Bronze Age iron artefacts in France: an update

被引:0
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作者
Jambon, Albert [1 ,2 ]
De Soto, Jose Gomez [3 ]
Dumont, Leonard [4 ,5 ]
Kerouanton, Isabelle [6 ]
机构
[1] Sorbonne Univ, Paris, France
[2] Museum Natl Hist Nat Paris, Paris, France
[3] Univ Rennes 1, Lab Archeosci, UMR 6566 CReAAH, CNRS, Bat 24-25,Av Marechal Leclerc, F-35042 Rennes, France
[4] Univ Ghent, Dept Archaeol, Ghent, Belgium
[5] Univ Bourgogne Franche Comte, UMR 6298 ARTEHIS, 6 Blvd Gabriel, F-21000 Dijon, France
[6] Inrap, Rech Archeol, Paris, France
来源
关键词
Iron; Late Bronze Age; forgery; Median France;
D O I
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中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
If iron was used in Asia Minor from the 3rd millennium BC, it was not known in Western Europe until the 13th century BC. In France, its first appears towards the end of the Bronze Age, possibly during the 13th century BC (Bronze final I / Bz D). Iron has been subsequently documented, especially during the 9th century BC (Bronze final IIIb / Late Atlantic Bronze Age 3 / Bz B2-3). Metallurgic iron is known only during this last stage of Late Bronze Age. The inventory of objects found in France, drawn up in 1981 and revised in 2009 has not changed much, despite several recent studies. However renewed data, with new discoveries and some objects removed from the list, call for an updated overview. The analysis of the iron rivet inserted in the Medoc Middle Bronze Age axe from Ygos-Saint-Saturnin (Landes) revealed that this rivet, presented until then as the oldest iron element in France, is nothing more than a modern addition, confirmed when the first publications of the axe were verified. This important new chronological element leads us to review former data of these first iron objects, to analyse several of them and to review the previous inventory of the first iron artefacts produced during the Bronze Age. We underline that the emblematic sword with a bronze hilt and an iron blade known as from Le Gue de Velluire (Vendee) is actually a forgery. It is in fact a modern reassembly of an Iron Age blade on a Late Bronze Age hilt. Twenty-two discoveries of iron objects are listed, bringing together around forty iron objects in total. For the early and middle stages of Late Bronze Age, we have retained a bronze collared pin with its head mounted on an iron shaft found in the Saone river, two small iron rings and an "object of the same metal" found in the Champigny tomb in the Aube, as well as two iron pins on a spearhead found in the riverbed of the Moselle. Iron is more common in the later stage of the Late Bronze Age and is found as small or medium-sized objects. The inventory includes ten arrowheads of the Le Bourget type, known in Saone-et-Loire and Cote-d'Or as well as in Vienne and Charente, five pins (including four in the Bourget Lake, and the fifth, with an iron shaft and bronze head from a hoard in Oise) and two bracelets (the Bourget Lake and Cote-d'Or). We have listed at least two iron knives: one from the Geraud tumulus in Saint-Romain-de-Jalionas (Isere) and one or two with a wide blade from the Queroy cave in Chazelles (Charente). Various small objects, whose nature and function cannot always be determined, as well as a few rings and rivets are also known in Cote-d'Or, Seine-et-Marne, Cher, Indre, Vendee and Charente. Four iron slags were found in Loiret, but their dating remains uncertain and needs to be clarified by additional analyses. Finally, three swords with bronze hilts, from Jura, Savoie and Drome, are decorated on the guard, the grip and the pommel with inlayed iron stripes. Conversely, the iron knife from the Geraud tumulus is mostly composed of iron and adorned with bronze inlays. The three artefacts dating before the Late Bronze Age IIIb all come from eastern France, two of them from rivers and the third from a burial. During the Late Bronze Age IIIb, iron objects come from a broad area including the Alpine lakes and eastern France and extending to the Atlantic coastline, excluding the south of the country. A diffusion from the Balkan area of this new material and the techniques related to it seems possible, rather than from the Mediterranean, in Provence and Languedoc, where iron does not seem to spread before the last quarter of the 8th century BC. It is only much later, during the Iron Age that this new metal becomes popular and supersedes copper alloys.
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页码:501 / 525
页数:25
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