Mycenaean Greece and Bronze Age Italy: cooperation, trade or war?

  • Reinhard Jung (Author)
  • Mathias Mehofer (Author)

Identifiers (Article)

Abstract

The interactions between Italy and Greece from the late 14th to the 11th century BC are the subject of this paper. During that particular period, new bronze types such as Naue II swords, spearheads with cast socket, different implements and dress accessories belonging to the metallurgical koiné spread to the Mediterranean world. Available typological research explains little and thus leaves the processes leading to the distribution of koiné goods only insufficiently understood. We therefore pursue an integrated approach combining archaeometallurgical analyses with the technological and typological classification of artefacts found in different Aegean and Italian regions in order to solve the problem. As a result, a number of bronzes from late Mycenaean contexts can be identified as imports from Italy. Furthermore, our research supports the theory that the local production of Italian-type impasto pottery and the introduction of bronze types of the metallurgical koiné were two related phenomena in the Late Palatial and Post-palatial Aegean societies.

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Published
2018-09-03
Language
en
Contributor or sponsoring agency
RGZM
Keywords
Bronze Age, Mediterranean, Aegean, Italy, lead isotope analysis, archaeometallurgy, weapons