure 37. Feasting scene on the situla from Kuffarn, Austria. 160 Figure 38.Photograph of the cliff outcrop (just right of center) at Schnellnecker Wänd, Bavaria, Germany. 166 Figure 39.Drawing of the scabbard from Grave 994 at Hallstatt, Upper Austria. 171 Figure 40.Drawing of inner plate E from the Gundestrup Cauldron, Gundestrup, Denmark. 174 Figure 41. Gold coin from Crémieu, Isére, France. 177 Figure 42. Bronze coin from the oppidum at Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany. 180 LIST OFILLUSTRATIONS ix Figure 43.Silver-coated bronze coin from the oppidum at Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany. 180 Figure 44. Gold coin of the CRICIRV type. 181 Figure 45.Inscribed Roman tombstone from Mainz, Germany. 185 Figure 46. Map showing some of the commercial centers of the second and first centuries BC in Eurasia and Africa, and sites near the Black Sea mentioned in the text. 212 Figure 47. Map showing the locations of some of the oppida in temperate Europe. 217
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