Title: Overview of Bronze Age World
1Overview of Bronze Age World
2Approximate Dates
- The Bronze Age primarily took place between 3500
BC and 1200 BC, and is traditionally divided into
the Early Bronze Age (c.3500-2000 BC), Middle
Bronze Age (c.2000-1600 BC), and Late Bronze Age
(c.1600-1200 BC), with progressively more
sophisticated metallurgy which culminates in the
discovery of ironworking. - The Bronze Age began 5,500 years ago in the
present-day areas of Turkey, Iran, and Iraq,
which was also the cradle of human civilization.
By this time permanent settlements were already a
few thousands years old, but it took time for
these early people to discover the potential of
metallic ores. The birthplace of metallurgy is
usually taken to be Anatolia, Turkey. The Indian
Bronze Age began in 3300 BC with the Indus Valley
civilization. In China and southeast Asia, the
Bronze Age began around 2100 BC. Throughout
Europe the Bronze Age began between 2100 BC and
2000 BC or so, with sophisticated Bronze Age
civilizations rising throughout the 2nd
millennium BC.
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4Features of bronze age Civilizations
- The Early Bronze Age saw the rise of urbanization
into organized city states - Monumental architecture
- Settlements still largely agriculturally based
- Social stratification. More complex and skilled
specialization - the invention of writing
- In the Middle Bronze Age movements of people
partially changed the political pattern of the
Near East with central monarchies - The Late Bronze Age is characterized by competing
powerful kingdoms and their vassal states
(Ancient Egypt, Assyria, Babylonia, Hittites,
Mitanni). Warfare common - Extensive contacts were made with the Aegean
civilization in which the copper trade played an
important role
5BRONZE AGE CIVILIZATIONS
- Middle and New Kingdom Egypt
- Mesopotamia
- Caananites
- Hittite Empire
- Indus Valley
- Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations
6Race to Preserve Worlds oldest ( 5,000yrs) town
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9Mycenaean civilization compared to Minoan
- Many cultural customs inherited
- Differences Mycenaean Cities fortified Mycenaean
was a warlike society - Mycenae weapons and armour found in graves of
leaders
10Aerial View of Excavated Site
11RECONSTRUCTION OF THE PALACE AT PYLOS
12Mycenae Lion Gatecyclopian Walls
13A Prosperous City State
- Each city state had a fortified palace surrounded
by massive walls - Outside of the large estate of the wannax,
farmland was collectively owned. - The economy was based on agriculture and
livestock breeding. - They produced oil, flax and wool.
- They were also skilled craftsmen
- The images depicted on their pottery and weapons
illustrate a warrior culture with a taste for
luxury,
14Grave Goods
15 Mycenaean SocietyHierarchically Structured
- King/Ruler
- Warrior Caste Companions (Mycenae)
- Priests and Priestesses
- Officials and Local Administrators
- Scribes
- Farmers
- Slaves
16Warrior Head
17Mycenean society
- Mycenaeans engaged in sea going commerce
- Aggressively expansionist
- Traded with Sicily, Libya, Anatolia
- Fortified towns using masonry
- Later stages used Linear B writing
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19CYCLOPEAN MASONRY
20- Evidence of Mycenaean Aggression
- On Linear B tablets lists of Asian slave women
and imported objects from all over the
Mediterranean luxury items.Prehistoric arms
race? The massive fortifications to protect the
Argive Plain. Do these citadels house one
extended family, or indicate frequent wars
between states?Wood examines Greek legend, such
as the traditional hatred between Thebes
Orchomenos.
21BRONZE AGE MYCENAEAN WEAPONS
22- Meriones gave Odysseus a bow, a quiver and a
sword, and put a cleverly made leather helmet on
his head. On the inside there was a strong lining
on interwoven straps, onto which a felt cap had
been sewn in. The outside was cleverly adorned
all around with rows of white tusks from a
shiny-toothed boar, the tusks running in
alternate directions in each row. Homer
23Linear A and B
24Mycenaean trade
- Luxury items came from the east- gold ,ivory and
gemstones - Amethyst from Egypt and Amber from the Baltic
- Exported products were bronze weapons,
jewellery, olive oil, wine, wool and stemmed
drinking cups
25Mycenaean art
- Pottery was wider at the top than the bottom and
used spirals, bands, fish, vegetable life and
human figures to decorate. - Mass produced to satisfy local and trade
- Small clay figures found in great numbers
especially in tombs - Small cups, goblets and jugs, many fashioned from
gold - Scarabs and gold rings found in tombs
26Early Bronze Age jug
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30- Found in large numbers in tombs And shrines,
these small clay idols were possibly of a female
deity - Typical of these simply shaped and painted
figurines are the ankle length, belted clothing,
a kind of crown and specific arm postures. - Because of their similarity to the corresponding
letters of the Greek alphabet, these types of
figurines are known as phi and psi idols.
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33Burial practices
- Two types may represent a change in dynastic
rule. - Grave Circle B
- Tholos tombs, nine found at Mycenaea
- Bodies dressed in lavishly decorated shrouds,
were adorned with gold items and diadems and
their faces were covered by masks of gold. The
bodies were lowered into the shafts and
spectacular grave goods , made of precious metals
were placed inside. - Here were male skulls with crowns of gold and
golden masks,, here were osseos ladies with
golden diadems, here were painted vases, beads of
amethyst and amber, heavily ornamented daggers,
gold rings and cups, even clothing embroidered
with thin plates of gold.
34- Archaeologists now believe that gold, tin and
Amber came from distant ports in Anatolia and the
Baltic.
35Circle A graves
36Archaeological remains of a Circle A Grave
37Tholos tomb
38Burial goods
39Mycenaean weaponry-Shields were made of wood and
so were not preserved, but images of them were
preserved on bronze daggers.
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41Mycenaean soldiery
42END OF GREEK BRONZE AGE
- The collapse of the Mycenaean palaces and
civilization occurred mysteriously at 1100 BC. - Various theories have been proposed
- (a) Economic Factors
- (b) Climatic Changes
- (c) Internal Social Upheaval
- (d) Invasion from Outside the Aegean World
43- Fall of Mycenaean Palaces
- After the disruptions at the end of the Bronze
Age, representational art was lost, along with
writing and other arts associated with the
palaces and palace life.
44End of Mycenaea and the Trojan War?
- According to Homer, when Troy was destroyed, it
was the Mycenaeans who sacked it. Based on the
archaeological evidence, about the same time
Hisarlik burned and was destroyed, the entire
Mycenaean culture was also under attack. - Beginning about 1300 BC, the rulers of the
capital cities of the Mycenaean cultures lost
interest in constructing elaborate tombs and
expanding their palaces, and began to work in
earnest on strengthening the fortification walls
and building underground access to water sources.
These efforts suggest preparation for warfare. - One after another, the palaces burned, first
Thebes, then Orchomenos, then Pylos. After Pylos
burned, a concerted effort was expended on the
fortification walls at Mycenae and Tiryns, but to
no avail. - By 1200 BC, the approximate time of the
destruction of Hisarlik, most of the palaces of
the Mycenaeans had been destroyed.
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46HITTITE EMPIRE
47MONUMENTAL ARCHITECTURE
48- They were able to build a large empire because of
their military strength. Between 1400 BC and
1200 BC, they ruled over most of the Fertile
Crescent.
49The people lived in cities fortified by thick
stone walls. They build palaces and temples.
Outside the cities, farmers grew food for
everyone. Their empire fell apart around 1200 BC.
50A Balance of Power 1200 B. C. E.
51Hattusas-Capital of the Hittite Empire
52RECONSTRUCTED CAPITAl
53Hittite Writing
54Hittite Art and Sculpture
55BRONZE AGE TRADE NETWORKRole of the Black
Sea??moodle
56The Black Sea- crossroads between Europe, Asia
and the Middle East
57 Source of tin for the Bronze Age
- Until 1984 we did not know the source of tin for
the ancient bronze civilizations of the Near
East. Now more than 40 ancient sites of tin
mining have been discovered in the Taurus
mountains of southern Turkey, only 40 km from the
Cilician Gates,. The area has a great variety of
metal ores, including deposits of gold and
silver. But lead is also present, and lead
artefacts are known from Çatal Höyük. Cast lead
figurines had become common by the late third and
early second millenia, and silver was important
from the late fourth millennium.
58MYTH AS EVIDENCE
- According to Greek mythology, on the eastern
shores of the Black Sea, there was once a kingdom
called Kolchis. Located in what is today the
Republic of Georgia, this kingdom was said to be
the home of the Golden Fleece, the legendary
treasure that Jason and his Argonauts set out to
find . - The Greeks originally referred to the Black Sea
as Pontos Axeinos - the Inhospitable Sea - for
good reason. Large sections of the southern and
Crimean coasts are mountainous and offer few
protected anchorages. Violent storms and
dangerous winds from both north and south made
navigation treacherous for ancient mariners.
Despite these hazards, however, the Mediterranean
cultures were drawn to the Black Sea by its
enormous economic potential
59- The evidence for Bronze Age Mediterranean
seafarers in the Black Sea is not limited to
mythology. Mycenaean anchors and oxhide-shaped
copper ingots have been found off the western
coast of the Black Sea. This aspect of Bronze Age
seafaring, however, remains largely unexplored.
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61What Links the Two????
Did Mycenaeans know about the Black Sea? Was
Troy a geo-commercial gatekeeper controlling
access to the Black Sea? Although evidence has
been limited by political opportunities for
maritime archaeology in the Black Sea, recent
projects have revealed Mycenaean pottery at
Kolchis and Masat, oxhide ingots and Mycenaean
double headed axes found in the Ukraine. Likewise
finds at Mycenaea such as the boar tusk helmet is
supposed to have originated from Southern Russia.
Some scholars suppose that the wide use of gold
in Mycenaean shaft graves is linked to Pontic
trade known to be a rich source of gold. This
gives a much larger meaning to the Myth of Jason
and the Golden Fleece