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Archaeologists date the Bronze Age in Europe from about the 5th to
the last millennium BC. That span of time saw dramatic changes in
civilizations from the Atlantic Ocean to the Black Sea, and from
Scandinavia to the Aegean. The discovery of Bronze, an alloy of
copper and tin, was a remarkable technological development,
permitting the casting of much stronger tools and weapons. Across
Europe, the people of the Bronze Age forged metal and traded its
products, raised monolithic standing stones, practised similar
funerary and religious rites, and decorated their products with the
same motifs and symbols. From Cretan palaces to Swiss lakeside
dwellings, a common culture arose. In this text the authors explore
the story of the Bronze Age, tracing it back beyond the borders of
history.
Lovers of gold, wine and war, the Celts have no voice because they
have left no written records. Much of what we know of them comes
from their enemies the Romans, who finally crushed them, and from
the weapons and ornaments they buried with their dead. From these
traces we can now resurrect a sophisticated people who dominated
Europe for 500 years. These highly cultured barbarians, with their
exquisite jewellery and metalwork, were eventually driven to the
edges of the known world - yet were destined to shine out once more
in the art of Celtic Christianity.
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