This
interdisciplinary project proposes to challenge and significantly
improve current understandings of Bronze Age history and cultural
entanglements in the Eastern Carpathian Basin (ECB), through the
application of archaeological analysis of metals in funerary contexts,
anthropology and archaeozoology, along with frontier high-resolution
chronology and aDNA analysis of human remains.
Recent
research places the cultural crucible of southeast Europe as a crucial
motor in the development of European societies and the ECB at the very
crossroads of these Bronze Age entanglements. The implications of
cultural networking of this phenomenon are even more so important today,
since active shifts of populations and daily felt effects of
globalisation are more present than ever before. Historical consequences
of metals, as agents of status and identity negotiators, will be
investigated in museums by the project director and team members with
specialisations in archaeology, anthropology and archaeozoology.
A
reliable temporal grid, based on 14C dates will be provided by the AMS Centre at Aarhus
University, Denmark. Kinships of the most prominent deceased individuals
buried between c. 3000 and c. 1200 BCE in the ECB will be researched by the Max Planck Institute for Science of Human
History, Department of Archaeogenetics in Jena, Germany.
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