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Hillforts, Warfare and Society in Bronze Age Ireland (Paperback)
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Hillforts, Warfare and Society in Bronze Age Ireland (Paperback)
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The later part of the Bronze Age (1500-700 BC) was a time of
settlement expansion and economic prosperity in Ireland. This was a
landscape of small autonomous farming communities, but there is
also evidence for control of territory and population, involving
centralized organization of trade and economy, ritual and military
force. That concentration of power was connected to the emergence
of chiefdom polities active in the consolidation of large regional
territories. Their competitive tendencies led on occasion to
conflict and warfare, at a time of growing militarism evident in
the mass production of bronze weaponry, including the first use of
swords. Hillforts are another manifestation of a warrior culture
that emerged not only in Ireland but across Europe during the
Middle and Late Bronze Age. They were centers for high-status
residence, ceremony and assembly, and represented an important
visual display of power in the landscape. This is the first project
to study hillforts in relation to warfare and conflict in Bronze
Age Ireland. New evidence for the destruction of hillforts is
connected to territorial disputes and other forms of competition
arising from the ambitions of regional warlords, often with
catastrophic consequences for individual communities. This project
combines remote sensing and GIS-based landscape analysis with
conventional archaeological survey and excavation, to investigate
ten prehistoric hillforts across southern Ireland. These include a
cluster of nine examples at Baltinglass, Co. Wicklow, often termed
'Ireland's hillfort capital'. The results provide new insights into
the design and construction of these immense sites, as well as
details of their occupation and abandonment. The chronology of
Irish hillforts is reviewed, with a new understanding of origins
and development. The project provides a challenging insight into
the relationship of hillforts to warfare, social complexity and the
political climate of late prehistoric Ireland.
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