Towards a spatial archaeology of crafting landscapes

Date published

2022-03-09

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Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0959-7743

Format

Citation

Erb-Satullo NL. (2022) Towards a spatial archaeology of crafting landscapes, Cambridge Archaeological Journal, Volume 32, Issue 4, November 2022, pp. 567-583

Abstract

Discussions of spatial relationships are persistent features of research on the organization of craft production. Despite the centrality of spatial issues, the correspondence between spatial patterning and economic organization remains relatively under-theorized, especially around questions of power and control. Drawing from the literature on craft ecology, specialization and landscape archaeology, I develop an approach that considers spatial scales of patterning, the power projection of elites and institutions and the articulation between elements of the crafting landscape. This approach recognizes the complex sets of factors affecting spatial patterning and ultimately produces a more robust understanding of how ancient economic systems were organized. These ideas are explored through a case study on Late Bronze and Early Iron Age metal production in the Caucasus, clarifying the organizational logics of the metal economy and highlighting how this industry differed in significant ways from other contemporary metal-producing regions in the ancient Near East.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Production, Specialization Control, Landscape, Economy, Technology, Metallurgy

DOI

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Attribution 4.0 International

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Funder/s

National Science Foundation (BSC-1338893), the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies and Harvard University