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The Early Bronze Age in Wessex
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Historical GeographyEarly Bronze AgeMaterial CultureHistorical ArchaeologyPaleolithic ArchaeologyFrench CultureArchaeologyArchaic GlobalizationAnthropologyCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesPrehistoryMiddle Bronze AgeMaterial WealthCultural AnthropologyArchaeological Evidence
The study builds on long‑standing observations of distinctive grave groups in Wessex after the Beaker phase, which suggest a unique Early Bronze Age culture linked to an aristocratic minority from northern France and extensive trade with continental Europe and Scandinavia. The authors aim to use these grave groups to clarify internal and overseas trade networks and to determine whether they represent a culture equivalent to the northern England Food Vessel phase, thereby defining the final stage of the Early Bronze Age. The analysis confirms the presence of such a culture in Wessex during the late Early Bronze Age.
The work on which this study is based was originally undertaken with a view to examining the cultures of the geographical area usually comprised in the term ‘Wessex’ in the period immediately following the Beaker phase. For a great many years a remarkable series of grave-groups have been known, incorporating elements (often spectacular in their implication of material wealth) which were peculiar to the area under discussion, and loosely assigned to the Middle Bronze Age. It was clear from the outset that a study of these groups would throw a great deal of light on trade relations, both internal and overseas, and it also seemed likely that in them might be found a culture equivalent chronologically to the Food Vessel phase of northern England, intervening (in a ceramic sense) between the beakers and the cinerary urns and forming a final phase of the Early Bronze Age—a phase which had already been postulated in the typological series of bronze implements, but which had not reached the dignity of a definite culture. The evidence examined in this paper supports the existence of such a culture in Wessex in the final phases of the Early Bronze Age. It is a highly individual culture whose origin lies in an actual ethnic movement from N. France. The nature of the evidence,—finds from the richly-furnished graves of chieftains—presents us with a view of the material equipment of an aristocratic minority. The basic folk culture appears, from the slight evidence available, to have been similar to the food-vessel culture of the greater part of Britain north of the Thames at this time, but it becomes clear that in Wessex there was; superimposed on this somewhat uninteresting and unenterprising substratum, an intrusive ruling class whose delight in barbaric finery led them to open trade connections not only with their Breton homeland, but with central Europe and Scandinavia, and whose imports of bronze tools and almost certainly of actual craftsmen laid the foundations of the peculiarly individual metallurgical achievements of the British Middle Bronze Age.