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El. knyga: Elevated Rock Art: Towards a maritime understanding of Bronze Age rock art in northern Bohuslan, Sweden

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How may Bohuslan rock art and landscape be perceived and understood? Since the Bronze Age, the landscape has been transformed by shore displacement but, largely due to misunderstanding and certain ideas about the character of Bronze Age society, rock art research in Tanum has drawn much of its inspiration from the present agrarian landscape. This perception of the landscape has not been a major issue. This volume, republished from the GOTAC Serie B (Gothenburg Archaeological thesis 49) aims to shed light on the process of shore displacement and its social and cognitive implications for the interpretation of rock art in the prehistoric landscape. The findings clearly show that in the Bronze Age, the majority of rock art sites in Bohuslan had a very close spatial connection to the sea.Much rock art analysis focuses on the contemplative observer. The more direct activities related to rock art are seldom fully considered. Here, the basic conditions for the production of rock art, social theory and approaches to image, communication, symbolism and social action are discussed and related to palpable social forms of the “reading” of rock art. The general location and content of the Bronze Age remains indicate a tendency towards the maritime realm, which seems to have included both socio-ritual and socio-economic matters of production and consumption and that Bronze Age groups in Bohuslan were highly active and mobile. The numerous configurations of ship images on the rocks could indicate a general transition or drift towards the maritime realm. Marking or manifesting such transitions in some way may have been important and it is tempting to perceive the rock art as traces of such transitions or positions in the landscape. All this points to a maritime understanding of Bronze Age rock art in northern Bohuslan.

Recenzijos

This is a well-produced and extensively illustrated

volume, although the quality of the maps varies. * Antiquity *

Abbreviations xi
Abstract xii
Preface xiii
Part I Launching
1 Introduction -- the rock art phenomenon in northern Bohuslan
Introduction
1(1)
"Finding the lost sea"
2(2)
Aims
4(1)
Temporal and spatial limitations
4(1)
2 A general picture of the Bronze Age in Bohuslan
Bronze Age conditions in Bohuslan
5(1)
Investigations at rock art sites
6(1)
Households and metallurgic activity
6(1)
Graves
7(1)
Households and metallurgic activity
8(1)
Conclusion
8(1)
3 Social landscapes
Introduction
9(2)
Conclusion
11(4)
Part II Embarking
4 The terrestrial paradigm: history of research
Introduction
15(1)
Theory
16(1)
Paradigm and thought style
16(2)
Conditions and questions
18(1)
A history of landscape and rock art research
18(1)
The perception of geology and landscape among 19th century antiquarians
19(1)
The landscape via the rock art image
20(2)
The shore-connected rock art
22(1)
Land uplift and the landscape
23(2)
The image via the landscape
25(4)
Modification of the terrestrial paradigm
29(2)
The sea is advancing
31(2)
Conclusion
33(2)
5 Rock art and seascapes in South Scandinavia
Introduction
35(1)
West Norwegian rock art
36(3)
Hogsbyn in Dalsland
39(3)
The Simris area in Scania
42(2)
Conclusion
44(3)
6 Shore displacement, tides and altitudes
Introduction
47(1)
The shore displacement phenomenon
47(2)
Dating and estimating shore displacement
49(1)
Shore displacement in Bohuslan
50(1)
Aims and outcome of the new shore displacement studies in the Tanum and Kville areas
51(4)
Altitudes and tides
55(4)
7 Rock art chronology and seascape in Bohuslan
Introduction
59(1)
Rock art chronologies: traditions and concepts
59(2)
Chronological standpoint
61(2)
The analysis
63(1)
The general setting of the rock art in relation to shore displacement
64(1)
The specific chronological setting of ship features in the landscape
65(1)
The Kungalv area (Solberga 50)
65(7)
The Uddevalla area, Utby (Herrestad 58: 1--5)
72(3)
Maritime rock art at the Stangenaset isthmus (Bro 622, 636, Brastad 123)
75(1)
The Sotenaset area (Tossene 107)
76(3)
The Svarteborg area (Svarteborg 13)
79(4)
The Kville area (Kville 172, 114)
83(4)
The Tanum area, "Runohall," at Ryk (Tanum 311)
87(4)
The vertical cliff at Tyft (Tanum 234)
91(1)
A low-lying panel in the Kalleby area (Tanum 425)
92(2)
The "Wismar and Kivik" panel in Kalleby (Tanum 427)
94(4)
Rock art sites in the Orreklapp area (Tanum 241, 369)
98(1)
A tentative ship chronology of the landscape
99(3)
Conclusion
102(5)
8 Modeling landscapes and seascapes in the Tanum area
Introduction
107(1)
Aims
107(4)
The landscape and Bronze Age in Tanum
111(3)
Maritime models of the Vitlycke area (Tanum 1, 833)
114(3)
The Aspeberget area -- a maritime aggregation site? (Tanum 17, 19, 120)
117(6)
Terrestrial landscapes and images at Tanum 33
123(2)
Sea shores and rock art in the Tegneby area, Bostallet (Tanum, 48, 61--64, 105:3, 345, 346 and 490)
125(2)
Ships and seascapes at Skatteklavan in the Tegneby area (Tanum 65--67)
127(6)
Embarking and disembarking by Bro Utmark (Tanum 192)
133(3)
Reconstructing Tanum 311 -- a maritime approach
136(4)
Maritime positions in the Kyrkoryk and Ryk area (Tanum 213, 216, 217, 219, 321, 325, 335, 336)
140(2)
Revisiting the vertical cliff at Tyft (Tanum 236)
142(2)
Landscapes and seascapes in the Kalleby area (Tanum 425, 427, 419, 944, 420, 421, 418, 417)
144(2)
Concluding remarks
146(15)
Part III Social and Maritime praxis
9 Social practice and rock art
Introduction
161(1)
Background
Ships in rock art, in graves and on bronze items
162(3)
The production of rock art
165(1)
Social practice, analogies and fictions
166(1)
Ideology and social theory
167(2)
Material and spiritual production
169(2)
Palaeolithic rock art and Marxism
171(1)
Later Marxist approaches
172(1)
Rock art between practice and structure
173(2)
Images, symbols and social action
175(1)
Image, speech, social praxis and social communication
175(1)
The symbological project
176(2)
The social dimension of rock art images
178(1)
Depictions of social environments and actions
179(1)
Depictions of social positions and social rhetorics
180(1)
Depictions of "iconic" features or elements
181(1)
Concluding remarks
182(3)
10 From terrestrial ships to war canoes
Introduction
185(1)
Background
185(2)
General features of the rock art ships
187(2)
General outcome of the proportional study; codes of dimension
189(2)
The Early Bronze Age ship images
191(3)
The Late Bronze Age ship images
194(2)
The Pre Roman Iron Age ship images
196(1)
Depictions of social realities
197(2)
Helmsmen and steering rods
199(3)
Depictions of social and ritual positions
202(1)
Warriors, acrobats, adorants, and lure blowers
203(1)
Spatial and social aspects of the ship
204(1)
Conclusion
205
Rock art and society
11(198)
Introduction
209(1)
The concept of chiefdom and the Bronze Age
209(3)
"Too many chiefs and not enough Indians"
212(1)
Ideas of social transformation during the Early Bronze Age
213(2)
Chiefdoms during the Late Bronze Age
215(1)
Rock images of chiefs, aggrandizers, commoners or girots?
216(3)
Material and ecological conditions of Bohuslan Bronze Age social formations
219(1)
Praxis, production and ideology
220(1)
Fishing
221(1)
Maritime trade, barter, communication
222(2)
Maritime warfare
224(1)
Maritime rituals and ceremonies
225(1)
Boat-building
226(1)
Discussion
227(1)
Dual social praxis, positions and transitions in Bronze Age Bohuslan
228(2)
Conclusions
230(1)
12 Maritime transitions
Introduction
231(1)
Rock art in a maritime zone
232(1)
Maritime transitions and rituals by the sea
233(2)
Rock art and maritime mobility
235(1)
Rock art as a traveler's picture
236(1)
The sea in the rock and the rock in the sea
236(1)
The ships on the rocks
237(3)
Maritime performances
240(1)
Coda
241(4)
Part IV Disembarking
13 Summary
Towards a maritime understanding of rock art in northern Bohuslan
245(12)
14 References
A--O
257(11)
Personal communications
268(1)
15 Appendix
Appendix 1 Measured rock art sites from Bohuslan 269
Johan Ling is a researcher and lecturer at the Department of Archaeology and Ancient History in Gothenburg. His research interests are primarily in rock art, its chronology and landscapes, particularly the relationship between rock art and shore displacement in Bronze Age Sweden; and in the use of lead isotope analyses on bronze items to investigate the possibility of copper extraction in Sweden at that time.