Making Sense of the Earliest Ceramics in North-Eastern Europe

IF 0.9 1区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Estonian Journal of Archaeology Pub Date : 2015-12-01 DOI:10.3176/arch.2015.2.04
V. Bērziņš
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Henny Piezonka. Jager, Fischer, Topfer. Wildbeutergruppen mit fruher Keramik in Nordosteuropa im 6. und 5. Jahrtausend v. Chr. (Archaologie in Eurasien, Band 30.) Habelt-Verlag, Bonn, 2015. 437pp. ISBN9783774939325 The work by Henny Piezonka, the title of which might be translated as Hunters, Fishers and Pots. Food Procuring Groups with Early Pottery in North-Eastern Europe in the 6th and 5th Millennium BC, is a major event in the context of the current research on the spread of ceramic technology across Eurasia. Bringing together a very rich body of material, much of it previously published only in Russian, the work offers a great boost to German-reading prehistorians dealing with this region; there are summaries in Russian and English, in addition to which the Anglophone research community may refer to the concise account given in Piezonka (2012). The study region covers the territory east and north of the Baltic Sea, namely present-day Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, along with north-western Russia, northern Belarus, northeastern Poland and the far northerly regions of Sweden and Norway. To place the region in a broader context, brief but very useful treatments of early ceramic cultures in neighbouring regions of eastern and northern Europe are also provided. As indicated in the title, the work deals mainly with the 6th and 5th millennia BC, which saw the advent of pottery in this territory. Following an introductory treatment of the region's natural setting, we have a description of the material from 17 selected sites in Finland, Estonia, Russia and Lithuania that the author herself has examined, focussing on pottery, but also covering lithics and other finds. The data from the ceramic assemblages (535 vessels in total) are subject to a comprehensive statistical analysis. In the next chapter the theme is considered at a more general level. A brief discussion of the Mesolithic (i.e. aceramic) cultures in the region is followed by a general treatment of pottery and other material of the various early ceramic cultures in the region, based on published accounts and some unpublished work, along with the author's findings from her own examination of material, as described in the previous chapter. For a wider context, the author also gives concise treatments of the earlier and contemporaneous cultures of the neighbouring regions, closing with brief summaries that characterize hunter-gatherer pottery in other parts of the world--the Jomon ceramics of Japan and the Laurel Tradition in the Woodland pottery of North America. Reassessment of previous studies, supplemented with the findings of her own work, leads the author to distinguish three strands of development of early pottery in north-eastern Europe, crosslinked by mutual influences: 1) a tradition of Sparsely Decorated Ceramics, spreading westwards from the middle Volga area in the late 7th millennium BC and providing the basis for the Volga-Oka Complex, Narva Ware and the Chernobor Culture; 2) a Southern Tradition, originating from the Dnieper-Donets Complex, that includes the Dubiciai Ware of the Pripet-Nemunas region, and also influenced the further development of Narva Ware, the Rudnja and Valdai groups, in addition to which it spread westwards along the south coast of the Baltic (Ertebolle and related groups); 3) a Comb Ceramic tradition, probably originating in the Volga-Kama region, whence it spread northwards and westwards in the first half of the 6th millennium BC. And how does this depart from previous schemes? In the author's own words (p. 253, reviewer's translation): "Whereas older scenarios saw the Dnieper-Donets Complex as the more or less exclusive point of origin for pottery development, from which various strands of development spread out into the East Baltic as well as north-western Russia and Fennoscandia, now the significance of the Middle Volga and Volga-Kama region can be underlined as a starting point of early ceramic traditions. …
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解读东南欧最早的陶瓷
的母鸡Piezonka。雅格,费舍尔,托普弗。1996年,野生动物群在东南欧发现了克拉明克。和5。Jahrtausend诉Chr。(《欧亚考古学》第30期)Habelt-Verlag,波恩,2015。437页。Henny Piezonka的作品,书名可以翻译为《猎人、渔夫和锅》。公元前6至5千年,在欧洲东北部发现了早期陶器的食物采购群体,这是目前研究欧亚大陆陶瓷技术传播的一个重大事件。这本书汇集了非常丰富的材料,其中大部分以前只以俄语出版,它为研究这一地区的德语阅读史前学家提供了巨大的推动力;有俄语和英语的摘要,此外,以英语为母语的研究界可以参考Piezonka(2012)给出的简明描述。研究区域包括波罗的海东部和北部的领土,即今天的芬兰、爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚和立陶宛,以及俄罗斯西北部、白俄罗斯北部、波兰东北部和瑞典和挪威的最北部地区。为了将该地区置于更广阔的背景下,还提供了对邻近东欧和北欧地区早期陶瓷文化的简要但非常有用的处理。正如标题所示,这部作品主要涉及公元前6至5千年,这一时期陶器在这一地区出现。在介绍了该地区的自然环境之后,我们对芬兰、爱沙尼亚、俄罗斯和立陶宛的17个选定遗址的材料进行了描述,作者本人对这些遗址进行了考察,重点是陶器,但也包括石器和其他发现。来自陶瓷组合(总共535个容器)的数据进行了全面的统计分析。在下一章中,将在更一般的层面上考虑这个主题。对该地区的中石器时代(即陶瓷)文化进行了简短的讨论,然后根据已发表的报道和一些未发表的作品,以及作者自己对材料的研究结果,对该地区各种早期陶瓷文化的陶器和其他材料进行了总体处理,如前一章所述。在更广泛的背景下,作者还对邻近地区的早期和同时期文化进行了简明的处理,最后简要总结了世界其他地区狩猎采集者陶器的特征——日本的绳纹陶器和北美林地陶器的月桂传统。通过对先前研究的重新评估,再加上她自己工作的发现,作者区分了东南欧早期陶器的三种发展趋势,它们因相互影响而相互联系:1)公元前7千年晚期,从伏尔加中部地区向西传播的稀疏装饰陶瓷传统,为伏尔加-奥卡遗址、纳尔瓦陶器和切尔诺贝利文化提供了基础;2)南方传统,起源于第聂伯尔-顿涅茨建筑群,包括普里佩特-涅穆纳斯地区的Dubiciai陶器,也影响了Narva陶器、Rudnja和Valdai群体的进一步发展,除此之外,它还沿着波罗的海南海岸向西传播(Ertebolle和相关群体);梳子陶瓷的传统,可能起源于伏尔加-卡马地区,并在公元前6世纪上半叶向北和向西传播。这与之前的方案有何不同?用作者自己的话说(第253页,评论家的翻译):“尽管在较早的场景中,第聂伯-顿涅茨建筑群或多或少是陶器发展的唯一起源,从那里各种发展延伸到东波罗的海、俄罗斯西北部和芬诺斯坎迪亚,但现在伏尔加中部和伏尔加-卡马地区的重要性可以被强调为早期陶瓷传统的起点。…
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