Full Entry Details (Separation, Hybridisation, and Networks. Globular Amphora s…)

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Content Information  
 
Database ID   124
 
Title   Separation, Hybridisation, and Networks. Globular Amphora sedentary pastoralists ca. 3200-2700 BCE. Supplement
 
Author(s)   Johannes Müller
 
 
Contributors   
 
Abstract   Around 3000 BCE, a turning point occurred in Europe: Long-existing regional societies entered into a process of transformation. The result is a world in which new global communication networks brought different regions closer together. From 3200/3100 BCE, the Globular Amphora phenomenon (GA) was the trailblazer in Eastern and Central Europe. Due to a focus on pastoral subsistence, in comparison to more agrarian economic systems, new ritual practices formed in light of a more flexible form of settlement. We initially observe the symbolic separation manifested through the “Globular Amphora” in an area between the Lower Vistula and Middle Elbe. Communication networks form rapidly in the West (the Elbe-Network) and in the East (the Vistula-Podolia Network). The monopolisation of the practice of double cattle burials connected regional patterns of mobility in the lowlands between the Elbe and the Dniester. With the aid of spatial analyses of the systems of symbols (Zeichensysteme) on locally/micro-regionally produced Globular Amphorae, a proxy is developed for the degree of similarity of the GA-habitus in different regions. Bayesian modelling and spatial visualisations of the radiometric dates indicate temporal sequences and synchronic changes within the newly-developed “global” GA-connectivity. Genetic analyses attest to the indigenous character of the GA individuals in Central Europe. Both isotopic and ceramic technology analyses provide evidence for a mobility radius of up to 50 km for the local groups. In the main phase of the GA, the Elbe and Vistula-Podolia networks appear separated. In the West the core areas are in Bohemia/Moravia, the Middle Elbe-Saale-Havel area, and the north-western Baltic areas; in the East, they are along the Vistula, in Podolia-Volhynia, and in the Siret area. GA networks are mostly symbiotically connected with the local and regional agricultural groups. The GA is, among other things, heavily involved in the formation of the multicultural Corded Ware phenomenon. Its end in 2600 BCE is linked to processes of change which also affected the change from Corded Ware to the Bell Beaker phenomenon. Only in the eastern areas, where a strong reciprocal influence with elements from the Steppe existed, can GA still be found until c. 2400 BCE. The emergence of the GA networks is described as social separation on the basis of social disharmonies within the Funnel Beaker societies, which is also visible via a reduction of the human impact in the palaeoecological archives. A new connectivity of diversified groups developed as a form of levelling mechanism, which in the long-term was part of the transformation of the entirety of European prehistory around 3000 BCE.
 
Description   This is the supplement for the Book of the same name.
 
Keywords   Materials; Ceramic; Dating
 
Sources   
 
Language(s)   English
 
Publication(s)   
Müller, J. (2023). Separation, hybridisation, and networks. Globular Amphora sedentary pastoralists ca. 3200-2700 BCE. In Scales of Transformation. Sidestone Press Academics. https://doi.org/10.59641/a0e4613c
 
Collection Type   Research Data
 
Format   
 
Extent   
 
DNB DCC   930
 
Additional Information   
 
 
Spatio-Temporal Categorization  
 
Period(s)   Late Neolithic; Final Neolithic
 
Period(s) Addition   
 
Other Classification   
 
Content Dating Start   3200 BCE
 
Content Dating End   2700 BCE
 
Region(s)   Europe
 
Region(s) Addition   Central Europe, Eastern Europe
 
Marker Position(s)   54.3393, 10.1233
 
 
Data Collection Process  
 
Project Reference(s)   CRC 1266; 290391021; C1
 
Created Start   
 
Created End   2023
 
Last Modified   11.12.2023
 
Published   14.02.2024
 
 
Meta Data Responsibility & Sharing  
 
Metadata Owner   Johannes Müller
 
Metadata Contact   Clemens Kruckenberg, clemens.kruckenberg@gmail.com
 
Citation   Müller, Johannes: Separation, Hybridisation, and Networks. Globular Amphora sedentary pastoralists ca. 3200-2700 BCE. Supplement. Online unter: https://opendata.uni-kiel.de/receive/fdr_mods_00000048.
 
DOI   
 
Access to Dataset    https://opendata.uni-kiel.de/receive/fdr_mods_00000048   via Open Data Repo
 
License   CC BY 4.0
 
 
Mergeable   True