Copper Ornaments in the Iberian Chalcolithic

Technology versus Social Demand

Authors

  • M. Murillo-Barroso Spanish National Research Council
  • I. Montero-Ruiz Spanish National Research Council

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v25i1.53

Keywords:

copper ornaments, metallurgical technology, Iberian Peninsula, social complexity

Abstract

A general feature of the first metallurgy in the Old World is the manufacture of personal ornaments. In the Iberian Peninsula, however, the earliest copper items during the Chalcolithic are not ornaments, but tools and tool-weapons. This situation changes radically in the Bronze Age, when copper ornaments constitute the largest group of objects. Technological divergences, which are also evident, speak of an autonomous and distinct development of metallurgy in Iberia, one that could have limited the elaboration of ornaments. The question we raise is: why was copper not used in Iberia for the manufacture of personal ornaments during the Chalcolithic? We try to answer this by analysing the technological and socioeconomic aspects of the social demand for these products in the Chalcolithic.

Author Biographies

  • M. Murillo-Barroso, Spanish National Research Council
    Institute of History, Spanish National Research Council (CCHS-CSIC), C/Albasanz 26-28, 28037-Madrid, Spain
  • I. Montero-Ruiz, Spanish National Research Council
    Institute of History, Spanish National Research Council (CCHS-CSIC), C/Albasanz 26-28, 28037-Madrid, Spain

Published

2012-06-05

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Murillo-Barroso, M., & Montero-Ruiz, I. (2012). Copper Ornaments in the Iberian Chalcolithic: Technology versus Social Demand. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 25(1), 53-73. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v25i1.53