Bronze Age
The Bronze Age is the prehistoric period defined by the working of copper and tin alloys, when long-distance exchange, social hierarchy, and in many regions early states first flourished.
Definition
The branch of prehistoric archaeology concerned with societies characterized by bronze metallurgy, conventionally falling between the Neolithic or Chalcolithic and the Iron Age.
Scope
This area covers the societies that adopted bronze metallurgy, from the later fourth and third millennia BC in the Near East and Europe through the later second millennium BC. It examines the technology and organization of metal production, the trade networks that moved tin, copper, amber, and finished goods across continents, the emergence of warrior and chiefly elites, and the relationship between metalworking and the growth of urban and state societies.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How was bronze produced, and how did its technology and organization develop?
- What exchange networks moved metals and prestige goods across the Bronze Age world?
- How did control of metal and trade contribute to social stratification?
- What was the relationship between the Bronze Age and the rise of urbanism and states?
Key theories
- Prestige-goods economy
- The model that Bronze Age elites maintained power by controlling the production and exchange of scarce prestige items such as metalwork, linking long-distance trade to the reproduction of social hierarchy.
- Interregional connectivity and transmission
- Kristiansen and Larsson's argument that Bronze Age Europe was integrated through travel, alliance, and the transmission of cosmologies and institutions from the Mediterranean and Near East, producing shared elite culture across vast distances.
History
The Bronze Age was defined within the Three-Age System established by C. J. Thomsen in the early 19th century. Twentieth-century research moved from typological and chronological schemes toward studies of production, exchange, and social organization, with Andrew Sherratt's secondary-products revolution and Renfrew's work on Aegean polities proving influential, and recent isotope and ancient-DNA studies illuminating mobility and the sourcing of metals.
Debates
- Degree of long-distance integration
- Researchers debate how tightly the Bronze Age world was connected—whether shared elite culture reflects intensive interaction and migration, as some maximalist models hold, or more limited and indirect contact between largely autonomous regions.
Key figures
- Kristian Kristiansen
- Anthony Harding
- Colin Renfrew
- Andrew Sherratt
Related topics
Seminal works
- kristiansen2005
- harding2000
- renfrewbahn2020
Frequently asked questions
- What defines the Bronze Age?
- It is the period defined by the widespread use of bronze, an alloy usually of copper and tin, for tools, weapons, and ornaments, sitting between the Neolithic and the Iron Age in the Three-Age System.
- Why was tin so important?
- Tin is scarce and rarely found near copper, so producing bronze required long-distance trade to bring the two metals together, which helped drive the extensive exchange networks of the period.