L’insediamento dell’età del Bronzo di Coppa Nevigata tra l’Adriatico e l’Egeo (original) (raw)
2020, Atti del 40° Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria, Storia della Daunia
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L’età del Bronzo finale nella penisola italiana
This paper analyzes the material data and archeological-historical reconstructions relative to four regional areas or individual contexts, all of which are expecially representative of the Italian Final Bronze Age (hereafter fba): southern Etruria and Ancient Lazio in central Italy, and two sites in southern Italy: Broglio di Trebisacce (Cosenza, Calabria) and Roca Vecchia (Lecce, Puglia). These different local situations are then contextualized within the present Italian territory, and the whole Mediterranean area. The different trends highlighted by the analysis provide a significant sample of the articulate processes which took place between the end of the 2nd and the early 1st millennium bc. A relevant feature of this period is the decline of the intensive sailings from the Aegean regions towards the central Mediterranean. From the 13th cent. bc, the Mycenaean presence was steadily substituted by increasing contacts from the Eastern Mediterranean (Cyprus ad Phoenicia). The eastern approach was characterized by the spreading of trade and productive activities from the Levant to the Atlantic coast of the Hiberian peninsula. The new trade system involved the whole area of Italy, and was especially active along the Adriatic sea and in the eastern Po plain: in this region, two major central places emerged during the fba and eia : Frattesina, in southern Veneto, and the Villanovan centre of Bologna, both showing some significant indication that a centralized political system was operating. A contemporary as well as structurally similar development took place in southern Etruria. During the eia , other areas of Italy, such as Veneto and Ancient Lazio, became actively involved in the main trend of socio-political and economic change.
Nuovi dati sulle fortificazioni dell'età del Bronzo di Coppa Nevigata
Scienze dell'Antichità 19, 2013, 2014
KEY-WORDS: Coppa Nevigata, Bronze Age Italy, Fortified settlements. ABSTRACT: This paper is aimed at discussing, in the first place, major evidence coming from the 2012 excavation at Coppa Nevigata (Manfredonia – Foggia province) related to the fortification lines dating back to the 14th century BC. In fact, the defensive dry-stone wall, which was built at the beginning the 14th century BC, underwent some important modifications of over this century and a large ditch was adjoined to the wall in order to improve the defensive potential. This phenomenon might have been related to wider changes of defensive strategies. In order to verify this hypothesis a comparison between Coppa Nevigata and the coeval fortified settlement of Roca in Salento (the southern part of Apulia) is proposed.
Abitato dell'età del Bronzo a Cella Dati (Cremona)
Preistoria e Protostoria in Lombardia e Canton Ticino RIVISTA DI SCIENZE PREISTORICHE LXXII - S2 - 2022 - Firenze, 2022
Bronze Age Settlement at Cella Dati (Cremona) - A prehistoric settlement was discovered in 1907 by Giacomo Locatelli at Cella Dati. One year later Locatelli opened several trenches at the site; however, he did not investigate the archaeological layer in its entirety. The area was elliptical (c. 82 m x 72 m), and the archaeological layer was up to 20 cm thick, covering directly the sterile soil. The only structural features identified were hearths, described as groups of fire-damaged stones and burnt soil. According to Giovanni Patroni, the context was an ‘open site’, and not a terramara with stilted houses and surrounded by an enbankment. Most of the finds were housed in Milan, but some of them were housed in Brescia and in Rome. This dispersal hampered a comprehensive study of the finds for a long time, which was eventually promoted by the chair of Prehistory and Protohistory of the University of Milan under the direction of R.C. de Marinis. A typological study of the pottery suggests a dating to the late phase of the Early Bronze Age. This assignement fit well with the dating of a ‘hourglass-headed’ bronze pin (Type Cella Dati, according to Carancini’s classification). The bronze pins of Cella Dati type can be attributed to the Early Bronze Age II thanks to the discovery of such a pin at Lavagnone (Brescia) in a secure archaeological context, belonging to Phase Lavagnone 4. The thickness of the archaeological layer at Cella Dati points to a short duration of the settlement. An earlier Early Bronze Age phase was not recognized, but it is possible that the site was occasionally settled during the Middle Bronze Age I and II A.
L'età del Bronzo finale in Romagna
IpoTESI di Preistoria, 2009
Si presenta sinteticamente il quadro conoscitivo delle segnalazioni relative al passaggio tra Bronzo Recente e Bronzo Finale in Romagna e nelle zone limitrofe. L'area è al centro degli studi per la probabile costituzione di un polo demografico gravitante sul riminese che verrebbe ...
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L’insediamento dell’età del Bronzo di Mola di Bari. Le fasi I-III
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Recenti rinvenimenti dell’età del bronzo ad Afragola (NA
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L'età del Bronzo nella Sicilia occidentale
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