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Projects / Programmes source: ARIS

Artefacts and landscapes. Structured Iron Age communities in the Notranjska region.

Research activity

Code Science Field Subfield
6.02.00  Humanities  Archaeology   

Code Science Field
H340  Humanities  Archaeology 

Code Science Field
6.01  Humanities  History and Archaeology 
Keywords
SW Slovenia, the Notranjska Region, Iron Age, Roman Age, landscape and settlement archaeology, LiDAR, settlements, small finds, hoards, ingots
Evaluation (rules)
source: COBISS
Researchers (11)
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  18462  PhD Maja Andrič  Archaeology  Researcher  2017 - 2020  223 
2.  06253  PhD Janka Istenič  Archaeology  Researcher  2017 - 2020  224 
3.  04034  PhD Peter Kos  Archaeology  Retired researcher  2017 - 2020  314 
4.  39658  Jure Kusetič  Archaeology  Researcher  2018 - 2020  36 
5.  29628  PhD Boštjan Laharnar  Archaeology  Head  2017 - 2020  201 
6.  24055  Vesna Svetličič Turk  Archaeology  Researcher  2017 - 2020  46 
7.  07716  PhD Žiga Šmit  Physics  Researcher  2017 - 2020  469 
8.  27737  PhD Benjamin Štular  Archaeology  Researcher  2017 - 2020  261 
9.  27513  PhD Tjaša Tolar  Humanities  Researcher  2017 - 2020  262 
10.  20222  PhD Borut Toškan  Humanities  Researcher  2017 - 2020  404 
11.  10760  PhD Peter Turk  Archaeology  Researcher  2017 - 2020  322 
Organisations (3)
no. Code Research organisation City Registration number No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  0613  National museum of Slovenia  Ljubljana  5055482000  2,670 
2.  0618  Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts  Ljubljana  5105498000  62,948 
3.  1554  University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics  Ljubljana  1627007  34,076 
Abstract
The major characteristic of the Iron Age societies seems to be highly evolved social differentiation: Iron Age society is highly structured. The emerging hierarchy – often studied through the artefacts – was also reflected in the territorial organization. In Slovenia – including its SW area with Notranjska and Karst regions – the main evidence of this are fortified, mostly hill-top, settlements – hillforts. Their intensive settlement in the Late Bronze Age is noticeable, but nevertheless the culmination of defence wall constructions and formation of complex spatial hierarchy seems to be predominantly an Iron Age phenomenon. The goal of the proposed project is to analyse the way that the Notranjska region Iron Age societies were structured as reflected in the artefacts and in the landscape. We will use two sources of data. The first is typo-chronological and archaeometric analysis of small archaeological finds. The second is the archaeological interpretation of lidar (Laser Imaging Detection and Ranging, a remote sensing technique using airborne laser-scanning systems) data combined with field survey (geophysics, trial trenching). On the one hand hillforts of interest have yielded numerous Iron Age artefacts. Our primary focus is the Iron Age hoards of mixed composition and individual finds of bronze fragmented shaft-hole axes and ingots. An important part of the research will be an in-depth study of possible associations with social structure or spatial organisation. A large quantity of these items in the region under question, points towards a use more complex than the assumed exchange between elites. Further, analogies of the Notranjska shaft-hole axes and ingots hint to Northern Italy and Etruscan centres of Central Italy as areas of origin and/or exchange communities. Based on these preliminary observations it is our hypothesis that the extensive distribution of these objects is related to a wide exchange network or even a pre-monetary function. This presumed exchange or pre-monetary function of bronze artefacts would be reflected in the elementary composition. The hypothesis will therefore be tested by defining the elementary composition with the non-invasive PIXE (proton induced X-ray emission) method.   On the other hand with preliminary analysis of 84 km2 of lidar data in the area in question, we detected more than 2000 archaeological features. We understand most of them as Iron and Roman Age remains of intensive agricultural use of the landscape. In addition, elements like linear earthwork boundaries in total length of almost 10 km and detail plans of hillforts reflect elements of social structure in the landscape. To harness the full potential of the lidar data, a more in-depth analysis of the lidar data supplemented with ground-truthing is needed. Ground-truthing – primarily with the intention of recovering dating evidence – will take the form of focussed systematic field survey, intensive field survey with micro trial trenches and small excavations of selected features. We plan to achieve better understanding of their significance and to reconstruct the paleo-environment.   The proposed project is planned as an interdisciplinary research and combines different methods and sciences, ranging from archaeology to archeozoology, archeobotany, spatial sciences and archeometry. Therefore, the research will be carried out in cooperation with experts from different fields. The results will be evaluated in the scientific monograph, which is the primary scientific objective of the proposal, on the Notranjska in the Iron Age. It shall bring an important contribution to the knowledge on social and cultural processes in the Iron Age and during the transition to the Roman period. The publication will contribute to the development of Slovenian archaeology and it will be used not only as a referential scientific work but also for education, promotion and preservation of cultural heritage.
Significance for science
The research will contribute to the development of archaeology of Iron Age and transition to Roman Period. Our work is particularly important for the integration of natural science methods in the study of portable archaeological heritage.   Expected results will enrich our understanding of western Slovenian (especially Notranjska region) Iron Age communities and in wider sense also the other south-eastern Alpine Iron Age groups. These were studied in previous paradigmatic frames of reference mostly in the perspective of their identities, as were revealed through diversity of mortuary practices (division between cultural groups according to barrow v. plane burials, according to inhumation v. cremation of the deceased).   Our research will combine the techniques of spatial and settlement archaeology (analysis of the lidar data, application of lidar in GIS, field checking) and in-depth studies of the selected small finds from settlements (hoards with mixed composition, individual finds of shaft-hole axes and ingots). At this point, small finds are not just dots distributed across the landscape and lidar is not just a tool to draw site plans. The associated contextualization of both stands a better chance of interpretation.   Through accenting upon enlargement of paradigmatic frames of reference with novelties in analogies for regionally comparable settlement hoards of long duration of the San Francesco type between central and western Slovenia regions on the one hand and the northern Etruscan area on the other hand will further enrich the already existing analogies with the Etruscan world through chosen portable finds. These analogies and affinities will therefore reveal themselves as structural: the anticipated pre-monetary nature of these hoards will tie the mentioned Slovene regions to the Etruscan world also in sense of pre-monetary systems.
Significance for the country
Implementation of the project will contribute to the positive development of Slovenia in the fields of economy, protection and promotion of cultural heritage, development of national awareness and education of young staff. Four research team members are museum curators, they promptly and routinely integrate their research results into archaeological heritage presentations for the general public (exhibitions, films, popular press releases, lectures and media appearances). Project will impact to strengthen the public’s awareness of the outstanding features of the archaeological heritage of Slovenia, a region with an important geostrategic position.
Most important scientific results Final report
Most important socioeconomically and culturally relevant results Interim report, final report
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