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Hallstatt culture

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thumb The Hallstatt culture was the predominant Central European culture during the local Bronze Age, and introduced the Iron Age. It is named for its type site, Hallstatt, a lakeside village in the Austrian Salzkammergut southeast of Salzburg.

Hallstatt site

In 1846, Johann Georg Ramsauer discovered a large prehistoric cemetery which he excavated during the second half of the 19th century. Eventually the excavation would yield 1,045 burials.

The community at Hallstatt exploited the salt mines in the area, which had been worked from time to time since the Neolithic, from the 8th to 5th century BC. The style and decoration of the grave goods found in the cemetery is very distinctive, and artifacts made in this style are widespread in Europe.

Hallstatt culture

The Hallstatt culture, extending from about 1200 BC until around 500 BC, is divided by archaeologists into four phases: Hallstatt A and B correspond to the late Bronze Age (c.1200–800 BC), while Hallstatt C refers to the very early Iron Age (c.800–600 BC) and is characterized by the first appearance of iron swords mixed amongst the bronze ones. For the final phase, Hallstatt D, only daggers are found in graves ranging from c.600–500 BC. There are also differences in pottery and the brooches.

An eastern Hallstatt cultural zone including Croatia, Slovenia, western Hungary, Austria, Moravia, and Slovakia can be distinguished from a western cultural zone which includes northern Italy, Switzerland, eastern France, southern Germany, and Bohemia.

Exchange systems or folk movements (probably both) spread the Hallstatt cultural complex into the western half of the Iberian peninsula, Great Britain, and Ireland. It is probable that some if not all of this diffusion took place in a Celtic-speaking context.

Trade with Greece is attested by finds of Attic black-figure pottery in the élite graves of the late Hallstatt period. It was probably imported via Massilia (Marseille). Other imported luxuries include amber, ivory (Gräfenbühl) and probably wine. Recent analyses have shown that the reputed silk in the barrow at Hohmichele was misidentified. Red dye (cochineal) was imported from the south as well (Hochdorf burial).

In the central Hallstatt regions, and toward the end of the period, very rich graves of high-status individuals under large tumuli are found in association with fortified hilltop settlements. They often contain chariots and horse bits or yokes. Well known chariot burials include Býčí Skála, Vix and Hochdorf. A model of a chariot made from lead has been found in Frögg, Carinthia.

The defended sites frequently include the workshops of bronze-, silver-, and goldsmiths. Typical sites are the Heuneburg on the upper Danube surrounded by nine very large grave tumuli, Mont Lassois in eastern France near Châtillon-sur-Seine with, at its foot, the very rich grave at Vix, and the hill fort at Molpir in the Slovakia.

Artwork includes elaborate jewellery made of bronze and gold, and stone stelae, like the famous warrior of Hirschlanden.

The succeeding culture in much of Central Europe is the La Tène culture.

Bibliography

 


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