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Título
The earliest villages in Iron Age Iberia (800–400 BC): a view from Cerro de San Vicente (Salamanca, Spain)
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Early Iron Age
Iberian peninsula
Cerro de San Vicente (Salamanca, Spain)
Household archaeology
Earthen architecture
Archaeological excavation
Clasificación UNESCO
5504.05 Prehistoria
5505.01 Arqueología
Fecha de publicación
2017
Citación
Blanco-González, A., Alario García, C., & Macarro Alcalde, C. (2017). The earliest villages in Iron Age Iberia (800–400 BC): a view from Cerro de San Vicente (Salamanca, Spain). Documenta Praehistorica, 44, 386-401. https://doi.org/10.4312/dp.44.24
Resumen
The onset of the Iron Age underwent manifold disruptions. The emergence of long-lasting nucleated villages in Iberia c. 900/800 BC best encapsulates such profound changes. This paper draws on the results of excavations over the last few decades at a fortified tell-like settlement in central Iberia: Cerro de San Vicente (Spain). The article focuses on formation dynamics in earth architecture to understand the role of cultural choices in the genesis of these sites. The occurrence of sophisticated lifestyles and novel cultural expressions in this village (avant-garde devices such as a drain pipe, unprecedented building techniques, exotic imports and alien practices) suggests the plausible role of inter-regional migration in their adoption. The appraisal of intra-site spatial arrangements sheds fresh light upon the diachronic social trajectories of these agrarian communities, from a seemingly egalitarian organisation to an increasingly ranked one.
URI
ISSN
1408-967X
DOI
10.4312/dp.44.24
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