La céramique indigène peinte de l’Incoronata. Étude typo-fonctionnelle et anthropologie d’une production de l’âge du Fer en Italie méridionale (original) (raw)

L'ancien site ayant été supprimé, et avec lui les accès aux travaux et thèses, vous pouvez retrouver cette thèse en ligne sur le Web Archive à l'adresse suivante : http://web.archive.org/web/20211113153227/https://sites-recherche.univ-rennes2.fr/incoronata/images/BELLAMY\_THESE.pdf La céramique indigène peinte de l’Incoronata. Étude typo-fonctionnelle et anthropologie d’une production de l’âge du Fer en Italie méridionale / Matt-painted Pottery from Incoronata. Typo-functional Study and Anthropology of an Iron Age Production in Southern Italy / Studio tipo-funzionale e antropologia di una produzione dell'età del Ferro in Italia meridionale. La ceramica indigena dipinta dell’Incoronata Cette thèse de doctorat met en œuvre une analyse morpho-fonctionnelle et historico-archéologique d’une production céramique indigène décorée inédite de l’âge du Fer provenant du site de l’Incoronata en Italie du Sud (Basilicate, commune de Pisticci). Abstract : This doctoral thesis implements a morpho-functional and historical-archaeological analysis of an unpublished matt-painted pottery production from the Iron Age site of Incoronata in Southern Italy (Basilicata, com. Pisticci). The subject of this inquiry is multiple: using a careful examination of the forms, decors and techniques, a complete catalog of our ceramical corpus has been constituted, accompanied by a dense bundle of comparisons which belong to a coherent South-Italian historical-cultural horizon, tightened between the valleys of Cavone and Bradano, between 9th and 7th centuries BC. The site of Incoronata is characterized by a period of mixed occupation. From the beginning of the 7th century BC, Incoronata welcomes a Greek component, more particularly potters, in an eminent indigenous establishment already characterized by a significant local production and consumption of ceramic products. Contextualization of data has thus constituted another strong pole of this research. The problematics have naturally focused on the characterization of the modalities of interactions between indigenous and Greek communities, looking for analogies in non-colonial spaces that nevertheless show intense relations between the two components. Aware of the difficulty of manipulating the very concept of identity, some anthropological, ethnoarchaeological and historical perspectives have been initiated. The possibility of characterizing a local indigenous ceramic production of the Iron Age in all its stages of development, allows us to re-think, with this first milestone in a renewed way, and with solid data on the production process, about the evolution of a formal and decorative repertory and the impact of Greek arrival on all these aspects. The role and the diffusion of a specific ceramic category could be approached, allowing at the same time to re-evaluate the modalities of occupation of the site of Incoronata and its nodal role in the understanding and the analysis in the historico-anthropological sense of the cultural relations which have characterized the archaic Mediterranean world.