From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Overview of the
Hallstatt and La Tène cultures. The
core Hallstatt territory (800 BC) is shown in solid yellow, the
area of influence by 500 BC (HaD) in light yellow. The core
territory of the La Tène culture (450 BC) is shown in solid green,
the eventual area of La Tène influence by 50 BC in light green. The
territories of some major
Celtic tribes are
labelled.
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The La Tène culture was a European Iron Age culture named after the archaeological site of La Tène on
the north side of Lake Neuchâtel in Switzerland, where a rich trove of
artifacts was discovered by Hansli Kopp in 1857.
La Tène culture developed and flourished during the late Iron
Age (from 450 BC to the Roman conquest in the 1st century BCE) in
eastern France, Switzerland, Austria, southwest Germany, the Czech Republic,
Slovakia and Hungary. To the north extended
the contemporary Jastorf culture of Northern
Germany.[1] La Tène
culture developed out of the early Iron Age Hallstatt
culture without any definite cultural break, under the impetus
of considerable Mediterranean influence from Greek, and later
Etruscan civilizations. A shift
of settlement centres took place in the 4th century.
La Tène cultural material appeared over a large area, including
parts of Ireland and Great Britain (the
lake dwellings at Glastonbury, England, are a well known
example of La Tène culture), northern Spain, Burgundy, and Austria. Elaborate burials also reveal a wide
network of trade. In Vix, France, an elite woman of the 6th
century BCE was buried with a bronze cauldron made in Greece. Exports from La Tène
cultural areas to the Mediterranean cultures were based on salt, tin and copper, amber, wool and
leather, furs and gold.
A disputed La Tène
"homeland"
Though there is no agreement on the precise region in which La
Tène culture first developed, there is a broad consensus that the
center of the culture lay on the northwest edges of Hallstatt
culture, north of the Alps,
within the region between the valleys of the Marne and Moselle in the west and modern Bavaria and
Austria in the east. In 1994 a prototypical ensemble of elite grave
sites of the early 5th century BCE was excavated at Glauberg in Hesse, northeast of Frankfurt-am-Main, in a region that had
formerly been considered peripheral to the La Tène sphere.[2]
From their homeland, La Tène groups expanded in the 4th century
to Hispania, the Po Valley, the Balkans, and even as far as Asia
Minor, in the course of several major migrations. In the 4th
century, a Gallic army led by Brennus
reached Rome and took the city. In the 3rd century, Gallic bands
entered Greece and threatened the oracle of Delphi, while another
band settled Galatia in Asia
Minor.
Periodization
Extensive contacts through trade are recognized in foreign
objects deposited in elite burials; stylistic influences on La Tène
material culture can be recognized in Etruscan, Italic, Greek and Scythian sources. Dateable
Greek pottery at La Tène sites and dendrochronology and
thermoluminescence help provide date ranges in an absolute
chronology at some La Tène sites.
As with many archaeological periods, La Tène history was
originally divided into "early" (6th century BCE), "middle"
(ca 450-100 BCE), and "late" (1st century BCE) stages,
with the Roman occupation effectively driving the culture
underground and ending its development. A broad cultural unity was
not paralleled by overarching social-political unifying structures,
and the extent to which the material culture can be linguistically
linked is debated.
Ethnology
Our knowledge of this cultural area derives from three sources:
from archaeological evidence, from Greek and Latin literary
evidence, and more controversially, from ethnographical evidence
suggesting some La Tène artistic and cultural survivals in
traditionally Celtic regions of far western Europe. Some of the
societies that are archaeologically identified with La Tène material culture were identified
by Greek and Roman authors from the 5th century onwards as
keltoi ("Celts") and galli ("Gauls"). Herodotus placed keltoi at the
source of the Danube, in the
heartland of La Tène material culture. Whether this means that the
whole of La Tène culture can be attributed to a unified Celtic people is
difficult to assess; archaeologists have repeatedly concluded that
language, material culture, and political affiliation do not
necessarily run parallel. Frey notes (Frey 2004) that in the 5th
century, "burial customs in the Celtic world were not uniform;
rather, localised groups had their own beliefs, which, in
consequence, also gave rise to distinct artistic expressions". In
some cases where La Tène archaeological sites are overlain by
Slavic culture, any identification of La Tène material culture with
Celts may become a sensitive local issue.
Material
culture
La Tène metalwork in bronze, iron and gold,
developing technologically out of Halstatt culture, is
stylistically characterized by inscribed and inlaid intricate
spirals and interlace, on fine bronze vessels, helmets and shields,
horse trappings and elite jewelry, especially the neck rings called
torcs and elaborate clasps called
fibulae. It is
characterized by elegant, stylized curvilinear animal and vegetal
forms, allied with the Hallstatt traditions of geometric
patterning.
The
Hallstatt and
La Tène Cultures
Initially La Tène folk lived in open settlements that were
dominated by the chieftains’ towering hill forts.[3] The
development of towns— oppida— appears in mid-La Tène culture. La
Tène dwellings were carpenter-built rather than of masonry. La Tène
peoples also dug ritual shafts, in which votive offerings and even
human sacrifices were cast. Severed heads appear to have held great
power and were often represented in carvings. Burial sites included
weapons, carts, and both elite and household goods, evoking a
strong continuity with an afterlife.
Discovery
La Tène is
a village on the northern shore of Lake Neuchâtel, Switzerland. It is both an archaeological
site and the eponymous site for the late Iron Age La Tène culture, also spelt "Latène"
or "La-Tène".
In 1857, prolonged drought lowered the waters of the lake by about
2 m. On the northernmost tip of the lake, between the river Thièle
and a point south of the village of Marin-Epagnier, Hansli Kopp, looking for
antiquities for Colonel Frédéric Schwab, discovered several rows of
wooden piles that still reached about 50 cm into the water.
From among these, Kopp collected about forty iron swords.
The Swiss archaeologist Ferdinand Keller published his
findings in 1868 in his influential first report on the Swiss pile dwellings (Pfahlbaubericht).
In 1863 he interpreted the remains as a Celtic village built on piles.
Eduard Desor, a geologist from Neuchâtel, started excavations on the
lakeshore soon afterwards. He interpreted the site as an armory,
erected on piles over the lake and later destroyed by enemy action.
Another interpretation accounting for the presence of cast iron
swords that had not been sharpened, was of a site of
sacrifices.
With the first systematic lowering of the Swiss lakes from 1868
to 1883, the site fell completely dry. In 1880, Emile Vouga, a
teacher from Marin-Epagnier, uncovered the wooden remains of two
bridges (designated "Pont Desor" and "Pont Vouga") originally over
100 m long, that crossed the little Thièle River (today a nature
reserve) and the remains of five houses on the shore. After Vouga
had finished, F. Borel, curator of the Marin museum, began to
excavate as well. In 1885 the canton asked the Société
d'Histoire of Neuchâtel to continue the excavations, the results of
which were published by Vouga in the same year.
All in all, over 2500 objects, mainly made from metal, have been
excavated in La Tène. Weapons predominate, there being 166 swords (most without traces of
wear), 270 lanceheads, and 22 shield bosses, along with 385 brooches, tools, and parts of chariots. Numerous human and animal bones were
found as well.
Interpretations of the site vary. Some scholars believe the
bridge was destroyed by high water, while others see it as a place
of sacrifice after a
successful battle (there are almost no female ornaments).
An exhibition marking the 150th anniversary of the discovery of
the La Tène site was launched in June 2007 at the Musée Schwab in
Bienne, Switzerland.
It is scheduled to move to Zürich in 2008 and the Mont Beuvray in Burgundy in
2009.
Sites
Some sites are:
Artifacts
Some outstanding La Tène artifacts are:
- "Strettweg Cart" (7th century BCE), found in southeast Austria, a four-wheeled cart
with a goddess, riders with axes and shields, attendants and stags.
(Landesmuseum Johanneum, Graz,
Austria)
- A woman in Vix (Châtillon-sur-Seine, Burgundy) buried with a 1,100
litre (290 gallon) bronze Greek vase, the largest ever found.
- The silver "Gundestrup cauldron" (3rd or 2nd
century BCE), found ritually broken in a peat bog near Gundestrup,
Denmark, but probably made
near the Black Sea,
perhaps in Thrace. (National Museum of Denmark,
Copenhagen)
- "Battersea
Shield" (350-50 BCE), found in the Thames, made of bronze with red enamel. (British Museum,
London)
- "Witham
Shield" (4th century BCE). (British Museum, London) [1] [2]
- "Chertsey Shield (400-200 BCE). (British Museum, London) [3]
- "Turoe stone" in
Galway, Ireland
- Chariot burial found at Waldalgesheim, Bad Kreuznach, Germany, late 4th century BCE. (Bonn: Rheinisches Landesmuseum)
- Chariot burial found at La Gorge Meillet (St-Germain-en-Laye: Musée
des Antiquités Nationales).
- A life-sized sculpture of a warrior that accompanied the Glauberg burials.
- A gold-and-bronze model of an oak tree (3rd century BCE) found
at the Oppidum of Manching.
- Noric steel
Notes
Further
reading
- Cunliffe, Barry. The Ancient Celts. Oxford: Oxford
University Press. 1997
- Collis, John. The Celts: Origins, Myths, Invention.
London: Tempus, 2003.
- James, Simon. The Atlantic Celts. London: British
Museum Press, 1999.
- James, Simon, and Valery Rigby. Britain and the Celtic Iron
Age. London: British Museum Press, 1997.
See also
External
links
| Archaeological Sites in
Switzerland |
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Coordinates: 47°00′25″N 7°01′25″E / 47.00694°N
7.02361°E / 47.00694;
7.02361