Conflict and Competition in Spanish Prehistory: The Role of Warfare in Societal Development from the Late Fourth to Third Millnium BC

Authors

  • Sarah J. Monks University of Reading

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v10i1.3

Keywords:

Mediterranean Archaeology, warfare, conflict, competition

Abstract

The inevitability of war or warfare cannot be taken for granted in prehistory. Nor can it be seen merely as something constantly going on in the background throughout societal development. Conflict is all too often explained as either a natural human characteristic, which does not require any explanation, or as the inevitable solution to some economic or environmental crisis or change. It is rarely defined or explained, and has not been ascribed a significant role in social change. This paper seeks to address these issues by developing a theoretical framework, which is tested through a specific archaeological case study. It is argued that conflict and competition have a significant role to play in explaining and tracing some of the social and cultural changes which took place from the Late Neolithic and throughout the Chalcolithic in prehistoric Spain. .

Author Biography

  • Sarah J. Monks, University of Reading
    Sarah Monks is a graduate of Reading University. She obtained her BA in Ancient History and Archaeology, her MA in Mediterranean Archaeology, and is currently completing her doctoral research from which this paper is taken. Her research interest include the anthropology and ethnography of warfare, Bronze Age East Mediterranean trade, and Chalcolithic and Bronze Age Cyprus. She is currently preparing for publication the final report on the Late Bronze Age funerary deposits from the site of Maroni Tsaroukkas in southern Cyprus (as part of the Maroni Valley Archaeological Survey Project). Her fieldwork interests have included excavations and survey projects in Britain, Spain, Mallorca, Italy, Greece and Cyprus.

Published

1997-09-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Monks, S. J. (1997). Conflict and Competition in Spanish Prehistory: The Role of Warfare in Societal Development from the Late Fourth to Third Millnium BC. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 10(1), 3-32. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v10i1.3