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Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe: Signing the Land PDF

297 Pages·1997·4.93 MB·English
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ROCK ART AND THE PREHISTORY OF ATLANTIC EUROPE n) o s at W n o ar A g: n wi a dr n ( n Li g n hti g u o R at k c o d r e v ar c e h of t n o cti u str n o c Re ROCK ART AND THE PREHISTORY OF ATLANTIC EUROPE Signing the Land Richard Bradley London and New York First published 1997 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 © 1997 Richard Bradley All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data Bradley, Richard Rock art and the prehistory of Atlantic Europe: signing the land Richard Bradley. Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Art. Prehistoric—Europe—Atlantic Coast. 2. Petroglyphs— Europe—Atlantic Coast. 3. Rock paintings—Europe—Atlantic Coast. 4. Atlantic Coast (Europe)—Antiquities. I. Title. GN803.B66 1997 709′.01′13094–dc21 96–51119 ISBN 0-203-44699-2 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-75523-5 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-16535-0 (Print Edition) 0-415-16536-9 (pbk) CONTENTS List of figures vii List of tables ix List of plates xi Preface and acknowledgements xiv PART I: TERMS OF REFERENCE 1 New directions, new points of view: The experience of 2 prehistoric rock art 2 A chart of the northern seaways: An introduction to the 17 prehistory of Atlantic Europe 3 The circle and the stag: An introduction to Atlantic rock 34 art 4 Time out of mind: The origins and chronology of Atlantic 50 rock art PART II: ROCK ART AND THE LANDSCAPE OF BRITAIN AND IRELAND 5 The rules of engagement: The character of British rock art 70 6 The shepherd on the rock: Rock art in the British 91 landscape 7 Reading Roughting Linn: Rock art and ritual monuments 107 8 The circle and the crag: The micro-topography of British 129 and Irish rock art 9 Public faces in private places: Rock art and Early Bronze 139 Age burials 10 Imaginary landscapes 154 vi PART III: ROCK ART AND THE LANDSCAPE OF ATLANTIC EUROPE 11 In comparison: Rock art and the prehistoric landscape from 160 Brittany to Portugal 12 The carnival of the animals: The distribution of Galician 175 rock art 13 The monarch of the glen: The symbolic character of 192 Galician rock art 14 Sign language: Rock art in the prehistory of Atlantic 211 Europe Bibliography 220 Index 236 FIGURES Frontispiece Reconstruction of the carved rock at Roughting Linn 2.1 The topography of Atlantic Europe 20 2.2 Interaction zones in Atlantic Europe 25 2.3 The distribution of Galician art, Schematic art and fortified sites in 28 the Iberian peninsula 3.1 Medieval pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela 35 3.2 Scottish rock art as recorded by Simpson in 1867 36 3.3 Scottish rock art as interpreted by Mann in 1915 38 3.4 British and Irish rock art as recorded by Breuil in 1934 40 3.5 Outline distribution of megalithic art 41 3.6 The carved rocks at Old Bewick and Laxe dos Cebros 46 4.1 Cup-and-ring carvings interpreted as the plans of houses 51 4.2 Cup-and-ring carvings and the plans of a passage grave and a henge 53 4.3 Motifs characteristic of entoptic imagery 55 4.4 Animals and circular motifs in Galician rock art 57 4.5 A decorated cist from Carnwath 60 4.6 Drawings of weapons at Leiro, compared with metalwork from the 63 nearby hoard 5.1 The regions of Britain and Ireland with major groups of rock art 71 5.2 The locations of British and Irish sites illustrated in the book 72 5.3 The distribution of rock art in Galloway 84 5.4 The distribution of rock art at Millstone Burn 86 5.5 Intervisibility between groups of rock carvings in Northumberland 88 6.1 Distribution of rock carving in north-east Yorkshire 95 6.2 Flint scatters and carved rocks on Ilkley Moor 97 6.3 The location of prehistoric rock carving near Kirkcudbright 101 6.4 The distribution of rock art and lithic artefacts in Strath Tay 105 7.1 Reconstruction of the rock carving at Roughting Linn 108 7.2 The decorated kerbstone at Newgrange 111 7.3 Horned spirals on selected artefacts and monuments 112 7.4 The contrasting use of space in passage graves, henges and stone 113 circles 7.5 Distribution of rock carvings and monuments in the Milfield basin 114 7.6 The spatial relationship between rock carvings and monument 117 complexes 7.7 The distribution of rock art in Mid Argyll 118 viii 7.8 Patterns of intervisibility between carved rocks in the Kilmartin 124 complex 8.1 Alternative design grammars for British and Irish rock carvings 131 8.2 The view from the Boheh Stone to Croagh Patrick 136 9.1 Carvings of Early Bronze Age artefacts at Stonehenge 140 9.2 The relationship between rock art, cists and burial cairns 144 9.3 A kerb cairn and associated rock art at Fowberry 148 9.4 Plan of a round house associated with a carved stone at Trethellan Farm 150 11.1 Groups of continental rock art considered in the text 163 11.2 The distribution of abstract motifs and animal drawings in Galicia 166 11.3 The distribution of rock carvings and settlements in Morrazo 168 11.4 The extent of drought in Galicia during July 171 12.1 The locations of the Galician study areas 182 12.2 Map of the Muros study area 183 12.3 Map of the Rianxo study area 184 12.4 Map of the Campo Lameiro study area 185 12.5 The location of rock art at Campo Lameiro in relation to the 187 movement of animals in the modern landscape 13.1 The sequence at Laxe das Ferraduras according to Anati 193 13.2 Animal tracks in Galician rock art 197 13.3 Animals and circular motifs at Pedra do Pinal do Rei 198 13.4 Drawings of stags in Galician rock art 200 13.5 The weapon carvings at Auga da Laxe 207 13.6 The distribution of weapon carvings in Galicia 208 13.7 Drawings of weapons and idols in Galician rock art 209 14.1 Drawing of a boat at Santa Maria de Oia 213 14.2 Chains of interlinked motifs in Ireland and Galicia 214 TABLES 1 The distribution of circular motifs in six areas of Britain and Ireland 74 2 Regions of Britain and Ireland with similar distributions of circular 74 motifs 3 The relationship between different design elements in Mid Argyll 75 4 The number of linked design elements in Mid Argyll and 76 Northumberland in relation to the number of separate motifs 5 The distribution of passage-grave motifs in Mid Argyll in relation to the 77 maximum number of rings on the same carved surface 6 The number of linked motifs on sites in Galloway in relation to the 77 maximum number of rings on the same carved surface 7 The distribution of passage-grave motifs in Galloway in relation to the 77 maximum number of rings on the same carved surface 8 The distinction between ‘simple’ and ‘complex’ rock carvings in 77 Northumberland 9 The orientations of the rock carvings in five selected regions 78 10 The rock surfaces selected for carving in Mid Argyll 81 11 The rock surfaces selected for carving in Northumberland 81 12 The visibility of carved rocks in Galloway 81 13 The visibility of carved rocks in Northumberland 81 14 The extent of the views from the carved rocks in Galloway 85 15 The extent of the views in the study area at Millstone Burn 87 16 The direction of view in the study area at Millstone Burn 87 17 The distribution of Irish rock art in relationship to potential land use 92 18 The height distribution of rock art in Strath Tay 103 19 The relationship between rock carvings and the position of the Milfield 116 basin 20 The distribution of simple and complex rock carvings in relation to the 116 Milfield basin 21 The character of prehistoric rock art in the Kilmartin complex and in 119 other parts of Mid Argyll 22 The surfaces selected for carving in the Kilmartin complex and in other 119 parts of Mid Argyll 23 The changing character of prehistoric rock art towards the edges of the 120 Milfield basin and the Kilmartin complex 24 Intervisibility between individual sites in the Kilmartin complex 123

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Along the Atlantic seaboard, from Scotland to Spain, are numerous rock carvings made four to five thousand years ago, whose interpretation poses a major challenge to the archaeologist. In the first full-length treatment of the subject, based largely on new fieldwork, Richard Bradley argues that thes
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