The Cutting Edge

A New Look at Early Aegean Metallurgy

Authors

  • Georgia Nakou Merton College, Oxford

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v8i2.1

Keywords:

metallurgy, complex societies

Abstract

Metal has long been awarded a central role in the emergence of complex societies in the Aegean Bronze Age. It is suggested in this paper that the prominent position of metal in the archaeological record of the Early Bronze Age of southern and insular Greece in particular is the manifestation of deliberate social strategies in the past, whose attainment was not so much the invention as the transformation of an existing medium through the imposition of radically different production and deposition mechanisms. The Early Bronze Age use of metal is contrasted with the increasing evidence for patterning in metal use in the later phases of the Aegean Neolithic. Finally, a diachronic model is suggested linking the contrasting modes of production and consumption of metal.

Author Biography

  • Georgia Nakou, Merton College, Oxford
    Georgia Nakou is a graduate of Reading University and is presently holder of the Leventis Senior Scholarship at Merton College, Oxford. Her current interests include technology and exchange in non-state societies, the human body and society, and interpretive aspects of regional survey.

Published

1995-12-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Nakou, G. (1995). The Cutting Edge: A New Look at Early Aegean Metallurgy. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 8(2), 1-32. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v8i2.1