Les « princes de la Manche » : des États royaux dans l’Europe de l’âge du Bronze ?

Early Bronze Age societies on both sides of the Channel are well known for the many monumental burial mounds scattered across northwestern France and southern England. From a neo-evolutionist perspective, they are classically considered chiefdoms because of the presence of “princely” graves. Social...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Clément Nicolas, Yvan Pailler, Cyril Marcigny
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: ENS Éditions 2024-11-01
Series:Tracés
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/traces/15650
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Summary:Early Bronze Age societies on both sides of the Channel are well known for the many monumental burial mounds scattered across northwestern France and southern England. From a neo-evolutionist perspective, they are classically considered chiefdoms because of the presence of “princely” graves. Social and territorial data suggest the existence of a series of spatially circumscribed political entities (160 to 2,000 km²). These entities appear to have based their wealth on controlling the production of food resources, salt and ores, and trade. These facts and the interpretations that we can legitimately draw from them (pronounced hierarchy, class divisions, fundiary property, monopoly of symbolic violence, territorial sovereignty, control over religion) suggest that these Early Bronze Age societies could well correspond to royal societies and, consequently, to an early form of “State”.
ISSN:1763-0061
1963-1812