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What did Bronze Age people do with all that bronze? New research revives old arguments about the nature of money

We have no written evidence about how people lived in Europe during the Bronze Age (2300-800 BCE), so archaeologists piece together their world from the artefacts and materials they left behind. Unlike perishable materials such as wool or wood, .

Authors


  • Catherine J. Frieman

    Associate Professor in European Archaeology, Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ University


  • Caroline Schuster

    Associate Professor, School of Archaeology and Anthropology, Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ University

Considerable archaeological attention focuses on elite members of society, largely because common people left fewer traces. A suggests we can learn something about these everyday people from buried hoards of metal – and that their economic lives were much like our own.

Why did people bury hoards of metal?

During the Bronze Age, it was a common practice across Europe to in the ground. People would gather metal objects and then bury them together or , such as a bog or a boundary.

Sometimes these hoards included , sometimes just a few. Sometimes they were composed of a single type of object – hoards of tens of axes of the same form are a well-known example. Sometimes they included a variety of objects, and even fragments of broken objects.

Despite their variety, the hoards show across Europe, and that bronze objects had a special value throughout most of it.

Why did people deposit these hoards? Archaeologists have spent decades trying .

Was it a religious act? An intentional destruction of valued goods designed to lessen wealth inequalities? Scrap hidden during times of strife or put aside for ?

Only a small number of Bronze Age people have ever been found. Often these were people buried in huge mounds of earth, who are presumed to have been important figures – ritual leaders, chiefs or other elites. Archaeologists have tended to assume that these people and in the Bronze Age.

Bronze as money for common folk?

In in Nature Human Behaviour, archaeologists Nicola Ialongo and Giancarlo Lago propose a different way of understanding hoards. Instead of focusing on elites as the movers and shakers, they suggest hoards show how common people contributed to the interconnected Bronze Age world and the spread of metal objects within it.

Ialongo and Lago analysed nearly 25,000 objects from hoards in Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia and Germany dating from the full 1,500-year span of the Bronze Age. They found that, over the centuries, a standardised weight system emerged that was widely shared across the Bronze Age world.

The paper goes on to argue this standardisation indicates that small pieces of bronze of standard weights could have been used as currency for everyday transactions by ordinary people.

The spread of European standards

Well before 2300 BCE, there seems to have been in artefact forms, at least on a surface level. Distinct types of objects emerged, such as daggers or certain pottery vessels, which appear similar but had different local uses in different places.

Archaeologists believe this sort of standardisation arose from a mix of shared and . When encountering new people whose language you don’t speak, having a shared way of dressing or acting can be a sort of social lubrication, easing communication and the exchange of stories and goods.

During the Bronze Age, this manifested in widely recognised social personae, or roles in society. The best known of these is “” with his , which was common to much of the continent.

But does it follow that this interest in standardised forms – and later weights – means we see the development of a nascent currency system? And if so, does this mean we should assume that Bronze Age peoples’ economic behaviour was the same as our own?

What is money, anyway?

There are many views about what money is and what it does for different societies, .

Many modern economists focus on money’s usefulness in transactions as a medium of exchange. This emphasises market-based buying and selling.

Other economists apply “chartalist” theory (taken from the Latin word for “token”) to emphasise . In this view, money can be used for ““, to keep track of socially important activities such as gifts, debts, tributes and offerings. This is not just a historical idea, as even some modern debts function through .

The distinction between these two views of money may seem like splitting hairs, but it points to .

Beyond the market

How would we know which view of money is more correct? To understand the function of money in a society, archaeologists and anthropologists would suggest starting with the social and technological meaning of the . That is, the bits of bronze buried in those ancient hordes.

Ialongo and Lago argue that discovering standardised counting units reveals a system of exchange, and therefore markets. But that raises a bigger question: for those bits of metal?

We know things other than metal were circulating long distances, and exchange systems were likely complex. Archaeologists believe were key Bronze Age valuables and drivers of long-distance communication, though they are harder to find archaeologically.

Standardisation also has many uses beyond social cohesion and economics. For example, Bronze Age smiths needed careful control of (copper, tin, antimony, lead and others) to make different kinds of bronze for use in their . We don’t know exactly how they achieved this control, but from the same time period tell us Sumerian smiths did it by weight.

Ialongo and Lago show how metal hoards may teach us about the everyday livelihoods of Bronze Age communities, not just the elites. But if we overemphasise the role of exchange in their economic worlds, we risk turning them from puppets of elites to thralls of the invisible hand.

Understanding money as a form of social accounting, and standardisation as a technology, can reveal much more about their lives.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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