Organization of ceramic production at a fortified Early Bronze Age settlement in Moravia (Czech Republic) inferred from minimally destructive archaeometry |
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Authors: | J. Petřík L. Prokeš D. Všianský M. Salaš P. Nikolajev |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Geological Sciences, Faculty of Science,Masaryk University,Brno,Czech Republic;2.Department of Archaeology and Museology,Masaryk University,Brno,Czech Republic;3.Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science,Masaryk University,Brno,Czech Republic;4.Department of Physical Electronics, Faculty of Science,Masaryk University,Brno,Czech Republic;5.Department of Archaeology,Moravian Museum,Brno,Czech Republic |
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Abstract: | This paper explores how pottery production was organized at fortified sites of central Europe at the end of the Early Bronze Age. The organization of pottery production in terms of ethnography-based models was inferred jointly by non-destructive multi-elemental analysis, micropetrography and powder X-ray diffraction. This minimally destructive approach was used to explore the mode of pottery production at the fortified central site Blu?ina (Moravia, Czech Republic). Archaeometry-based indirect evidence indicates that tableware of a specific shape was produced using a specific technology at the site or in its close vicinity and that coarse ware was brought to the site from elsewhere. The results obtained were complexly evaluated and compared with ethnography-based categorizations to reveal the features of production organization of the Early Bronze Age pottery. Multidimensional analysis classified the production as intensified household labour and work of individual retainers, or nucleated corvée, depending on its scale and intensity. |
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