Search results for "Campaniforme"
showing 10 items of 47 documents
Le Campaniforme et l'Europe à la fin du Néolithique
2006
A paraître : LEMERCIER O. : Le Campaniforme et l'Europe à la fin du Néolithique, in : Actes du colloque international : La Préhistoire de l'Europe occidentale : un bilan des connaissances à l'aube du 3e millénaire, Toulon, 2005, sous presse.; Qu'est ce que le phénomène campaniforme ? Que traduit-il dans l'évolution des sociétés de la fin du Néolithique européen ? Ce court article offre un bref état de la question au début du XXIe siècle en proposant quelques éléments de réponse et quelques questionnements.
Le guerrier dans l'Europe du 3e millénaire avant notre ère. L'arc et le poignard dans les sépultures individuelles campaniformes
2009
Campaniformes insulaires et continentaux de France et d'Italie méditerranéennes: Relations et échanges entre Corse, Sardaigne, Toscane et Midi frança…
2006
Les spectaculaires développements régionaux du Campaniforme dans le sud-est de la France, en Toscane et en Sardaigne traduisent, par un certain nombre d'éléments, une origine commune et des relations parfois suivies de contacts et d'échanges dans la seconde moitié du troisième millénaire avant notre ère. Cependant, leur profusion qui s'oppose à la quasi-absence de vestiges campaniformes en Corse, des décalages chronologiques d'implantation et des influences multiples (méditerranéennes, centre-européennes...) montrent l'existence de plusieurs réseaux de diffusion dans le temps et dans l'espace ainsi que des mécanismes historiques complexes.Ce court article propose de croiser différentes appr…
Campaniformes insulaires et continentaux de France et d'Italie méditerranéennes
2007
The beaker phenomenon and the Genomic transformations of Northwest Europe
2018
Bell Beaker pottery spread across western and central Europe beginning around 2750 BCE before disappearing between 2200–1800 BCE. The mechanism of its expansion is a topic of long-standing debate, with support for both cultural diffusion and human migration. We present new genome-wide ancient DNA data from 170 Neolithic, Copper Age and Bronze Age Europeans, including 100 Beaker-associated individuals. In contrast to the Corded Ware Complex, which has previously been identified as arriving in central Europe following migration from the east, we observe limited genetic affinity between Iberian and central European Beaker Complex-associated individuals, and thus exclude migration as a signific…
Interpreting the Beaker phenomenon in Mediterranean France: an Iron Age analogy
2012
http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/086/ant0860131.htm; International audience; The author offers a new descriptive explanation of the Beaker phenomenon, by focusing on Mediterranean France and making reference to the Greek influx in the same area 2000 years later. In the Iron Age, the influence began with an exploratory phase, and then went on to create new settlements and colonise new areas away from the coast. The Beaker analogy is striking, with phases of exploration and implantation and acculturation, but adjusted to include a final phase where Beaker practice was more independent. Comparing the numerous models put forward to explain it, the author shows that immigration and a cultural package …
Explorations, implantations et diffusions : le "phénomène" campaniforme en France méditerranéenne
2004
In the south-east of France, the first Bell Beaker expansion is manifested by the presence of isolated ceramics but also by a series of settlements established in contact with the indigenous populations. Analysis of the assemblages, their composition and their distribution makes it possible to propose a model of the appearance and development of the Bell Beaker phenomenon but also the probable origin of the elements present in this area.
2500 avant notre ère : l’implantation campaniforme en France méditerranéenne
2013
Around 2 500 BC, drinking beakers with a characteristic pattern appeared in diverse areas of Europe. They are frequently associated with other kinds of materials, like specific ornaments and weapons. This set defines what is called the Bell Beaker phenomenon. In Southern France, more than 600 sites are known. In this very rich European study area, it is possible to study the nature and origin of this phenomenon, and question its poten-tial exogenous components, its modes of establishment and development, and its rela-tionship with local groups that had already settled in the South of France. Consequently, a layout similar to the Greek colonization model of the Mediterranean coast is proposed
Phénomène, culture et tradition : statuts et r̂oles du Campaniforme au IIIe millénaire dans le Sud-Est de la France
1998
Abstract The "Bell Beaker " complex should not be globally perceived, because it seems to include several different entities, as shown by its variations in space and time. A regional approach, in south-eastern France, outlines the existence of a first " Bell Beaker Phenomenon " and its spread in Late Neolithic societies. This relatively marginal phenomenon quickly becomes an actual independent "Bell Beaker Culture ", with different geographical fades. These may have been in contact with surviving local cultures. In the Early Bronze Age, a "Bell Beaker Tradition " integrates some new elements brought in from outside, and seems to extend the Bell Beaker culture. The role of this " Bell Beaker…
Les Campaniformes dans le sud-est de la France
2004
The term "Bell Beaker", in the strict sense, designates a ceramic beaker form with an S-shaped profile that gives it the shape of an inverted bell. This type of drinking-vessel is characterized by both its very particular pattern of decoration and by the generally skilled execution of that decoration. By extension, the decoration characteristic of these beakers bas allowed the expansion of the category "Bell-Beaker" to include other pottery forms and even other types of decoration showing the same tradition, vvhich probably represent an evolution or reproduction of the original Bell Beaker pattern, The recognition of these objects and their definition as a class date to the nineteenth centu…