Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach

This paper aims to investigate the role of the sanctuaries in regards to the settlement-pattern, control of metal resources and mobility of those resources during the Final Bronze Age (1200-900 BC) and Early Iron Age (900-700 BC) in Nuragic Sardinia. The rise of Nuragic sanctuaries relates as a...

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Main Author: Valentina Matta
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Università degli Studi di Cagliari 2020-12-01
Series:Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.unica.it/index.php/layers/article/view/4158
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spelling doaj-c095a777ac0f4b528750ee0c5c51d3ab2021-01-20T10:40:59ZdeuUniversità degli Studi di CagliariLayers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti2532-02892020-12-01510.13125/2532-0289/4158Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approachValentina Matta0Aarhus University (Denmark) This paper aims to investigate the role of the sanctuaries in regards to the settlement-pattern, control of metal resources and mobility of those resources during the Final Bronze Age (1200-900 BC) and Early Iron Age (900-700 BC) in Nuragic Sardinia. The rise of Nuragic sanctuaries relates as a response to a profound societal and economic crisis that invests the Nuragic civilization around 1200 BC. Defined as ‘territorial compounds’ and generally associated with the cult of water, the rise of these new types of settlements corresponds also to a period of increasing metal production, internal and external metal trade. However, their role in a model that investigates the control, exchange and the internal mobility of metal resources have never been conceptualized or tested. In this paper, I argue that the rise of the sanctuaries acted as symbolic, territorial and economic nodes within and between Nuragic settlements and natural resources. The study takes advantage of spatial analysis applied with two different methods: Terrain analyses through GIS and Network Analysis. Cost Surface Analysis and Least Cost Path to investigate mobility patterns between sanctuaries, settlements and metal resources. The results will be used in the Network Analysis to understand the role of sanctuaries in connection to the exchange of metal resources among settlements. https://ojs.unica.it/index.php/layers/article/view/4158Nuragic sanctuarymetal resourcesmobility networksGIS AnalysisNetwork Analysis
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valentina Matta
spellingShingle Valentina Matta
Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach
Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti
Nuragic sanctuary
metal resources
mobility networks
GIS Analysis
Network Analysis
author_facet Valentina Matta
author_sort Valentina Matta
title Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach
title_short Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach
title_full Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach
title_fullStr Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach
title_full_unstemmed Sanctuaries in the Sardinian Bronze Age and Early Iron Age landscape (1200-700 BC): Network analysis and GIS approach
title_sort sanctuaries in the sardinian bronze age and early iron age landscape (1200-700 bc): network analysis and gis approach
publisher Università degli Studi di Cagliari
series Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti
issn 2532-0289
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This paper aims to investigate the role of the sanctuaries in regards to the settlement-pattern, control of metal resources and mobility of those resources during the Final Bronze Age (1200-900 BC) and Early Iron Age (900-700 BC) in Nuragic Sardinia. The rise of Nuragic sanctuaries relates as a response to a profound societal and economic crisis that invests the Nuragic civilization around 1200 BC. Defined as ‘territorial compounds’ and generally associated with the cult of water, the rise of these new types of settlements corresponds also to a period of increasing metal production, internal and external metal trade. However, their role in a model that investigates the control, exchange and the internal mobility of metal resources have never been conceptualized or tested. In this paper, I argue that the rise of the sanctuaries acted as symbolic, territorial and economic nodes within and between Nuragic settlements and natural resources. The study takes advantage of spatial analysis applied with two different methods: Terrain analyses through GIS and Network Analysis. Cost Surface Analysis and Least Cost Path to investigate mobility patterns between sanctuaries, settlements and metal resources. The results will be used in the Network Analysis to understand the role of sanctuaries in connection to the exchange of metal resources among settlements.
topic Nuragic sanctuary
metal resources
mobility networks
GIS Analysis
Network Analysis
url https://ojs.unica.it/index.php/layers/article/view/4158
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