Home Region:  Western Europe (Europe)

Hallstatt A-B1

1000 BCE 900 BCE

D G SC WF HS EQ 2020  fr_hallstatt_a_b1 / FrHallA



Preceding Entity: Add one more here.
2200 BCE 1000 BCE Atlantic Complex (fr_atlantic_complex)    [continuity]

Succeeding Entity: Add one more here.
900 BCE 700 BCE Hallstatt B2-3 (fr_hallstatt_b2_3)    [continuity]

The Hallstatt culture, named after an archaeological site in Austria and traditionally divided into four phases, was the main cultural complex in Western Europe during the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age. It coincides with the North Alpine complex, extending over modern-day central and southern Germany, northern Italy, and Switzerland. [1]
Population and political organization
Across Europe, thousands of small-scale polities coexisted in the Hallstatt A period (c. 1100-1000 BCE); [2] the average independent political unit controlled a zone with a radius of 20 kilometres. [3] Most settlements identified archaeologically consisted of dispersed farms gravitating around a significant monument, a village or a fortification. [4]
At this time, elites had control over long-distance exchange networks, which encouraged the production of bronze objects such as helmets. [5] These elites also distinguished themselves in death, as they were buried in elaborate complexes of tumuli, which could include protective walls, stone markers and even four-wheeled wagons. [6]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14) Brun, Patrice. 1995. “From Chiefdom to State Organization in Celtic Europe.” In Celtic Chiefdom, Celtic State: The Evolution of Complex Social Systems in Prehistoric Europe, edited by Bettina Arnold and D. Blair Gibson, Cambridge University Press, 13-25. Cambridge. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/RZWRCEPH.

[2]: (CNRS-ENS 2017) CNRS-ENS. 2017. “Atlas de L’âge Du Fer.” Accessed July 7. http://www.chronocarto.ens.fr/gcserver/patlas. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/HUKZMF9J.

[3]: (Brun 2007, 381) Brun, Patrice. 2007. “Une Période de Transition Majeure En Europe: De La Fin Du IVe Au Début Du IIe s. Av. J.-C.(La Tène B2 et C).” In La Gaule Dans Son Contexte Européen Aux IV e et III e Siècle Avant Notre Ère, edited by Christine Mennessier-Jouannet, Anne-Marie Adam, and Pierre-Yves Milcent, 377-84. Lattes: Edition de l’Association pour le Développement de l’Archéologie en Languedoc-Roussillon. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/D2ET47FZ.

[4]: (Brun 1995, 15) Brun, Patrice. 1995. “From Chiefdom to State Organization in Celtic Europe.” In Celtic Chiefdom, Celtic State: The Evolution of Complex Social Systems in Prehistoric Europe, edited by Bettina Arnold and D. Blair Gibson, Cambridge University Press, 13-25. Cambridge. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/RZWRCEPH.

[5]: (Allen 2007, 119) Allen, Stephen. 2007. Lords of Battle: The World of the Celtic Warrior. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/F9D9PI8A.

[6]: Pare, Christopher FE. 1992. Wagons and Wagon-Graves of the Early Iron Age in Central Europe. Vol. 35. Oxford: Oxford University School of Archaeology. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/itemKey/XPKX7SNP.

General Variables
Social Complexity Variables
Social Scale
Hierarchical Complexity
Professions
Bureaucracy Characteristics
Law
Specialized Buildings: polity owned
Transport Infrastructure
Special-purpose Sites
Information / Writing System
Information / Kinds of Written Documents
Information / Money
Information / Postal System
Information / Measurement System
Warfare Variables (Military Technologies)
Economy Variables (Luxury Goods)
Luxury Goods
Religion Variables Coding in Progress.
Human Sacrifice Coding in Progress.
Crisis Consequences Coding in Progress.
Power Transitions Coding in Progress.

NGA Settlements:

Year Range Hallstatt A-B1 (fr_hallstatt_a_b1) was in:
 (1000 BCE 901 BCE)   Paris Basin
Home NGA: Paris Basin

General Variables
Identity and Location
Utm Zone:
31 U
[-1000, -900]

Original Name:
Hallstatt A-B1
[-1000, -900]

Capital:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]



Alternative Name:
European Bronze Age
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)

Alternative Name:
Late European Bronze Age
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)

Alternative Name:
Atlantic Complex
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)

Alternative Name:
Hallstatt culture
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)

Alternative Name:
Hallstatt
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)

Alternative Name:
North-Alpine Complex
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)

Alternative Name:
Urnfield culture
[-1000, -900]

The Paris Basin region straddles the "North-Alpine Complex" and the "Atlantic Complex" culture. [1] This time period straddles end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Europe.

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)


Temporal Bounds
Peak Years:
900 BCE
 

Most developed at the end of this period?


Duration:
[1000 BCE ➜ 900 BCE]
 

At the end of the European Bronze Age at the transition to Hallstatt culture
"The European Bronze Age lasted from approximately 2500-800 BC. It was the period in which the production and use of metal tools and weapons first became widespread." [1]

[1]: (Allen 2007, 18)


Political and Cultural Relations
Suprapolity Relations:
none
[-1000, -900]

Supracultural Entity:
Hallstatt
[-1000, -900]

2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age) "The principal characteristics of the Bronze Age appear during the middle of the third millennium BC." [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 13)



Relationship to Preceding Entity:
continuity
[-1000, -900]

Succeeding Entity:
900 BCE 700 BCE Hallstatt B2-3 (fr_hallstatt_b2_3)    [continuity]  
 
Preceding Entity:
2200 BCE 1000 BCE Atlantic Complex (fr_atlantic_complex)    [continuity]  
 

Degree of Centralization:
loose
[-1000, -900]

2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age)
"centralization of power but only at a restricted scale and in three forms (Brun and Pion 1992): 1. A cluster of dispersed farms gravitate around a monument, a sort of tomb-sanctuary, which symbolizes the unity of the territorial community. This community is ruled by a chief who occupies one of the farms. 2. A cluster of farmsteads polarized by a village, near which is found the territorial sanctuary. ... 3. Identical in organization to #2, but the central role of the village is held by a fortification. It appears that this type of settlement owes its existence to the control it exerted over long-distance exchange, especially over exchange in metal." [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 15)


Language
Linguistic Family:
NO_VALUE_ON_WIKI
[-1000, -900]

Language:
NO_VALUE_ON_WIKI
[-1000, -900]

Unknown?


Religion

Social Complexity Variables
Social Scale
Population of the Largest Settlement:
100 people
[-1000, -900]

Inhabitants.
2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age)
"Each autonomous political community consisted of around a hundred people on average, distributed in five to eight small settlements." [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)


Polity Territory:
[750 to 1,250] km2
[-1000, -900]

in squared kilometers
Around 1000-900 BCE, politically independent polities in the northern alpine region (which includes central France [1] ) had a radius of about 20 km, which gives an area of about 1,257 sq kilometers. [2]
[2]
2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age) - this is earlier research from the same author. Since it is earlier research and the same author I defer to the more recent research. However, the upper limit is similar.
"Each politically autonomous territory measured from 7 to 15 km in diameter during the whole period, except during periods of temporary expansion." [3]
"The Wessex communities seem to have succeeded in organizing polities 1000 km2 in extent" however "Evidence of similar polities is very rare in Europe during the same period." [4]

[1]: (Brun 2007, 380)

[2]: (Brun 2007, 381)

[3]: (Brun 1995, 15)

[4]: (Brun 1995, 14)


Polity Population:
[100 to 1,000] people
[-1000, -900]

People. There is a mismatch between polity territory and polity population. Very rough estimate assuming small communities of ~10 100-or-so person villages
2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age)
"Each autonomous political community consisted of around a hundred people on average, distributed in five to eight small settlements." [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 14)


Hierarchical Complexity
Settlement Hierarchy:
[1 to 2]
[-1000, -900]

levels.
1. Village

2. Farmstead

2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age)
"centralization of power but only at a restricted scale and in three forms (Brun and Pion 1992): 1. A cluster of dispersed farms gravitate around a monument, a sort of tomb-sanctuary, which symbolizes the unity of the territorial community. This community is ruled by a chief who occupies one of the farms. 2. A cluster of farmsteads polarized by a village, near which is found the territorial sanctuary. ... 3. Identical in organization to #2, but the central role of the village is held by a fortification. It appears that this type of settlement owes its existence to the control it exerted over long-distance exchange, especially over exchange in metal." [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 15)


Religious Level:
1
[-1000, -900]

levels.
Quasi-Polities were unified by their sanctuaries and monuments. [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 15)


Military Level:
1
[-1000, -900]

levels.


Administrative Level:
[1 to 2]
[-1000, -900]

levels.
1. Chief

2. Headman

2500-800 BCE (European Bronze Age)
"centralization of power but only at a restricted scale and in three forms (Brun and Pion 1992): 1. A cluster of dispersed farms gravitate around a monument, a sort of tomb-sanctuary, which symbolizes the unity of the territorial community. This community is ruled by a chief who occupies one of the farms. 2. A cluster of farmsteads polarized by a village, near which is found the territorial sanctuary. ... 3. Identical in organization to #2, but the central role of the village is held by a fortification. It appears that this type of settlement owes its existence to the control it exerted over long-distance exchange, especially over exchange in metal." [1] . "The production of bronze objects has suggested to many scholars that, just as trade became more complex, sociopolitical organization may have become more complex as well. This idea seems to be reinforced by the presence of fortified towns, suggesting some degree of political integration, at least at a local level. Unfortunately, there is little formal data on sociopolitical organization for the Earlier Bronze Age. Scholars analyzing the contents of burials have suggested a two-tiered division was present in Earlier Bronze Age society, with one tier being "elites" buried with considerable wealth, the other being commoners buried with very few goods. Most scholars believe that such differences were probably achieved during the life of the individual, particularly since many of the "elite" burials contain goods associated with warriors. However, both women and men, and even some children, were buried in the "elite" style, suggesting that ascribed status differences may have been present." [2]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 15)

[2]: (Peregrine 2001, 413)


Professions
Professional Soldier:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Full-time specialists


Professional Priesthood:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Full-time specialists


Professional Military Officer:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Full-time specialists


Bureaucracy Characteristics
Specialized Government Building:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Merit Promotion:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Full Time Bureaucrat:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Full-time specialists


Examination System:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Law
Professional Lawyer:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Judge:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Formal Legal Code:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Court:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Specialized Buildings: polity owned
Market:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Irrigation System:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]


previous code: inferred present | primitive irrigation system known from Beaker culture. "Silo" present during this time period. [1] Does this refer to food storage? Surplus production might also indicate irrigation systems. DH: is there evidence or reason to believe Beaker irrigation, if existed, remained?

[1]: (http://www.chronocarto.ens.fr/gcserver/atlas#)


Food Storage Site:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

"Silo" present during this time period. [1] Does this refer to food storage?

[1]: (http://www.chronocarto.ens.fr/gcserver/atlas#)


Drinking Water Supply System:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Transport Infrastructure
Road:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Port:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Canal:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Bridge:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Special-purpose Sites
Mines or Quarry:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Information / Writing System
Written Record:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Script:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Phonetic Alphabetic Writing:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Nonwritten Record:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Non Phonetic Writing:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Mnemonic Device:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Information / Kinds of Written Documents
Scientific Literature:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Sacred Text:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Religious Literature:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Practical Literature:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Philosophy:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Lists Tables and Classification:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

History:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Fiction:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]



Calendar:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Information / Money
Token:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Possibly present for Atlantic Complex.

Token:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Possibly present for Atlantic Complex.


Precious Metal:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Paper Currency:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Indigenous Coin:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Foreign Coin:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Article:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Interpolating between the previous and succeeding periods


Information / Postal System
Postal Station:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

General Postal Service:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Courier:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Information / Measurement System

Warfare Variables (Military Technologies)
Fortifications
Wooden Palisade:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Some fortified villages that appear to be associated with long-distance exchange networks. [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 15)


Stone Walls Non Mortared:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Stone Walls Mortared:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Settlements in a Defensive Position:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Some fortified villages that appear to be associated with long-distance exchange networks. [1]

[1]: (Brun 1995, 15)


Modern Fortification:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Moat:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Fortified Camp:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Earth Rampart:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Ditch:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Complex Fortification:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Inferred from the presence of complex fortifications in previous and subsequent polities in the Paris Basin.


Long Wall:
absent
[-1000, -900]

Military use of Metals
Steel:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Iron:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Copper:
Present
[-1000, -900]

"In the Halstatt and early La Tene periods, helmets were made of bronze. Iron helmets first appeared in the 4th century BC and gradually replaced the softer alloy, possibly in response to the development of the long slashing sword." [1]

[1]: (Allen 2007, 119)


Bronze:
Present
[-1000, -900]

"In the Halstatt and early La Tene periods, helmets were made of bronze. Iron helmets first appeared in the 4th century BC and gradually replaced the softer alloy, possibly in response to the development of the long slashing sword." [1]

[1]: (Allen 2007, 119)


Projectiles
Tension Siege Engine:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Sling Siege Engine:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Sling:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Self Bow:
Present
[-1000, -900]

"The story of the Bronze Age is also to some extent the story of the inven- tions that occurred during it. High up on the list of these come the series of new weapons created during the period. The bow and arrow had existed since at least the Mesolithic, the dagger since the Neolithic." [1]

[1]: (Harding 2000, 275)


Javelin:
Present
[-1000, -900]

"Spears were used from the Palaeolithic period for hunting, both handheld and as projectiles, and also served as weapons in early times, though it was not until the Middle Bronze Age when socketed metal spearheads began to be developed that spear superseded arrows as the preferred projectile. Their frequency in Bronze and Iron Age burials shows that they were used by all warriors and par- ticularly by fighters who did not own a sword." [1]

[1]: (McIntosh 2006, 298)


Handheld Firearm:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Gunpowder Siege Artillery:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Crossbow:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Composite Bow:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Inferred from previous and succeeding (quasi)polities.


Atlatl:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Handheld weapons
War Club:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Inferred from previous quasi-polities.


Sword:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Sword found in Loire Valley dates to 1000-820 BCE time period. [1] "Bronze age swords found by Lake Neuchâtel, Switzerland, estimated to be 3,000 year old." [2]

[1]: (http://www.chronocarto.ens.fr/gcserver/atlas#)

[2]: (https://twitter.com/europeshistory/status/630725341313548288)


Spear:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Spears were used from the Palaeolithic period for hunting, both handheld and as projectiles, and also served as weapons in early times, though it was not until the Middle Bronze Age when socketed metal spearheads began to be developed that spear superseded arrows as the preferred projectile. Their frequency in Bronze and Iron Age burials shows that they were used by all warriors and par- ticularly by fighters who did not own a sword." [1]

[1]: (McIntosh 2006, 298)


Polearm:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Present in previous and subsequent periods.


Dagger:
Present
[-1000, -900]

"a very fine decorated one-edged knife of advanced Hallstatt A type ... also a dagger with notched hilt" [1]

[1]: (Sandars 1957, 90) N K Sandars. 2014 (1957). Bronze Age Cultures in France. The Later Phases From The Thirteenth To The Seventh Century B.C. Cambridge At The University Press. Cambridge.


Battle Axe:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Inferred from previous quasi-polities.


Animals used in warfare
Horse:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Present in previous and subsequent periods


Elephant:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Donkey:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Dog:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Camel:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Armor
Wood Bark Etc:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Shield:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

No finds within France until 620-560 BCE. ("Umbo" = shield boss?) [1]

[1]: (http://www.chronocarto.ens.fr/gcserver/atlas#)


Scaled Armor:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Plate Armor:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Limb Protection:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Present in previous and subsequent periods.


Leather Cloth:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Laminar Armor:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Helmet:
Present
[-1000, -900]

Helmet found in Loire Valley dates to 1000-820 BCE time period. [1]

[1]: (http://www.chronocarto.ens.fr/gcserver/atlas#)


Chainmail:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Iron chain mail was introduced in the third century BCE, probably by the Celtic peoples. [1] The French Chronocarto database mentions "Chaîne de suspension" for the later Hallstatt periods. Either way, the technology was not present at this time.

[1]: (Gabriel 2002, 21) Richard A Gabriel. 2002. The Great Armies of Antiquity. Praeger. Westport.


Breastplate:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Naval technology
Specialized Military Vessel:
Absent
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.


Small Vessels Canoes Etc:
Present
[-1000, -900]

"Similarities between the logboats and plank boats of the period 600 BC to AD 600 and those of earlier times suggest that the roots of Celtic boatbuilding lie in the second millennium BC or earlier." [1] However there is no geographical resolution, even if the term ’Celtic’ implies La Tène and Hallstatt.

[1]: (Green 1995, 271)


Merchant Ships Pressed Into Service:
Unknown
[-1000, -900]

Not mentioned in the literature.



Economy Variables (Luxury Goods)
Luxury Goods

Human Sacrifice Data
Human Sacrifice is the deliberate and ritualized killing of a person to please or placate supernatural entities (including gods, spirits, and ancestors) or gain other supernatural benefits.
Coding in Progress.
Coding in Progress.
Power Transitions
Coding in Progress.