Encounters and Transformations in Iron Age Europe: the ENTRANS Project
Journal article
Armit, I., Potrebica, H., Črešnar, M., Mason, P. and Buster, L. 2014. Encounters and Transformations in Iron Age Europe: the ENTRANS Project. Antiquity: A Review of World Archaeology. 88, p. 342.
Authors | Armit, I., Potrebica, H., Črešnar, M., Mason, P. and Buster, L. |
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Abstract | The Iron Age in Europe was a period of tremendous cultural dynamism, during which the values and constructs of urbanised Mediterranean civilisations clashed with alternative webs of identity in ‘barbarian’ temperate Europe. Until recently, archaeologists and ancient historians have tended to view the cultural identities of Iron Age Europeans as essentially monolithic (Romans, Greeks, Celts, Illyrians etc.). Dominant narratives have been concerned with the supposed origins and spread of peoples, such as ‘the Celts’ (e.g. Collis 2003), and their subsequent ‘Hellenisation’ or ‘Romanisation’ through encounters with neighbouring societies. Yet there is little to suggest that collective identity in this period was exclusively or predominantly ethnic, national or even tribal. Instead, we need to examine the impact of cultural encounters at the more local level of the individual, kin-group or lineage, exploring identity as a more dynamic, layered construct. |
Keywords | Iron Age; Europe; Archaeology |
Year | 2014 |
Journal | Antiquity: A Review of World Archaeology |
Journal citation | 88, p. 342 |
Publisher | Department of Archaeology, Durham University |
Official URL | http://journal.antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/armit342 |
Publication dates | |
Dec 2014 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 26 Jan 2022 |
Output status | Published |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/90386/encounters-and-transformations-in-iron-age-europe-the-entrans-project
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