Litcius/Paper detail

Early Balkan Metallurgy: Origins, Evolution and Society, 6200–3700 BC

Miljana Radivojević, Benjamin W. Roberts

2021Journal of World Prehistory31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This paper analyses and re-evaluates current explanations and interpretations of the origins, development and societal context of metallurgy in the Balkans (c. 6200–3700 BC). The early metallurgy in this region encompasses the production, distribution and consumption of copper, gold, tin bronze, lead and silver. The paper draws upon a wide range of existing archaeometallurgical and archaeological data, the diversity and depth of which make the Balkans one of the most intensively investigated of all early metallurgical heartlands across the world. We focus specifically on the ongoing debates relating to (1) the independent invention and innovation of different metals and metal production techniques; (2) the analysis and interpretation of early metallurgical production cores and peripheries, and their collapses; and (3) the relationships between metals, metallurgy and society. We argue that metal production in the Balkans throughout this period reflects changes in the organisation of communities and their patterns of cooperation, rather than being the fundamental basis for the emergence of elites in an increasingly hierarchical society.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Bronze AgeBronzeMetallurgyConsumption (sociology)Production (economics)Diversity (politics)Interpretation (philosophy)ArchaeologyHistoryAnthropologySociologyMaterials scienceSocial scienceComputer scienceProgramming languageMacroeconomicsEconomicsArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesMetallurgy and Cultural ArtifactsArchaeological Research and Protection