Corded Ware Coastal Communities. Using ceramic analysis to reconstruct third millennium BC societies in the Netherlands

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Leiden: Sidestone Press, 2015. — 302 pp. — (PhD Thesis to obtain the degree of PhD at the University of Groningen). — ISBN 978-90-8890-318-2.
The Corded Ware Culture (c. 2900–2300 BC) is found in a large area, from Russia to the Netherlands and from Scandinavia to Switzerland. Supra-regional elements include beakers decorated with cord and/or spatula imprints, battle-axes, and a funerary customs involving crouched inhumations under barrows with gender-specific placement of the body gender-specific funerary gifts.
Analysis of ceramics from well-preserved settlements from the Dutch coastal zone have provided very valuable new information on the Corded Ware chronology, social organisation, ideology, subsistence, and use of material culture. A critical review of the commonly applied chronological models shows that many of the underlying premises cannot be supported due to problems with (broad calibration and sample reliability of) 14C dates. This study shows that in the Neolithic Dutch coastal zone, the thin-walled ceramics reflect supra-regional (Corded Ware ) affiliations, whereas the medium-thick-walled and thick-walled ceramics reflect persistent regional (Vlaardingen) traditions. The beakers decorated with cord and spatula impressions were used primarily for cooking; indications for the often proposed use of alcohol (and associated rise of individualisation and elites) were not found.
It is argued in this study that the Corded Ware Culture represents an economic alliance, a dynamic totality as well as a network linking regional groups – each with a distinct economic base, material culture and ideology. These communities all participated in a vast supra-regional network that was a platform for inter-community exchanges of goods, skills, ideas and possibly people. Affiliation to this supra-regional network was a vital aspect for all regional groups involved, and membership to it was expressed by using a set of common traits. Decorated thin-walled beakers act as symbols of these supra-regional networks and thus embody both functional and ideological roles.
About the author:
Sandra Mariët Beckerman (1983) studied prehistory of northwestern Europe at Groningen university. During her masters she specialised in ceramic analysis and studied Neolithic assemblages of the Vlaardingen and Funnel Beaker Culture. After graduation Sandra Beckerman worked for three years as a prehistoric ceramic specialist for two Dutch commercial archaeology firms.
From 2009 to 2014 she was part of the Odysee research project: Unlocking Noord-Holland’s Late Neolithic Treasure Chest: Single Grave Culture behavioural variability in a tidal environment. As part of this project Beckerman wrote her PhD thesis entitled Corded Ware Coastal Communities. She used ceramics as a means to enhance our understanding of Corded Ware communities in the Dutch coastal zone and other regions.
Beckerman is also an activist and politician for the Dutch socialist party (SP). From 2007 onwards she was an elected member of the regional parliament of the province of Groningen. In 2015, under her leadership, this party became the largest party in this province.

Author(s): Beckerman S.M.

Language: English
Commentary: 1722280
Tags: Исторические дисциплины;Археология;Энеолит и бронзовый век