Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water

Iberian Copper Age «ditched» and «walled» enclosure sites are often thought to represent two clearly distinguishable groups of sites. However, the discovery of sites where both ditches and walls are present («mixed sites») complicates things. There are good reasons to question whether the aforementi...

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Main Authors: Víctor Jiménez-Jáimez, Marcos García-García, Adara López-López, David W. Wheatley
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universidad de Alicante 2025-01-01
Series:Lucentum
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Online Access:https://lucentum.ua.es/article/view/25385
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author Víctor Jiménez-Jáimez
Marcos García-García
Adara López-López
David W. Wheatley
author_facet Víctor Jiménez-Jáimez
Marcos García-García
Adara López-López
David W. Wheatley
author_sort Víctor Jiménez-Jáimez
collection DOAJ
description Iberian Copper Age «ditched» and «walled» enclosure sites are often thought to represent two clearly distinguishable groups of sites. However, the discovery of sites where both ditches and walls are present («mixed sites») complicates things. There are good reasons to question whether the aforementioned dichotomy is real, or if, instead, it is largely an artifact of research, resulting from a combination of poorly preserved archaeological contexts and inadequate survey strategies and methods which missed the potential integration of both building techniques at the same sites. This paper will address this problem from a Pan-Iberian perspective, as we will compare type-sites across multiple Iberian regions. We shall formulate and test seven relevant hypotheses by undertaking multiple comparative analyses at various scales on top of a purpose-built database including 345 sites. Among others, we will address questions such as: How frequent or rare are mixed sites? Is the perceived duality of the archaeological record (ditched versus walled) a by-product of preservation issues or the differential availability of certain building materials? Did walled and ditched enclosures really coexist in space and time? We conclude that: (a) Chalcolithic Iberian enclosures are markedly dichotomous (ditched vs walled); (b) «mixed» sites are rare exceptions rather than the rule; (c) walled and ditched enclosures show important differences in key features (topographic setting, geographical distribution); (d) such differences cannot be solely attributed to geological factors. The paper will end with a discussion of possible explanations for this dichotomy.
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institution Kabale University
issn 0213-2338
1989-9904
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publishDate 2025-01-01
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spelling doaj-art-584e964cadb648939af0b7e7002f0cde2025-02-06T11:47:10ZcatUniversidad de AlicanteLucentum0213-23381989-99042025-01-0144275410.14198/LVCENTVM.2538533557Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and waterVíctor Jiménez-Jáimez0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0534-8543Marcos García-García1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5778-7893Adara López-López2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3736-1179David W. Wheatley3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7265-704XUniversidad de MálagaMinisterio de Asuntos Exteriores, Unión Europea y CooperaciónInvestigadora independienteUniversity of SouthamptonIberian Copper Age «ditched» and «walled» enclosure sites are often thought to represent two clearly distinguishable groups of sites. However, the discovery of sites where both ditches and walls are present («mixed sites») complicates things. There are good reasons to question whether the aforementioned dichotomy is real, or if, instead, it is largely an artifact of research, resulting from a combination of poorly preserved archaeological contexts and inadequate survey strategies and methods which missed the potential integration of both building techniques at the same sites. This paper will address this problem from a Pan-Iberian perspective, as we will compare type-sites across multiple Iberian regions. We shall formulate and test seven relevant hypotheses by undertaking multiple comparative analyses at various scales on top of a purpose-built database including 345 sites. Among others, we will address questions such as: How frequent or rare are mixed sites? Is the perceived duality of the archaeological record (ditched versus walled) a by-product of preservation issues or the differential availability of certain building materials? Did walled and ditched enclosures really coexist in space and time? We conclude that: (a) Chalcolithic Iberian enclosures are markedly dichotomous (ditched vs walled); (b) «mixed» sites are rare exceptions rather than the rule; (c) walled and ditched enclosures show important differences in key features (topographic setting, geographical distribution); (d) such differences cannot be solely attributed to geological factors. The paper will end with a discussion of possible explanations for this dichotomy.https://lucentum.ua.es/article/view/25385copper ageiberian peninsuladitched enclosureswalled enclosuresspatial analysislithological analysisgeographical distribution
spellingShingle Víctor Jiménez-Jáimez
Marcos García-García
Adara López-López
David W. Wheatley
Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water
Lucentum
copper age
iberian peninsula
ditched enclosures
walled enclosures
spatial analysis
lithological analysis
geographical distribution
title Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water
title_full Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water
title_fullStr Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water
title_full_unstemmed Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water
title_short Ditched and walled enclosures in Prehistoric Iberia (4th-3rd millennia cal. BCE): Like oil and water
title_sort ditched and walled enclosures in prehistoric iberia 4th 3rd millennia cal bce like oil and water
topic copper age
iberian peninsula
ditched enclosures
walled enclosures
spatial analysis
lithological analysis
geographical distribution
url https://lucentum.ua.es/article/view/25385
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