Results of micrometallographic analysis of metalworking tools in graves of metallurgists in Moravia/Czech Republic
Authors | |
---|---|
Year of publication | 2023 |
Type | Article in Periodical |
Magazine / Source | Archaeometry |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
Web | https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/arcm.12843 |
Doi | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/arcm.12843 |
Keywords | BBC; energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis (EDX); MCWC; metallurgical toolkit; metallurgists' graves; Moravia |
Description | The number of finds relating to metalworking, without evidence of mining and processing facilities, is very limited. In Final Eneolith graves of specialized metallurgists that have occurred, they contain a metal-founding or metalsmithing toolkit, whose origins were from eastern Europe (the Maykop, Yamnaya Culture). Such metallurgical tools may have reached central Europe as part of the so-called Yamnaya Package before the onset of the Bee Beaker Culture (BBC); and unlike the Pontic region, these two types of metallurgy separated here. There are found an accumulation of metallurgists' graves in Moravia, where the complete metalworking toolkit is deposited in a predefined place in richly furnished male graves with a distinctive funerary architecture that exhibit a clear relationship to the grave goods. EDX-analysis detected a high content of metals (Cu, Ag, Au, Au–Ag alloy) on all working surfaces of stone tools, grinders, and boar tusks used for the final treatment of their metal products. This makes us believe that the used artefacts were laid as symbolical objects in the graves of these craftsmen who perfectly knew these advanced technologies. Due to their knowledge, their social significance gradually rose and finally reached the level of social elites, who were usually buried in a spectacular manner, including the quantity of grave goods (Überausstattung) and the pars pro toto deposition in one part of the finds. |