Warfare in Neolithic Europe: An Archaeological and Anthropological Analysis

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The Neolithic ('New Stone Age') marks the time when the prehistoric communities of Europe turned their backs on the hunter-gatherer lifestyle that they had followed for many thousands of years, and instead, became farmers. The significance of this switch from a lifestyle that had been based on the hunting and gathering of wild food resources, to one that involved the growing of crops and raising livestock, cannot be underestimated. Although it was a complex process that varied from place to place, there can be little doubt that it was during the Neolithic that the foundations for the incredibly complex modern societies in which we live today were laid. However, we would be wrong to think that the first farming communities of Europe were in tune with nature and each other, as there is a considerable (and growing) body of archaeological data that is indicative of episodes of warfare between these communities. This evidence should not be taken as proof that warfare was endemic across Neolithic Europe, but it does strongly suggest that it was more common than some scholars have proposed. Furthermore, the words of the seventeenth-century English philosopher, Thomas Hobbes, who famously described prehistoric life as 'nasty, brutish, and short', seem rather apt in light of some of the archaeological discoveries from the European Neolithic.

Author(s): Julian Maxwell Heath
Publisher: Pen & Sword Archaeology
Year: 2017

Language: English
Pages: 138
City: Barnsley

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Earliest Evidence for European Neolithic Warfare: Greece and the Balkans
Chapter 2: Warfare in the Linearbandkeramik/Linear Pottery Culture
Chapter 3: Corded Ware and Bell Beaker Burials: Evidence of Warfare and Warrior Groups?
Chapter 4: France and Italy
Chapter 5: The Iberian Peninsula
Chapter 6: The British Isles
Notes
Bibliography