2017 - The power of production in the northern Iberian world. In Brysbaert and Gorgues (eds), Artisans vs Nobility ?, Sidestone Press, Leiden, 2017. (original) (raw)
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Saguntum: Papeles del Laboratorio de Arqueología de Valencia-Extra, 2020
In this paper we revise and re-interpret some of the areas in the oppidum of Puente Tablas (Jaén) for the Iberian phase (late fifth-third century BC), focusing on the evidence of textile weaving. In this case, we aim to analyse this activity as a productive function, endowing it with the value it merits as part of the so-called maintenance activities, linking it not only to the social sphere, but also to those of the economy and culture. In particular, this article focuses on the analysis of hitherto unpublished complexes and contexts associated with this Iberian oppidum. This analysis is crucial since the empirical base is fundamental for inferring interpretations associated with these activities. The analysis of the various selected archaeological contexts provides information about the wide-ranging economic and social dimensions this activity acquired during this period.
INTERWEAVING TRADITIONS: CLOTHING AND TEXTILES IN BRONZE AND IRON AGE IBERIA EDITED BY BEATRIZ MARÍN-AGUILERA AND MARGARITA GLEBA, 2020
In this paper we revise and re-interpret some of the areas in the oppidum of Puente Tablas (Jaén) for the Iberian phase (late fifth-third century BC), focusing on the evidence of textile weaving. In this case, we aim to analyse this activity as a productive function, endowing it with the value it merits as part of the so-called maintenance activities, linking it not only to the social sphere, but also to those of the economy and culture. In particular, this article focuses on the analysis of hitherto unpublished complexes and contexts associated with this Iberian oppidum. This analysis is crucial since the empirical base is fundamental for inferring interpretations associated with these activities. The analysis of the various selected archaeological contexts provides information about the wide-ranging economic and social dimensions this activity acquired during this period.
Material Exchanges in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Archaeological Perspectives, 2021
Busto Zapico, M. (2021). A Mandatory Stop: The Trade of Imported Pottery in Asturias (NW Iberian Peninsula) during the Early Modern Period. En M. E. Naum, J. Linaa, & S. Escribano-Ruiz (Eds.), Material Exchanges in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Archaeological Perspectives (Vol. 9, 113-142). Turnhout: Brepols. This research presents the analysis of 3066 sherds, which were found in thirty-four archaeological excavations carried out across six regions of Asturias (NW of the Iberian Peninsula, Spain). The fragments come from twenty-one different pottery production sites and date between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. The archaeological study of this ceramic material has offered new insights into the pottery trade in Asturias during the early modern period. The results of this study help us to reconstruct the historical processes that shaped the society of Asturias in that period.
European Journal of Archaeology
According to Childe, the Bronze Age in Europe is thought to be the first ‘golden age’ in European history. The development of metallurgy, clearly associated with the production of weapons, and the expansion of exchange networks covering all types of goods are considered essential in the process of consolidation of social elites, and, by extension, of social inequalities. The significance of textile production has, however, been undervalued as a specialized craft and as a manufacturing process that creates cultural differences and signals social inequalities. Being associated with domestic contexts rather than with specialized workshops, textile production in the eastern Iberian Peninsula has been underestimated; it is addressed here, as is its potential importance in societies immersed in a process of social stratification.
The Iberian Peninsula between 300 and 850: An Archaeological Perspective
2018
Scholarship on the Iberian Peninsula in late antiquity and the early Middle Ages is burgeoning across a variety of disciplines and time periods, yet the publication profile of the field remains disjointed. 'Late Antique and Early Medieval Iberia' (LAEMI) provides a publication hub for high-quality research on Iberian Studies from the fields of history, archaeology, theology and religious studies, numismatics, palaeography, music, and cognate disciplines. Another key aim of the series is to break down barriers between the excellent scholarship that takes place in Iberia and Latin America and the Anglophone world.
Visigothic Symposia, 2017
Approaching Visigothic artisans in the Iberian Peninsula is not an easy task, since archaeological and art historical studies continue modifying traditional and prevailing views on them. The chronologies of and our understanding about architectural and sculptural elements attributed to this period (the sixth and seventh centuries AD) are being revised, due to the securing of accurate stratigraphic sequences (both from excavated and standing buildings), the uncovering of new materials, the reinterpretation of the relatively few written records, and the introduction, thus, of innovative and fresh theses. Within this frame, although artisans and their knowledge and skills are directly visible in the archaeological record, their identity is only to be approached in an indirect way, in which preliminary hypotheses will have to be reconsidered in the near future.