2021
DOI: 10.1017/s0959774321000524
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Cultural Metallurgy—A Key Factor in the Transition from the Chalcolithic to Bronze Age in the Southern Levant

Abstract: The causes of the disappearance of Late Chalcolithic society (Ghassulian) in the early fourth millennium bc remain obscure. This study identifies the collapse as the consequence of a change in the approach to metallurgy from cosmological fundament (Late Chalcolithic) to a practical craft (EB1). This endogenous transition accounts for the cultural recession characterizing the transitional period (EB1A) and the discontinuity in ritual practices. The new practical approach in metallurgy is firstly observed in the… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In pre-industrial societies ritual often plays a crucial role in coordinating craft production, especially when this embodies newly established cultural and social identities. In the case of the Ghassulian Chalcolithic communities, the production of astonishing ceremonial and ritual objects is directly connected by these scholars to the gradual formation of new social structures, in a complex entanglement that links the act of manufacture itself, and the skilled craftsman behind it, to the negotiation of communal socio-cultural fabric through ritual and magic ontologies (Amzallag 2019;Amzallag 2022). While the emphasis on the role of metal artifacts as crucial status-markers is certainly important, one cannot help but wonder if, and in which ways, the inarguable skills required to produce them also led to a (re) negotiation of the social role of metal craftsmen.…”
Section: Negotiating Social Roles: Ritual Production In the Levant An...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In pre-industrial societies ritual often plays a crucial role in coordinating craft production, especially when this embodies newly established cultural and social identities. In the case of the Ghassulian Chalcolithic communities, the production of astonishing ceremonial and ritual objects is directly connected by these scholars to the gradual formation of new social structures, in a complex entanglement that links the act of manufacture itself, and the skilled craftsman behind it, to the negotiation of communal socio-cultural fabric through ritual and magic ontologies (Amzallag 2019;Amzallag 2022). While the emphasis on the role of metal artifacts as crucial status-markers is certainly important, one cannot help but wonder if, and in which ways, the inarguable skills required to produce them also led to a (re) negotiation of the social role of metal craftsmen.…”
Section: Negotiating Social Roles: Ritual Production In the Levant An...mentioning
confidence: 99%