scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Crisis in Context: The End of the Late Bronze Age in the Eastern Mediterranean

A. Bernard Knapp, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2016 - 
- Vol. 120, Iss: 1, pp 99
TLDR
The authors reviewed the current state of the archaeological and historical evidence and considered the coherence of climatic explanations and overprecise chronologies in attempting to place the "crisis" in context.
Abstract
Explanations for the Late Bronze Age crisis and collapse in the eastern Mediterranean are legion: migrations, predations by external forces, political struggles within dominant polities or system collapse among them, inequalities between centers and peripheries, climatic change and natural disasters, disease/plague. There has never been any overarching explanation to account for all the changes within and beyond the eastern Mediterranean, some of which occurred at different times from the mid to late 13th throughout the 12th centuries B.C.E. The ambiguity of the evidence—material, textual, climatic, chronological—and the differing contexts involved across the central-eastern Mediterranean make it difficult to disentangle background noise from boundary conditions and to distinguish cause from effect. Can we identify the protagonists of the crisis and related events? How useful are recent explanations that focus on climate and/or chronology in providing a better understanding of the crisis? This article reviews the current state of the archaeological and historical evidence and considers the coherence of climatic explanations and overprecise chronologies in attempting to place the “crisis” in context. There is no final solution: the human-induced Late Bronze Age “collapse” presents multiple material, social, and cultural realities that demand continuing, and collaborative, archaeological, historical, and scientific attention and interpretation. This article is available as open access on (AJA Online).

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution of an Ancient Coastal Lake (Lerna, Peloponnese, Greece)

TL;DR: In this paper , an ancient coastal lake wetland is investigated, the so-called Lake Lerna in NE Peloponnese, Greece, and two drill cores in the area of the ancient lake were analyzed to establish the sedimentological succession and the depositional environments using sub-fossil assemblages (molluscs and ostracods).
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of the Akrotiri Marsh, island of Cyprus, to Bronze Age climate change

TL;DR: In this article , the authors present two multiproxy records covering the last 5000 years from the Akrotiri Marsh in southern Cyprus, revealing expansion and contraction of the marsh in response to mid-late Holocene climate events, with peak aridity reconstructed in the early Bronze Age, inferred between 4.3 and 4.1 cal ka BP, and repeated dry intervals in the Late Bronze Age.
Journal ArticleDOI

Archaeo-tectural Translations: New Roles for the Field Architect

TL;DR: In this paper, the field architect's evolving role in interdisciplinary archaeology projects when equipped with new technologies for reconstructing ancient history is examined, and how digital technologies facilitate the architect's extrapolation of embedded knowledge from archaeological datasets, especially those contained in a shared interoperable modeling domain.
Book ChapterDOI

Tracing the Remains of a Late Bronze Age Field System in Central Mainland Greece

TL;DR: In this article, the AROURA project identified the Kopaic Basin in northern Boiotia as a suitable study region, and performed magnetometry on 60 ha of land selected from inside the polder around the fortress of Glas and revealed evidence of canals connected to rivers that were diverted during the Late Bronze Age (Helladic) this article.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-Term Aridity Changes in the Western United States

TL;DR: Using gridded drought reconstructions that cover most of the western United States over the past 1200 years, it is shown that this drought pales in comparison to an earlier period of elevated aridity and epic drought in AD 900 to 1300, an interval broadly consistent with the Medieval Warm Period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asian monsoon failure and megadrought during the last millennium.

TL;DR: The Monsoon Asia Drought Atlas (MADA), a seasonally resolved gridded spatial reconstruction of Asian monsoon drought and pluvials over the past millennium, derived from a network of tree-ring chronologies, provides a long-term context for recent monsoon variability that is critically needed for climate modeling, prediction, and attribution.
Related Papers (5)