Scales of Conflict in Bronze Age to Iron Age Britain: Enemies both Outside and Within

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Abstract

In this paper I assess two archaeological phenomena for Bronze to Iron Age Britain: the expanding scale of conflict over this period and the practice of what is often called deviant burial, and I consider their possible connection. Such burials may relate to a wider pattern of social violence, given that community setbacks need to be explained away, perhaps requiring scapegoats to take the blame, who met their death as a result of being identified as ‘the enemy within’.) Although burials with weaponry occurred in the Early Bronze Age, there is little evidence of conflict and few deviant burials. The Later Bronze Age and the Iron Age, by contrast, provide significant evidence at varying scales of both warfare and deviant burial practices.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationMaterialisierung von Konflikten/Materialisation of Conflicts
Place of PublicationBonn
Pages259-276
Number of pages18
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2019

Keywords

  • 2020

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