Abstract

Contrary to pottery or metal artefacts, macro-lithic tools are still not fully integrated into the archaeological research programs concerning the Early Bronze Age of Central Europe. While such kind of archaeological materials usually do not easily allow typological approaches, their constant participation in several productive spheres makes them a crucial element for understanding the economic processes and the organisation of past societies. This paper presents the general results of the investigation carried out on an assemblage of 1073 macro-lithic items recovered in the wet soil area of the site of Bruszczewo (municipality of Śmigiel, Poland). This fortified settlement was inhabited during the Early Bronze Age (2100-1650 BCE) and later on in the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age (1100-800 BCE), with minor archaeological evidences from Middle Ages. The methodology applied in this assessment is a holistic one, which combines manufacturing (petrography and morphometry), functional (use-wear and residues) and spatial analyses. This approach has allowed recording a mainly local raw material supplying system, based on the gathering of pebbles in the vicinity of the site and a minimal transformation of raw pieces previous to use. Moreover, Bruszczewo comes out to be a central settlement managing and controlling exogenous ores, such as copper and gold, as shown by residues found on some macro-lithic forging anvils. All in all, the recognition in the macro-lithic tool assemblage of different tasks related to subsistence (food preparation) as well as to manufacture (metallurgy, probably bone working) processes contributes to (a) defining the settlement's organisation and the management of resources in the site and (b) improving our understanding of the role played by central settlements in the socio-economic networks, at a time when the first class societies emerged in Central Europe.

Highlights

  • Bruszczewo 5 is a prehistoric settlement located at the municipality of Śmigiel, in the Kościan County of the Lowland of Great Poland province (Figures 1 & 2)

  • The first regular and most important occupation phase is related to the Early Bronze Age, attributed to the Únětice culture

  • Some final products made of these raw materials have been recovered in the princely graves of Łęki Małe and other Early Bronze Age hoards found in the vicinity of Bruszczewo, as well as on the site itself

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Summary

Introduction

Bruszczewo 5 is a prehistoric settlement located at the municipality of Śmigiel, in the Kościan County of the Lowland of Great Poland province (Figures 1 & 2). The transgression episode at the end of the Early Bronze Age provided a unique situation from the point of view of the preservation of the remains, favouring mineral soil preservation as well as water-logged archaeological remains, especially organic materials, conserved in the shallow waters of the lake edge (Kneisel & Kroll 2010: 576-661). This turns Bruszczewo into the only Únětice site known up to date with wet soil findings. Only two partial studies exist regarding macro-lithic assemblages, which use their own terminology, independent one from each other:

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