Warfarevs - Exchange?Thoughts Onanintegrativeapproach: Chapterfour
Warfarevs - Exchange?Thoughts Onanintegrativeapproach: Chapterfour
Warfarevs - Exchange?Thoughts Onanintegrativeapproach: Chapterfour
INTRODUCTION
47
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48 HORN
Nevertheless, the presence of weapons, warrior graves, and imagery does not
fit smoothly into this picture. Thus, the questions concerning their meaning in
prehistory persist. The following is an attempt to reach an integrated under-
standing of exchange and warfare. Due to the circumstantial nature of the
evidence and space restrictions, the discussion will be brief and some evidence
must be left out.
Similar systems of exchange may have existed in the Late Neolithic and the
Earliest Bronze Age in southern Scandinavia. Natural resources for exchange
were available in the deposits of flint (Varberg 2005) and Baltic amber (Shennan
1982). Copper, on the other hand, was presumably imported (Ling et al. 2013)
as suggested by the morphology of metal artefacts which are thought to confirm
these far-reaching contacts (cf. Oldeberg 1976). However compelling, this
proposed system is accompanied by some inherent problems, at least when it
is supposed to account for all of southern Scandinavia. For example, the
distribution of natural resources is unequal and seems to be concentrated in
Limfjord, the Danish Isles and Rügen (Fig. 4.1). Another unsolved question is
what resource flowed in the opposite exchange direction (Klassen 2000:
277–278). The picture created unintentionally conveys the idea of a communal
sphere in which people came together peacefully, bound by common trade,
interest and contact: an ideal capitalist world.
One of the most favourable southern Scandinavian regions in terms of
economic advantages is Limfjord and its adjacent regions (Fig. 4.1). It has a
large occurrence of Baltic amber (Dahlström and Brost 1996), a resource that was
highly significant during the Late Neolithic and the Bronze Age. Amber was
exchanged throughout Europe, including the Wessex culture, Úně tice cul-
ture, and later throughout the Mediterranean region (Harding, Hughes-
Brock and Beck 1974; Shennan 1982). Large deposits of naturally occurring
flint were another resource used by the inhabitants of Limfjord (Varberg
2005). Flint daggers were widely distributed throughout Scandinavia and
more distant regions, reaching Finland, Poland and the Netherlands (Lomborg
1973; Apel 2001). Therefore, both materials were very important for the pro-
duction and acquisition of prestige goods thought to be highly significant for the
establishment of social rule and hierarchies (Earle 2004).
Additionally, natural currents favour Limfjord (Ehlin 1981: 129–133).
From the west, significant streams pass Limfjord and flow into the Kattegat
and the Skategatt (Fig. 4.1). Potentially, this facilitated incoming exchange by
means of waterborne mobility, perhaps from northwestern Germany and the
Netherlands or even European regions farther away, such as the British Isles,
France or Iberia. Along the coast, currents flow out of the Skategatt and
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WAR FAR E V S. EXCHANGE? T HOUGHTS ON A N I NTEGRATIVE APPROACH 49
Amber deposits
Flint deposits
Incoming metal
Main currents
4.1: Map of southern Scandinavia indicating natural resources, maritime currents and metal
trade routes (after Dahlström and Brost 1996; Varberg 2005).
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50 HORN
(a)
Graves with amber (n = 107)
100%
90%
31
80%
49
70% 65
78
60% 90
50%
40%
76
30%
58
20% 42
29
10% 17
0%
Weapons Clothing Ornaments Tools Toilet gear
gear
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WAR FAR E V S. EXCHANGE? T HOUGHTS ON A N I NTEGRATIVE APPROACH 51
Among the first bronze objects created in Period I of the Early Nordic Bronze
Age were weapons: short-swords and spears. Yet, even prior to this period,
weapons in the form of copper halberds were present in southern Scandinavia.
This is, in itself, a very intriguing observation, but these early weapons are
viewed by many researchers with much scepticism. Frequently, halberds are
portrayed as a nonfunctional class of weapons used solely for prestige or ritual
purposes, and arguments testifying to their ‘weak construction’, ‘unsuitability’
and ‘uselessness’ have been repeated for more than seventy years (Ó’Ríordáin
1937: 241; cf. O’Flaherty 1998). Swords of the Sögel/Wohlde-complex have
also equally been portrayed as technologically ill-constructed and merely fit for
stabbing (Fontijn 2005: 146). Similarly, early spears have been considered by
some to be ‘clumsy’ (Harding 2007: 76) or generally not fit for fighting (Mercer
2006: 131). In the light of this previous research, I will reconsider the evidence
for fighting and war in the following.
If these weapons were not fit for use, a use-wear analysis should be expected
to provide no traces of past combat. Here, I will only provide a summary of
the use-wear analysis (for details, see Horn 2013, 2014a, 2014b). Fifteen of the
forty-one known Late Neolithic halberds, and 208 of the approximately 600
known Period I weapons have been examined. Traces of use included impact
damage (e.g., notches, indentations, blow-marks and plastic deformation includ-
ing curvatures and fractures). Although plastic deformations are partially caused
by impact, they are separated within this designation from impact damage
because they affect larger parts of the weapon. Conversely, ‘impact damage’
leaves more or less clear imprints of the impacting objects. In that sense, tip
damage forms a separate category including pressure, fracture and curvature.
Traces of repair were recorded for two reasons: first, repairs were obviously only
necessary when something had been damaged; therefore, they may account for
secondary proof of combat use (Kristiansen 1984, 2002). Second, repairs distort
combat traces because they subtract larger parts of the edges.
Post-depositional processes, above all corrosion, also distort use-wear traces.
In general, certain aspects of depositions increase the potential of corrosion: for
example, the environment of graves is more corrosive due to the presence of
chlorine and ammonia as products of the decomposition of the human body
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52 HORN
(Spähn 2001: 203 tab. 1; Tylecote 1979: 350). Preweakened parts, such as
notches, are also susceptible due to their enlarged surface. For example,
56 per cent of the swords (twenty-eight) exhibited traces of use or repair, and
only two swords (4 per cent) clearly lacked such evidence. The remaining swords
(twenty or 40 per cent) were too disturbed to make any clear judgement.
In comparison, spears exhibit use-wear more frequently. Perhaps this relates
to the fact that more swords were discovered in burial contexts. Accordingly,
almost half of the examined swords (twenty-three or 46 per cent) display strong
corrosion. Despite these difficulties, the evidence for the use of the examined
weapons in combat is overwhelming (Horn 2013, 2014a, 2014b). Kristiansen
has shown that weapons continued to be used in frequently occurring conflicts
in later periods (Kristiansen 1984, 2002).
More than half of the examined weaponry possessed damage acquired in
combat as well as traces of repair indicating frequent and heavy use. If we
consider the presence of different damage categories, repairs and the simulta-
neous presence of both combined with the occurrence of heavy disturbances,
we can conclude that the damage observed represents only the minimum of
the damage that was originally incurred (see Horn 2013, Horn 2014b).
Considering the evidence from the use-wear analysis it can be said that
fighting occurred quite often. If the assumption is accepted that the weapons
in the archaeological record present only a subset of the prehistoric reality, we
may view Scandinavia as a tightly knit network in which conflict occurred with
a certain degree of regularity. That this conflict could have ensued between
close neighbours is exemplified by a deceased man discovered in Over
Vindinge who had the tip of a local Valsømagle spear embedded in his pelvis
(Kjær 1912). He also reminds us that these conflicts had serious consequences
for the living population.
It can perhaps generally be stated that archaeological evidence is for the most
part sketchy, always demanding interpretation if past reality is to be approxi-
mated. Nonetheless, there is good evidence for the association of warfare and
exchange if we turn our attention to the weapons themselves. The use-wear
analysis suggests that many weapons were produced for violent conflict.
However, used weapons may also have been part of the exchange of highly
regarded gifts as objects invested with stories. That is to say, their use in warfare
gave them their value and the potential to convey prestige. Therefore, it cannot
be assumed that they were deposited as symbols for exchange as freshly produced
objects might. Nevertheless, used weapons can serve as secondary proof of
commodity exchange, namely as evidence of the exchange of the raw materials
they were made from (Ling et al. 2013).
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WAR FAR E V S. EXCHANGE? T HOUGHTS ON A N I NTEGRATIVE APPROACH 53
Accordingly, studies of lead isotopes suggest that most of the copper was
imported into Scandinavia from all over Europe (Ling et al. 2013). This is
confirmed by the observation that many weapon forms are influenced by
contact with other regions. Halberds feature types known from the British
Isles and later from the Úně tice culture (Horn 2014a), whereas the develop-
ment of swords seems to be largely dependent on interaction with the
Carpathian Basin (Lomborg 1960). That past people made the decision to
set aside some of the precious raw materials in anticipation of conflict (i.e.,
producing weapons to be used in combat), perhaps points to a certain neces-
sity to do so. This necessity may have arisen within the competitive context of
exchange. On a local scale, the same might be true for flint and flint daggers,
which should be regarded as weapons rather than as tools within their social
context (Christensen 2004: 141; Sarauw 2007: 73–75).
In a wider view, there is further evidence that warfare and exchange were
interrelated. Other raw materials refer to this connection, pointing to exchange
networks with regions outside Scandinavia. In the Wessex culture of southern
Britain, pendants were produced in the shape of halberds. Their handles were
made out of gold, Baltic amber or both (Piggott 1938: 84–85). These finds
point to the manifold complexity involved in exchange and warfare. To
produce the handles with imported raw materials from another region was
not the only choice made: people decided to produce pendants in the form of a
weapon not in use locally, but typically belonging to the wider Úně tice region.
Within the Úně tice culture, hoard II from Dieskau not only exemplifies
the link between warfare and exchange, but indicates connections to
Scandinavia as well. A necklace of amber beads was associated with fourteen
halberds, which implies that the Dieskau hoard II contained elements of both
exchange and warfare because European halberds were usable and used as
weapons (Horn 2014a).
Furthermore, there is local evidence in southern Scandinavia for a connec-
tion between amber and weapons. In Tinnum (Sylt), a grave assemblage was
discovered containing an amber bead associated with a sword of the Sögel type
(Aner and Kersten 1979: no. 2742) and a grave in Kisum in the Limfjord area
contained a Wholde-type sword which was associated with another amber
bead (Aner and Kersten 1995: no. 4642). These findings can be quantified:
a sample of 107 graves with amber and associated finds dating to the Late
Neolithic and Early Bronze Age mainly from northern Germany, Sweden and
the Copenhagen region (taken from the respective Aner and Kersten volumes
and Oldeberg 1974) were analysed and five categories were defined (Fig. 4.2).
Ornaments and clothing gear have been separated according to their degree of
practical utility. Assuming that the dead were usually buried clothed, a fibula or
a pin was necessary to secure the garment and therefore was possibly not a
prestigious gift, but a finger ring would have been something extraordinary in
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54 HORN
this sense. It should also be mentioned that the weapons category also includes
axes. Scandinavian rock art may be considered evidence that axes were
employed in violent encounters because they appear in a number of antag-
onistic scenes; however, they were also counted in the tool category to reflect
their other potential uses.
A majority of the graves with amber contain swords (seventy-six or 71 per cent).
While this only slightly deviates from the overall percentage, there is a drop-
off from the other categories. This can possibly be explained overall by the
graves that include amber being somewhat richer than the rest. Analysing
the categories further, we see that the average of present categories is 2.1 and
the median is 2. For all the other graves, the average is 1.5 and the median is 1.
Most remarkable in the scope of this paper is the relative increase in ornaments,
clothing and toilet gear at the expense of tools in these graves (Fig. 4.2). This may
potentially be seen as evidence that the local precious exchange material was
closely connected to activities associated with conflict. Depending on the out-
look of what the grave goods represent, this suggests that exchange with amber
was a high-status activity either of the deceased himself or those who suc-
ceeded him. Assumedly, the continuous flow of the raw materials that formed
the base and potential for exchange, as well as the raw materials used to
produce these grave goods, needed to be a secured. The weapons could be
interpreted as an integral part of exchange acts, whether to protect exchange
networks or to force a one-sided ‘exchange’ through raiding. Rock carvings
possibly depict this entanglement of high statuses, exchange networks, orga-
nization of raiding parties, waterborne mobility and participation in cosmo-
logical and political codes (see Chapter 5).
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WAR FAR E V S. EXCHANGE? T HOUGHTS ON A N I NTEGRATIVE APPROACH 55
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56 HORN
CONCLUSION
By examining the weapons and their internal and external associations to the
sphere of exchange, this contribution argued that exchange and warfare should
not be regarded as separate entities in Scandinavian prehistory. Both are mean-
ingful actions suggesting mobility and contact between people. Some view the
origin of exchange in warfare (Lévi-Strauss 1943), others may interpret it the
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WAR FAR E V S. EXCHANGE? T HOUGHTS ON A N I NTEGRATIVE APPROACH 57
(a)
(b)
4.3: Early Bronze Age sea level: A. Limfjord (~5 m above current sea level); B. Mälardalen
(~20–22 m above current sea level).
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58 HORN
other way round. From the material presented here, it is not possible to make
a firm decision on this issue. It appears that warfare and exchange are each
other’s sine qua non. Thus, if archaeologists are concerned with the distribution
and displacement of material culture, it is suggested that considering both
conflict and exchange is a worthwhile undertaking.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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WAR FAR E V S. EXCHANGE? T HOUGHTS ON A N I NTEGRATIVE APPROACH 59
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60 HORN
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