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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).

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidences for centennial dry periods at ~3300 and ~2800 cal. yr BP from micro-facies analyses of the Dead Sea sediments

TL;DR: Laminated lake sediments from the Dead Sea basin provide high-resolution records of climatic variability in the eastern Mediterranean region, which is especially sensitive to changing climatic cond... as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Philistine and Israelite Pottery: A Comparative Approach to the Question of Pots and People

TL;DR: In this paper, a comparative approach to the question of pottery and people is presented, with a focus on the difference in pottery styles between the two cultures. But this approach is limited.
Journal ArticleDOI

The climate of crete in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

TL;DR: In this paper, the most important documentary sources for the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are introduced, their potentialities discussed and examples of documentary evidence given, and detailed consideration is given to the period 1548 to 1648, and its main climatic features tabulated.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Radiocarbon Perspective on Greenland Ice-Core Chronologies: Can we Use Ice Cores for 14C Calibration?

John R. Southon
- 01 Jan 2004 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the various chronologies were developed, summarizes the differences between them, and examines ways in which further research may allow a (super 14) C calibration to be established.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards an absolute chronology for the Aegean iron age: new radiocarbon dates from Lefkandi, Kalapodi and Corinth.

TL;DR: A new set of short-lived radiocarbon dates from the sites of Lefkandi, Kalapodi and Corinth in Greece focus on the crucial transition from the Submycenaean to the Protogeometric periods and place it in the second half of the 11th century BCE.
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