Abstract

The use and socio-environmental importance of fruits dramatically changed after the emergence of arboriculture and fruit domestication in the eastern Mediterranean, between the 5th and the 3rd millennia BCE. Domesticated fruits together with cultivation techniques apparently reached the western Mediterranean via colonial activities during the 1st millennium BCE – early 1st millennium CE. However, the pace and chronology of this diffusion as well as the recompositions in diversity, to adapt to new socio-environmental conditions, remain poorly known. In this study we investigate archaeobotanical records in Southern France from the Neolithic to the end of the Roman empire (ca. 5,800 BCE – 500 CE) to assess changes in fruit use as well as the emergence, spread and evolution of fruit cultivation. We explore changes in native traditions faced with innovations brought by Mediterranean colonization and how domesticated fruit cultivation spread from the Mediterranean to more temperate areas. Archaeobotanical data from 577 assemblages were systematically analyzed distinguishing two datasets according to preservation of plant remains (charred vs. uncharred), as this impacts on the quantity and diversity of taxa. The 47 fruit taxa identified were organized in broad categories according to their status and origin: exotic, allochtonous cultivated, indigenous cultivated, wild native. We also analyzed diversity, quantity of fruits compared to the total of economic plants and spatio-temporal variations in the composition of fruit assemblages using correspondence factor analyses. Archaeobotanical data reflect variations and continuities in the diversity of species used through time and space. In the Mediterranean area, significant changes related to the arrival of new plants and development of fruit cultivation occurred mainly, first during the Iron Age (6th-5th c. BCE), then in the beginning of the Roman period. Large cities played a major role in this process. In agreement with archeological information, archaeobotanical data reveal the predominance of viticulture in both periods. However, arboriculture also included other fruit species that have been subject to less intensive and specialized cultivation practices. Most significantly, this study pinpoints the continuous contribution of native, supposedly wild fruits throughout the chronology. Despite the homogenizing Roman influence, results reveal clear differences between the Mediterranean and temperate regions.

Highlights

  • The chronological boundaries range from 5,850 BCE, corresponding to the earliest Neolithic settlement, to 500 CE, which roughly marks the end of the Roman Empire in Western Europe

  • Assemblages were subsequently assigned to a broad chrono-cultural period: Neolithic (Neo: 5,850-2,200 BCE), Bronze Age (BA: 2,200-750 BCE), First Iron Age (IR1: 750525 BCE), Transition First/Second Iron Age (IA1/2: 525-425 BCE), Second Iron Age (IA2: 425-50 BCE), Early (ERo: 50 BCE-250 CE) and Late Roman Empire (LRo: 250-500 CE)

  • As they correspond to the emergence of colonial contacts in the Mediterranean the Iron Age and Roman period have been divided into subphases

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Summary

Introduction

Eaten fresh, dried or transformed according to different procedures (pressing, cooking, fermentation. . .), fruits are valuable components of human diet (Maurizio, 1932; Brothwell and Brothwell, 1998). . .), fruits are valuable components of human diet (Maurizio, 1932; Brothwell and Brothwell, 1998) They provide sugars, vitamins, mineral salts, and fiber, and lipids and proteins (Tiwari and Cummins, 2013; FAO, 2017). They can be charged with cultural and symbolic values, which can be reflected in social (Flandrin and Montanari, 1999; ToussaintSamat, 2008) or ritual contexts (Bouby and Marinval, 2004; Rottoli and Castiglioni, 2011). Many fruits and their subproducts possess characteristics that can make them considered luxury foods as they are unessential to diet, difficult to obtain in large quantities, labor-intensive to transform, able to produce sweetened products or alcoholic drinks (van der Veen, 2003; Ouerfelli, 2016). In the Western Mediterranean, domesticated fruit species and cultivation techniques are considered as being foreign and of late introduction after the onset of agriculture

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