Cutillas, B. (2020) - Alfarerías y producción cerámica durante el Bronce Final y la Primera Edad del Hierro en el sector central del sureste ibérico (original) (raw)

MARÍN SUÁREZ, C. (2012) La cerámica de la Edad del Hierro en el sector centro-occidental cantábrico. Munibe Antropologia - Arkeologia, 63: 165-198.

While knowledge of the surrounding region has been further developed, archaeological knowledge of the Cantabrian Region during the Iron Age is relatively low. We have a clear example of this deficiency in studies of pottery, which go so far as to confuse pieces from different time periods. Preroman vessels are confused with roman and medieval ones as a result of sloppy classifications typical of the culture-historical typological perspective. This article provides a review and a systemization of the published data of the central-western region of Cantabrian Mountains using the theoretical and methodological framework of the Technological Operational Chains. Subsequently a series of archaeological groups are presented and discussed. And finally an interpretative hypothesis is proposed which takes into account the sex-gender systems and the sociological particularities of northern hillfort groups.

Cutillas, B. (2018) - En busca de los pobladores de la Primera Edad del Hierro en el campo de Cartagena: resultados preliminares en torno a la ocupación del Cabezo Ventura (Sureste ibérico).

Lvcentvm, 2018

This work presents the first results of the research concerning the area of Cabezo Ventura in Cartagena. This hillock is a predominant feature in Campo de Cartagena, from which can be controlled a large area between Mar Menor, Sierra Minera Cartagena-La Unión and the peninsula where the punic city of Qart-Hadast was founded. Within the last decades, different archaeological sites have been defined in this area, although a series of material evidence corresponding to the First Iron Age was located in one of the sectors during mechanical archaeological surveys. This work studies these archaeological materials, unpublished to date, as well as the results of the archaeological survey that was carried out in 2017. The aim is to evaluate the scope of this protohistoric occupation of the hillock and its importance within an unknown territory for this historical period, but which is directly related to the coast and the commercial traffic that flowed through it.

López Castro, J.L.; Pardo Barrionuevo, C. A.; Moya Cobos, L. (2017):" ¿Fondos de cabaña o depósitos rituales?. Sobre un tipo de contextos materiales del Bronce Final y comienzos de la Edad del Hierro en el Sur de la Península Ibérica". Zephyrus LXXX, pp. 69-91

Zephyrus. Revista de Prehistoria y Arqueología., 2017

Resumen: Cortijo Riquelme es un depósito arqueológico del Bronce Final e inicios de la Edad del Hierro del Sureste de la Península Ibérica asimilable a los denominados “fondos de cabaña”: una interpretación tradicional recientemente rechazada en diversos estudios críticos. Siguiendo estas propuestas, en el artículo se efectúa un análisis del contenido del depósito mencionado, formado principalmente por cerámicas locales y fenicias importadas de gran antigüedad, que muestran la introducción del vino fenicio y del servicio para consumirlo, como resultado de las relaciones entre autóctonos y colonizadores fenicios. Se efectúa una comparación con otros contextos similares que se distribuyen por el Sur de la Península Ibérica desde finales de la Edad del Bronce, aunque la mayoría datan de los primeros siglos del i milenio a. C. coincidiendo con la colonización fenicia. Otros depósitos mediterráneos de Creta, Chipre, Sicilia y el Norte de África relacionados con banquetes colectivos ayudan a proponer una interpretación para el depósito de Cortijo Riquelme y otros del mismo tipo en los que la amortización ritual de los recipientes usados en banquetes contribuirían a la formación de los depósitos, en un contexto de incremento de la competición de las élites autóctonas en procesos de diferenciación social.

Cutillas, B. y Ros, M.M. (2020): Asentamientos polinucleares y resiliencia urbana entre el Bronce Final y la Edad del Hierro en el Sureste ibérico: nuevos datos a partir del Castellar de Librilla

Complutum, 2020

In the last phase of the Late Bronze Age, a series of hilltop settlements, characterized by a first dispersed planning, were created in the Iberian Southeast. This planning turned into a polynuclear urbanism system and a significant socio-political organisation that continues during the Iron Age. In this article, we examine the development of this type of occupation pattern on different sites throughout the Segura basin and we present new data from the site of Castellar de Librilla to deepen in the development of its intra-urban spatial structure. The new habitat areas detected in recent archaeological surveys, some of them delimited by important defensive systems, allow us to observe the transformations in its internal configuration from the Late Bronze Age to Iberian Period. These episodes of urban restructuring show the adaptation processes that these polynuclear settlements developed within the framework of the changing territorial and cultural dynamics of the region during the 1st millennium BC.

La cronología de la cerámica pintada monócroma roja tipo Carambolo del Bronce Final IIC-III e inicios de la Edad del Hierro del Suroeste de la Península Ibérica (1150-825 AC) [The Chronology of the Monochrome Red Painted Pottery Carambolo Type of the Late Bronze Age IIC-III in the Iberian Peninsula]

MEDEROS, A. (2017): “La cronología de la cerámica pintada monócroma roja tipo Carambolo del Bronce Final IIC-III e inicios de la Edad del Hierro del Suroeste de la Península Ibérica (1150-825 a.C.)”. En D. Brandherm (ed.): Memento. Festschrift für Majolie Lenerz-de Wilde. Hagen/Westf.: 105-125

The monochrome red-painted pottery with geometric motifs of Carambolo type appears in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula at an earlier stage than the currently accepted dates, supposedly contemporaneous with the first arrival of the Phoenicians. The earliest attested finds are from Llanete de los Moros (Montoro, Córdoba), trench R-1, level IIIa, dating to the Late Bronze Age IIC, 1150–1050 BC, and from Setefilla (Lora del Rio, Seville), level XIII, dating to the Late Bronze Age IIIA, 1050–950 BC. Both predate their association with Phoenician pottery in Calle Méndez Núñez at Huelva, 915–895 BC. It is a luxury pottery, probably burnished to contain liquids, which appears in large numbers in sacred spaces such as Calle Méndez Núñez, El Carambolo (Seville) and perhaps the hut excavated at the Universidad Laboral (Seville). The pottery shapes are of the Atlantic Late Bronze Age, as well as the geometric decoration, already present in gold jewellery and bronze bracelets. Only later a significant influence from Aegean Geometric pottery makes itself felt, relating especially to the Early and Middle Geometric periods, 975–825 BC, probably accompanied by the introduction of luxury textiles with similar motifs, which was reflected in the adoption of new geometric motifs, the use of metopes or the development in friezes of some decorative compositions.