Protohistoric cultural interactions in Atlantic Europe: a general perspective from Brittany to Galicia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36707/palaeohispanica.v23i0.523Keywords:
Late prehistory Archaeology, Cultural interactions, Networks, Socio-political hierarchization, Cultural evolutionAbstract
This article provides a synthetic overview of the late prehistory within the Bay of Biscay. The data are considered from the angle of the evolution of cultural interactions, in the light of recent works. The period considered extends from the Bell Beaker period to the end of the Iron Age. It seems to be characterized by alternating phases of dense interactions, which are associated with the appearance of markers of socio-political hierarchization (Early Bronze Age, Late Bronze Age, end of the Early Iron Age, end of the Second Iron Age), and phases of diminishing interactions, which are associated with the apparent disappearance or flattening of hierarchies (Middle Bronze Age, beginning of the First Iron Age, beginning of the Second Iron Age). The cultural phenomena highlighted shed light on the evolution of Palaeohispanic languages and cultures.
References
Adroit 2015 : S. Adroit, Pratiques funéraires et sociétés de la Garonne à l’Èbre (Xe s. - Ve s. av. J.-C.), Thèse de doctorat, université de Toulouse 2 Le Mirail, Toulouse 2015.
Blanchet 2022 : S. Blanchet, “Les pratiques funéraires du Bronze moyen et du Bronze final en Bretagne : un premier bilan”, in : L. Nonat, M. P. Prieto Martínez (éd.), Funerary Practices in the Second Half of the Second Millenium BC in Continental Atlantic Europe: from Belgium to the North of Portugal, Oxford 2022, 29 46. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2b07v0x.9
Brandherm 2019 : D. Brandherm, “Almost lost between the lines: the concept of the Atlantic Bronze Age”, in : D. Brandherm (éd.), Aspects of the Bronze Age in the Atlantic Archipelago and Beyond. Proceedings from the Belfast Bronze Age Forum, 9-10 November 2013, Hagen 2019, 1 15.
Breuil 1900 : H. Breuil, “L’âge du Bronze dans le bassin de Paris. I. Les épées et dagues du bassin de la Somme”, L’Anthropologie, 11, 1900, 530 534.
Breuil 1901 : H. Breuil, “L’âge du Bronze dans le bassin de Paris. II. Poignards, couteaux, scies, rasoirs, faucilles du bassin de la Somme”, L’Anthropologie, 12, 1901, 283 296.
Briard 1965 : J. Briard, Les dépôts bretons et l’âge du Bronze atlantique, Rennes 1965.
Briard 1976 : J. Briard, L’âge du Bronze en Europe barbare. Des mégalithes aux Celtes, Toulouse 1976.
Brughmans 2010 : T. Brughmans, “Connecting the Dots: Towards Archaeological Network Analysis”, Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 29, 3, 2010, 277 303. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0092.2010.00349.x
Brun 1998 : P. Brun, “Le complexe culturel atlantique : entre le cristal et la fumée”, in : S.O. Jorge (ed.), Existe uma idade do Bronze Atlântico ?, Lisbonne 1998, 40 51.
Brun et al. 2021 : P. Brun, B. Chaume, F. Sacchetti (éd.), Vix et le phénomène princier, Bordeaux 2021.
Buchsenschutz 2015 : O. Buchsenschutz (éd.), L’Europe celtique à l’Âge du fer : VIIIe-Ier siècles, Paris 2015. https://doi.org/10.3917/puf.busch.2015.01
Cabanillas de la Torre 2016 : G. Cabanillas de la Torre, Arts et sociétés celtiques du second âge du Fer en Europe occidentale : la céramique à décor estampé, thèse de doctorat, Université de Paris I, 2016.
Carozza et al. 2017 : L. Carozza, C. Marcigny, M. Talon (éd.), L’habitat et l’occupation des sols à l’âge du Bronze et au début du premier âge du Fer, Paris 2017.
Cassen et al. 2019 : S. Cassen, C. Rodríguez-Rellán, R. Fábregas Valcarce, V. Grimaud, Y. Pailler, B. Schulz Paulsson, “Real and ideal European maritime transfers along the Atlantic coast during the Neolithic”, Documenta Praehistorica, XLVI, 2019, 308 325. https://doi.org/10.4312/dp.46.19
Chantre 1875-1876 : E. Chantre, Études palethnologiques dans le bassin du Rhône. Âge du Bronze. Recherche sur l’origine de la métallurgie en France, Paris 1875-1876.
Coffyn et al.1981 : A. Coffyn, J. Gomez De Soto, J.-P. Mohen, L’apogée du Bronze atlantique : le dépôt de Vénat, Paris 1981.
Constantin 2023 : T. Constantin, Cultures transpyrénéennes. Les parures du sud-ouest de la france et du nord-ouest de l’Espagne au Premier âge du Fer (VIIIe-Ve s. a.C.), Pessac 2023.
https://ressources.una-editions.fr/s/TNjSrjctymzgZHJ
Couderc 2017 : F. Couderc, “Synthèse sur la pratique des dépôts métalliques au Bronze moyen en Médoc (Gironde, France) à la lumière de l’analyse spatiale”, Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, 114, 3, 2017, 529 552. https://doi.org/10.3406/bspf.2017.14805
Cunliffe 2001 : B. W. Cunliffe, Facing the ocean: the Atlantic and its peoples, 8000 BC-AD 1500, Oxford-New York 2001.
Cunliffe et Koch 2010 : B. W. Cunliffe, B.W., J. T. Koch (és.), Celtic from the West: alternative perspectives from archaeology, genetics, language, and literature, Oxford-Oakville 2010.
Currás et Sastre 2020 : B. X. Currás, I. Sastre (éd.), Alternative Iron Ages: social theory from archaeological analysis, Abingdon-New York 2020.
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351012119
Déchelette 1910 : J. Déchelette, Manuel d’archéologie préhistorique, celtique et gallo-romaine. II. Archéologie celtique ou protohistorique. Première partie : âge du Bronze, Paris 1910.
https://doi.org/10.3406/linly.1911.12611
Demoule 1993 : J.-P. Demoule, “L’archéologie du pouvoir : oscillations et résistances dans l’Europe protohistorique”, in : A. Daubigney (éd.), Fonctionnement social de l’âge du Fer : opérateurs et hypothèses pour la France. Table ronde internationale de Lons-le-Saunier (Jura), 24-26 octobre 1990, Lons-le-Saunier 1993, 259 273.
Dubos 2006 : B. Dubos, “Les pirogues du lac de Sanguinet”, Aquitania, 22, 2006, 7 53. https://doi.org/10.3406/aquit.2006.1145
Dumas 2016 : A. Dumas, Le premier âge du Fer en vallée de Garonne et sur ses marges. Dynamiques chrono-culturelles et territoriales, thèse de doctorat, université Bordeaux Montaigne, 2016. https://theses.hal.science/tel-01485503v1
Dumas 2021 : A. Dumas, “Nécropoles multipolaires et élaboration d’un nouveau modèle socio-politique au premier âge du Fer : réflexions à partir des sites du Camp de l’Église Sud à Flaujac-Poujols (Lot) et du Camp d’Alba à Réalville (Tarn-et-Garonne)”, Gallia, 78, 2021, 175 204. https://journals.openedition.org/gallia/6227
Dumas et Adroit 2022 : A. Dumas, S. Adroit, “Cours d’eau, faciès culturels et territorialité : la phase ancienne du Premier âge du Fer en moyenne Garonne”, in : B. Bonaventure et S. Carrara (éd.), Axes fluviaux et territoires à l’âge du Fer. Actes du 44e colloque de l’AFEAF, Lyon, 2020, Paris 2022, 175 191.
Escats et al. 2011 : Y. Escats, S. Blanchet, T. Nicolas, “Une enceinte et une nécropole protohistoriques à Lannion : présentation liminaire”, Bulletin de l’Association pour la Promotion des Recherches sur l'Âge du Bronze, 8, 2011, 77 79.
Escudé-Quillet 2007 : J.-M. Escudé-Quillet, “Pour une chronologie de l’âge du Fer de l’Aquitaine méridionale (VI-IVe s. a.C.) : étude chronotopographique du tumulus A.64.1 (Ibos, Hautes-Pyrénées)”, in : M. Vaginay, L. Izac-Imbert (éd.), Les âges du Fer dans le sud-ouest de la France. Actes du XXVIIIe colloque de l’AFEAF, Toulouse, 20-23 mai 2004, Bordeaux 2007, 93 123. https://doi.org/10.3406/aquit.2004.1396
Fernandez-Götz et García Quintela 2022 : M. Fernandez-Götz, M. V. García Quintela, “Oppida and Public Spaces: Constructing Identities in Late Iron Age and Early Roman North-West Iberia”, in : T.D. Stek et A. Carneiro (éds.), The archaeology of Roman Portugal in its Western Mediterranean context, Oxford 2022, 297 313. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2v6pcq1.20
Fichtl et al. 2019 : S. Fichtl, P. Barral, G. Pierrevelcin, M. Schönfelder (éds.), Les agglomérations ouvertes de l’Europe celtique (IIIe-Ier s. av. J.--C): Table ronde internationale Glux-en-Glenne, 28, 29 et 30 octobre, Strasbourg 2019.
Gardes et al. 2022 : P. Gardes, E. Hiriart, T. Le Dreff, P. Péfau, A. Colin, F. Verdin, “De la Garonne aux Pyrénées. Identité(s) culturelle(s) du sud-ouest de la France au second âge du Fer”, in : G. Pierrevelcin, J. Kysela, S. Fichtl (éd.), Unité et diversité du monde celtique - Unity and Diversity in the Celtic World. Actes du 42e colloque de l’AFEAF, Prague, 10-13 mai 2018, Paris 2022, 243-261.
Gerloff 1975 : S. Gerloff, The Early Bronze Age daggers in GReat Britain and a reconsideration of the Wessex Culture, Munich 1975.
Gomez De Soto 1995 : J. Gomez de Soto, Le Bronze moyen en Occident. La culture des Duffaits et la civilisation des Tumulus, Paris 1995.
Gomez De Soto 2006 : J. Gomez de Soto, “L’art laténien du Ve et du IVe siècle av. J.-C. en Gaule de l’Ouest : monde nord-alpin et/ou Méditerranée ? Actualités de l’art celtique d’Occident”, in : D. Frère et A. Morin (éd.), De la Méditerranée vers l’Atlantique : aspects des relations entre la Méditerranée et la Gaule centrale et occidentale (VIIIe-IIe siècle av. J.-C.), Rennes 2006, 57 66.
Gomez de Soto 2013 : J. Gomez de Soto, “En France de l’Ouest, de la Loire à Aquitaine septentrionale, de la céramique cannelée au style RSFO. Diffusion ou polygénie ?”, in : W. Leclercq, E. Warmenbol (éd.), Echanges de bons procédés. La céramique du Bronze final dans le nord-ouest de l’Europe. Actes du colloque international organisé à l’Université libre de Bruxelles les 1er et 2 octobre 2010, Bruxelles, 2013, 267 285. https://doi.org/10.4000/books.artehis.18216
Gomez de Soto et Pautreau 2013 : J. Gomez de Soto, J.-P. Pautreau, “Les importations méditerranéennes en Gaule du Centre-Ouest et dans les pays de la Loire moyenne du VIIIe au IIIe s. a.C. Un bilan”, in : S. Krausz, A. Colin, K. Gruel, I. Ralston, T. Dechezleprêtre (éd.), L’âge du Fer en Europe, mélanges offerts à Olivier Buchsenschutz, Bordeaux 2013, 463 474.
Gomez de Soto et al. 2009 : J. Gomez de Soto, I. Kerouanton, É. Marchadier, “La transition du Bronze final au premier âge du Fer (XIIIe-VIIe s. av. J.-C.) dans le centre-ouest de la France et sur ses marges”, in : M.-J. Roulière-Lambert, A. Daubigney, P.-Y. Milcent, M. Talon, J. Vital (éd.), De l’âge du Bronze à l’âge du Fer en France et en Europe Occidentale (Xe-VIIe siècle av. J.-C.). La moyenne vallée du Rhône aux âges du Fer, actualité de la recherche. Actes du XXXe colloque international de l’AFEAF, Saint-Romain-en-Gal, 26-28 mai 2006, Besançon 2009, 267 282. https://doi.org/10.4000/books.artehis.18216
Gomez de Soto et al. 2017 : J. Gomez de Soto, I. Kerouanton, C. Maitay, “Le Bronze moyen et l’origine du Bronze final dans le centre-ouest de la France (région Poitou-Charentes et ses marges)”, in : T. Lachenal, C. Mordant, T. Nicolas, C. Véber (éd.), Le Bronze moyen et l’origine du Bronze final en Europe occidentale (XVIIe-XIIIe siècle av. J.-C.): Colloque international de l’APRAB Strasbourg, 17 au 20 juin 2014, Strasbourg 2017, 343 362.
González Ruibal 2006-2007 : A. González Ruibal, Galaicos: poder y comunidad en el Noroeste de la Península Ibérica, 1200 a.C.-50 d.C., Brigantium 18-19, 2006-2007.
Gorgues et Milcent 2018 : A. Gorgues, P.-Y. Milcent, “Circulations et modalités d’échanges à l’âge du Bronze en France”, in : J. Guilaine et D. Garcia (éds.), La Protohistoire de la France, Paris 2018, 265 282. https://doi.org/10.3917/herm.garci.2018.01.0266
Harrison 1977 : R. J. Harrison, The Bell Beaker cultures of Spain and Portugal, Cambridge 1977.
Hawkes 1948 : C. F. C. Hawkes, “From Bronze Age to Iron Age: Middle Europe, Italy and the North and West”, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 14, 1948, 196 218. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00019496
Henderson 2007 : J. C. Henderson, The Atlantic Iron Age: settlement and identity in the first millennium BC, Londres 2007. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203938461
IHO 1953 : International Hydrographic Organization, Limits of oceans and seas, Monaco 1953.
Jeunesse 2018 : C. Jeunesse, “"Big men", chefferies ou démocratie primitive ? Quels types de sociétés dans le Néolithique de la France ?”, in : J. Guilaine, D. Garcia (éd.), La Protohistoire de la France, Paris, 2018, 171 185. https://doi.org/10.3917/herm.garci.2018.01.0172
Knappett 2011 : C. Knappett, An archaeology of interaction: network perspectives on material culture and society, Oxford-New York 2011. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780199215454.001.0001
Kristiansen 1998 : K. Kristiansen, Europe before history, Cambridge 1998.
Lachenal et al. 2017 : T. Lachenal, C. Mordant, T. Nicolas, C. Veber (éds.), Le Bronze moyen et l’origine du Bronze final en Europe occidentale (XVIIe-XIIIe siècle av. J.-C.): Colloque international de l’APRAB Strasbourg, 17 au 20 juin 2014, Strasbourg 2017.
Lagarde-Cardona 2012 : C. Lagarde-Cardona, Production métallique en Aquitaine à l'âge du Bronze moyen. Techniques, usages et circulation, Bordeaux 2012.
Lalonde 1989 : M. Lalonde, “Temps et sociétés traditionnelles”, Société, 6, 1989, 125 160.
Lemercier 2018 : O. Lemercier, “La question campaniforme”, in : J. Guilaine, D. Garcia (éd.), La Protohistoire de la France, Paris 2018, 205 217. https://doi.org/10.3917/herm.garci.2018.01.0206
Lévi-Strauss 1962 : C. Lévi-Strauss, La pensée sauvage, Paris 1962.
Mac White 1951 : E. Mac White, Estudios sobre las relaciones atlánticas de la Península Hispánica en la Edad del Bronce, Madrid 1951.
Mahr 1937 : A. Mahr, “New aspects and problems in Irish prehistory”, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 3, 1937, 262 436. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00021447
Marcigny 2017 : C. Marcigny, “L’habitat et l’occupation du sol en Normandie”, in L. Carozza, C. Marcigny, M. Talon (éd.), L’habitat et l’occupation des sols à l’âge du Bronze et au début du premier âge du Fer, Paris 2017, 53 77. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2b07v0x.8
Marcigny 2022 : C. Marcigny, “Les contextes funéraires du XVIIe au IXe siècle en Normandie”, in $ L. Nonat, M. P. Prieto Martínez (éd.), Funerary Practices in the Second Half of the Second Millenium BC in Continental Atlantic Europe. From Belgium to the north of Portugal, Oxford 2022, 15 28.
Mare et al. 2018 : É. Mare, E. Ghesquière, I. Le Goff, C. Marcigny, T. Nicolas, V. Zech-Matterne, “Malleville-sur-le-Bec, un village à l’âge du Bronze final (Eure)”, in : S. Boulud-Gazo, M. Mélin (éd.), Contributions à l’archéologie de l’âge du Bronze dans les espaces atlantiques et Manche-Mer du Nord. Volume 1 : Actes de la table ronde de Rouen (2005), Paris 2018, 77 266.
Martínez Santa-Olalla 1941 : J. Martínez Santa-Olalla, Esquema paletnológico de la península hispánica, Madrid 1941.
Milcent 2004 : P.Y. Milcent, Le premier Âge du Fer en France centrale, Paris 2004. https://doi.org/10.4000/books.artehis.18296
Milcent 2006 : P.Y. Milcent, “Premier âge du Fer médio-atlantique et genèse multipolaire des cultures matérielles laténiennes”, in : D. Vitali (éd.), Celtes et Gaulois, l’Archéologie face à l’Histoire. 2 : la Préhistoire des Celtes. Actes de la table ronde de Bologne-Monterezio, 28-29 mai 2005, Glux-en-Glenne 2006, 81 105.
Milcent 2009 : P.Y. Milcent, “Le passage de l’âge du Bronze à l’âge du Fer en Gaule au miroir des élites sociales : une crise au VIIIe s. av. J.-C. ?”, in : M.-J. Roulière-Lambert, A. Daubigney, P.-Y. Milcent, M. Talon, J. Vital (éd.), De l’âge du Bronze à l’âge du Fer en France et en Europe Occidentale (Xe-VIIe siècle av. J.-C.). La moyenne vallée du Rhône aux âges du Fer, actualité de la recherche. Actes du XXXe colloque international de l’AFEAF, Saint-Romain-en-Gal, 26-28 mai 2006, Besançon 2009, 453 476.
Milcent 2012 : P.Y. Milcent, Le temps des élites en Gaule atlantique. Chronologie des mobiliers et rythmes de constitution des dépôts métalliques dans le contexte européen (XIIIe-VIIe s. av. J.-C.), Rennes 2012.
Milcent 2017 : P.Y. Milcent, “The Atlantic Early Iron Age in Gaul”, in : A. Lehoërff et M. Talon (éd.), Movement, exchange and identity in Europe in the 2nd and 1st millennia BC: beyond frontiers, Oxford 2017, 79 98. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv13nb8p8.10
Milcent 2022 : P.-Y. Milcent, “Premier et second âges du Bronze, ou comment périodiser l’âge du Bronze en France ?”, in : C. Marcigny, T. Lachenal, P.-Y. Milcent, C. Mordant, R. Peake, M. Talon (éd.), Mesurer le temps à l’âge du Bronze, Journée thématique de l’Association pour la Promotion des Recherches sur l'Âge du Bronze, supplément 8, Paris 2022, 85 98.
Milcent et al. 2021 : P.Y. Milcent, F. Couderc, F.-A. Auxerre-Géron, P. Barral, C. Basset, J. Bénézet, L. Bernard, G. Blancquaert, S. Carrara, C. Chevillot, S. Chevrier, A. Colin, Y. Deberge, B. Dedet et al., “Les établissements de hauteur défendus protohistoriques en France (XXIIe-Ier siècles av. J.-C.)”, in : F. Delrieu, C. Féliu, P. Gruat, M.-C. Kurzaj, É. Nectoux (éd.), Les espaces fortifiés à l’âge du Fer en Europe. Actes du 43e colloque international de l’AFEAF (Le Puy-en-Velay, 30 mai-1er juin 2019), Paris 2021, 175 194.
Milcent et al. 2022 : P.-Y. Milcent, M. Nordez, B. Armbruster, “Parures annulaires en métal précieux et sociétés au début de l’âge du Fer dans le sud-ouest de la France (800-550 av. J.-C.)”, in : V. Ard, B. Boulestin, S. Boulud-Gazo, I. Kerouanton, C. Maitay, M. Mélin, M. Nordez (éd.), À l’ouest sans perdre le nord : liber amicorum, José Gomez de Soto, Chauvigny 2022, 353-373.
Moore et Armada 2012 : T. Moore, X. L. Armada (éd.), Atlantic Europe in the first millennium BC : crossing the divide, Oxford ; New York 2012. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780199567959.001.0001
Nicolas 2016 : C. Nicolas, Flèches de pouvoir à l’aube de la métallurgie de la Bretagne au Danemark (2500-1700 av. n. è.), Leiden 2016.
Nicolas et al. 2021 : C. Nicolas, Y. Pailler, P. Stephan, J. Pierson, L. Aubry, B. Le Gall, V. Lacombe, J. Rolet, “La carte et le territoire : la dalle gravée du Bronze ancien de Saint-Bélec (Leuhan, Finistère)”, Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, 118, 1, 2021, 99 146.
Nonat 2017 : L. Nonat, Monde funéraire de l’âge du Bronze ancien et moyen de la façade nord de l’Espagne jusqu’au sud-ouest de la France : identités et espaces, thèse de doctorat, université de Pau et des pays de l’Adour, Pau 2017. https://doi.org/10.30861/9781407313481
Nonat et al. 2015 : L. Nonat, P. Vázquez Liz, M. P. Prieto Martínez, El Vaso de Largo Bordo Horizontal: Un Trazador Cultural del Noroeste de la Península Ibérica en el II Milenio BC, Ann Arbor 2015.
Nonat et Prieto Martínez 2022 : L. Nonat, M. P. Prieto Martínez (éd.), Funerary practices in the second half of the second millennium BC in continental Atlantic Europe: from Belgium to the north of Portugal, Oxford 2022. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2b07v0x
Nordez 2019 : M. Nordez, La parure en métal de l’âge du Bronze moyen atlantique (XVe-XIVe siècles avant notre ère), Paris 2019.
Oliveira Jorge 1998 : S. Oliveira Jorge, S., Existe uma idade do Bronze Atlântico ?, Lisbonne 1998.
Östborn et Gerding 2014 : P. Östborn, H. Gerding, “Network analysis of archaeological data: a systematic approach”, Journal of Archaeological Science, 46, 2014, 75 88. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2014.03.015
Parcero Oubiña et Cobas Fernández 2004 : C. Parcero Oubiña, I. Cobas-Fernández, “Iron Age Archaeology of the Northwest Iberian Peninsula”, E-Keltoi, 6, 2004, 1 72.
Parcero Oubiña et al. 2020 : C. Parcero Oubiña, X. L. Armada, S. Nión, F. González Insua, “All together now (or not). Change, resistance and resilience in the NW Iberian Peninsula in the Bronze Age - Iron Age transition”, in : B.X. Currás et I. Sastre (ed.), Alternative Iron Ages. Social theory from archaeological analysis, London; New York 2020, 151 175. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351012119-9
Prieto Martínez, Salanova 2015 : M. P. Prieto Martínez, L. Salanova (éd.), The Bell beaker transition in Europe: mobility and local evolution during the 3rd millennium BC, Oxford 2015.
Rodrigues 2016 : V. Rodrigues, Parures et échanges au premier âge du Fer des Pyrénées à l’Atlantique (VIIIe-Ve siècles), thèse de doctorat, université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour, Pau 2016.
Roussot-Larroque 1988 : J. Roussot-Larroque, “Le ‘Rhin-Suisse-France Orientale’ et l’Aquitaine”, in : P. Brun et C. Mordant (éd.), Le Groupe Rhin-Suisse-France orientale et la notion de civilisation des Champs d’Urnes : actes du colloque international de Nemours 1986, Paris 1988, 481 511.
Roussot-Larroque et Merlet 2012 : J. Roussot-Larroque, J.-C. Merlet, “La céramique du Bronze final en Aquitaine : éléments de synthèse”, Documents d’Archéologie Méridionale, 35, 2012, 175 204. https://doi.org/10.4000/dam.2102
Roussot-Larroque et al. 2018 : J. Roussot-Larroque, J.-C. Merlet, F. Marembert, “La diffusion de la céramique à pastillage au Bronze moyen en Aquitaine”, in : P. Marticorena, V. Ard, A. Hasler, J. Cauliez, C. Gilabert, I. Sénépart (éd.), Entre deux mers & actualité de la recherche : actes des 12e Rencontres méridionales de Préhistoire récente, Bayonne, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, du 27 septembre au 1er octobre 2016, Toulouse 2018, 117 129.
Salanova 2000 : L. Salanova, La question du Campaniforme en France et dans les îles anglo-normandes: productions, chronologie et rôles d’un standard céramique, Paris 2000.
Schauer 1971 : P. Schauer, Die Schwerter in Süddeutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz, Munich 1971.
Schauer 1972 : P. Schauer, “Zur herkunft des bronzenen Hallstatt-Schwerter”, Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt, 2, 261-270.
Savory 1949 : H. N. Savory, “The Atlantic Bronze Age in South-west Europe”, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 15, 1949, 128 155. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00019253
Verger 2013 : S. Verger, “La couche archaïque de Bitalemi à travers quelques-uns de ses dépôts de bronze”, in : S. Verger, L. Pernet (éd.), Une odyssée gauloise: parures de femmes à l’origine des premiers échanges entre la Grèce et la Gaule, Arles 2013, 265 270.
Additional Files
Published
Issue
Section
License
Professional standards and ethical policies
a) Palaeohispanica’s editorial board
Details concerning the journal’s internal organization can be found at this website.
b) Authors’ responsibilities
As an implicit condition for publishing in Palaeohispanica, authors are expected to adhere to all the ethical and professional principles that are shared across all research fields and academic publications. By submitting a contribution for peer review, potential authors guarantee that their work is original, that it constitutes a significant contribution to its research field and has not been published elsewhere.
All submitted manuscripts ought to contain bibliographic references at the end of the paper as well as an indication of how the research that culminated in the article was funded.
Likewise, authors must agree to incorporate any relevant changes that peer reviewers suggest as well as to include any recommendations that the editorial committee includes in the manuscript’s proofs at the end of the editorial process.
The journal expects its authors, reviewers, editors and staff members to all conduct themselves professionally by treating others with respect and civility. Should any sort of untoward situation arise, such as (self) plagiarism, conflicts of interest or aggressive behaviour on the author’s part, the following actions will be taken:
- Plagiarism and the republication of articles
Plagiarism is defined as the reproduction of a text or other materials found in different publications without the original source being adequately cited. Accordingly, material can still be plagiarized even when it has been tweaked or paraphrased. Plagiarism constitutes a serious ethical violation; furthermore, there can be legal ramifications for violating an author’s rights in cases where the reproduced material has been previously published. Authors who want to cite published work must do so by including complete references to the original materials and by including any quotations within quotation marks. Graphs and images can only be reproduced with the express permission of the original author and must include a citation below said image or graphic according to the rules laid out on the journal’s website. If a peer reviewer or the editorial board detects any instance of plagiarism (whether of one’s own or another’s work), the manuscript will automatically be disqualified.
- Conflicts of interest
In most instances an individual who works at the same institution as an author or one of the co-authors is automatically barred from evaluating a potential contribution. The journal’s editors must always be aware of possible conflicts of interest and are required to recuse themselves from any decision-making process, whenever there is even the appearance of a possible conflict of interest.
c) The peer-review process
Palaeohispanica employs peers to evaluate externally all contributions, with this being understood as obtaining the opinion of an established expert over the merits of every potential contribution. In addition to completing the relevant form, reviewers are expected to suggest any pertinent bibliography that was not included in the original version of the manuscript.
Furthermore, the peer-review process is double blind, meaning that both authors’ anonymity as well as the reviewers’ impartiality and independence are guaranteed. Reader reviews will be treated with the utmost confidentiality. As is the case with all respectable research journals, the editors of Palaeohispanicawill not share with a third party the identity of a peer reviewer, the contents of his or her review or any correspondence resulting from the review process. Likewise, reviewers are required to adhere to the same strict standard of confidentiality: neither manuscripts nor the contents of any correspondence between an author and the editors can be shared with a third party without the written and express consent of the journal’s editors.
While strictly speaking authors are not held to the same standards (they can, for instance, solicit advice from co-authors and colleagues as they revise and amend a manuscript in accordance with the recommendations found in a reviewer’s report), the public airing of a reviewer’s report or of the correspondence with the editorial team constitutes untoward behavior. Any author who acts in such a way will automatically forfeit his or her right to the journal’s confidentiality.
- Aggressive behaviour
Should the editorial committee be made aware of any untoward behaviour on the author’s part towards external reviewers, other authors or the journal’s editors/staff, that author’s submission will immediately be withdrawn from the consideration process.
All participants in the publication process, including editors, authors, peer reviewers, and member’s of the journal’s staff are expected to meet basic standards of professional courtesy and to respect the fundamental rules and guidelines concerning the peer-review and publication processes. Under any circumstance, personal attacks and verbal assault (whether expressed orally or through writing) are completely unacceptable. Accordingly, the journal reserves the right to reject the contribution of any author who repeatedly violates these principles or refuses to cooperate with the editors and reviewers during the normal evaluation and publication processes.
d) Editorial ethics
The editorial team at Palaeohispanica will bring an end to any dishonest research practice by submitting every proposal to a careful review process that will begin before the selection of possible peer reviewers. Should anything questionable be detected, an author will be asked to provide relevant explanations and then be told to review his/her text so as to meet the journal’s quality standards. If an author does not make the requested changes, the manuscript will not be submitted for double-blind peer review and, accordingly, will not be published. The editorial board is always available to discuss and debate with authors any misunderstanding that could have given rise to such a situation.
e) Copyright and journal access
Journal content falls under the protection of licence Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA. Access the all journal content is open and free of charge.
f) Journal archive
Given that the Institución Fernando el Católico is an established and important publishing house, it is extremely unlikely that access to the journal’s contents could be compromised in anyway within the foreseeable future. The contents of Palaeohispanica will be stored in IFC’s servers even if the journal ceases to be published.
g) Ownership and management of the journal
The journal Palaeohispanica is edited and run by the institution «Fernando el Católico», an independent entity of the Excelentísima Diputación de Zaragoza.
Names and email addresses submitted to this journal will only be used for tasks related to the journal and will not be shared with any third party or used for any other purpose.
In accordance with the Regulation UE 2016/679, information gathered by the Institución Fernando el Católico de la Excma. Diputación de Zaragoza (IFC) will be used for carrying out the functions of an academic publication, the handling of claims, appeals, complaints, suggestions, surveys as well as any other activity involved in the management of the journal.
Cubic Factory is in charge of handling said data. They can be contacted at cubic@cubicfactory.com.
Data can be given to public agencies with the relevant competencies and in case of legal obligations.
Those who are interested can exercise their rights of access, correction, suppression, limitation of the use, opposition and portability by contacting ifc@dpz.es.
Users can also go to the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos to make any complaints that they feel is necessary.
User information will be kept during the period in which it is needed to complete the task for which said information was provided in the first place or for the period necessary to comply with any legal obligations. Once a given objective has been completed, personal data that is not part of fulfillment of public service will be blocked until the applicable period has ended.
Ethical and confidentiality policy of Palaeohispanica can be consulted here.
Privacy policy
Names and email addresses submitted to this journal will only be used for tasks related to the journal and will not be shared with any third party or used for any other purpose.
In accordance with the Regulation UE 2016/679, information gathered by the Institución Fernando el Católico de la Excma. Diputación de Zaragoza (IFC) will be used for carrying out the functions of an academic publication, the handling of claims, appeals, complaints, suggestions, surveys as well as any other activity involved in the management of the journal.
Cubic Factory is in charge of handling said data. They can be contacted at cubic@cubicfactory.com.
Data can be given to public agencies with the relevant competencies and in case of legal obligations.
Those who are interested can exercise their rights of access, correction, suppression, limitation of the use, opposition and portabilityby contacting ifc@dpz.es.
Users can also go to the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos to make any complaints that they feel is necessary.
User information will be kept during the period in which it is needed to complete the task for which said information was provided in the first place or for the period necessary to comply with any legal obligations. Once a given objective has been completed, personal data that is not part of fulfillment of public service will be blocked until the applicable period has ended.
The IFC’s privacy and data protection policy can be consulted at https://tiendaifc.dpz.es/Sites/dpz/paginasPersonalizadas/Modelo2/inicio.aspx. It can also be found in the journal’s the top navigation menu: http://ifc.dpz.es/ojs/index.php/palaeohispanica/dpd
Names and email addresses submitted to this journal will only be used for tasks related to the journal and will not be shared with any third party or used for any other purpose.
In accordance with the Regulation UE 2016/679, information gathered by the Institución Fernando el Católico de la Excma. Diputación de Zaragoza (IFC) will be used for carrying out the functions of an academic publication, the handling of claims, appeals, complaints, suggestions, surveys as well as any other activity involved in the management of the journal.
Cubic Factory is in charge of handling said data. They can be contacted at cubic@cubicfactory.com.
Data can be given to public agencies with the relevant competencies and in case of legal obligations.
Those who are interested can exercise their rights of access, correction, suppression, limitation of the use, opposition and portability by contacting ifc@dpz.es.
Users can also go to the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos to make any complaints that they feel is necessary.
User information will be kept during the period in which it is needed to complete the task for which said information was provided in the first place or for the period necessary to comply with any legal obligations. Once a given objective has been completed, personal data that is not part of fulfillment of public service will be blocked until the applicable period has ended.
Ethical and confidentiality policy of Palaeohispanica can be consulted here.