4.5 Article

Approaching sheep herds origins and the emergence of the wool economy in continental Europe during the Bronze Age

Journal

ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages 4909-4925

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s12520-019-00856-x

Keywords

Ancient wool; Breeding practices; Textile production; Ancient DNA; Second millennium BC

Funding

  1. Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences [P15-0591:1]
  2. Berit Wallenberg Foundation [BWS 2014.0083]
  3. Villum Foundation [10120]
  4. Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences [P15-0591:1] Funding Source: Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences

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In recent years, extensive archaeological studies have provided us with new knowledge on wool and woollen textile production in continental Europe during the Bronze Age. Concentrations of large numbers of textile tools, and of zooarchaeological evidence suggesting intense sheepherding, hint at specialized centres of wool production during the Bronze Age. The aim of this paper is to discuss whether engagement with this economic activity was facilitated by the introduction of new foreign sheep types, possibly from the Eastern Mediterranean, where well-established wool economies existed, or by using local sheep, or a mixture of local and non-local types. A small-scale genetic pilot study, presented in this paper, primarily aimed at testing the DNA preservation, and thus the genomic potential in Bronze Age sheep remains provides evidence of both mitochondrial haplogroups A and B among Bronze Age sheep in Hungary. This result could hint at sheep herds with mixed origin but further in-depth studies are necessary to address this. We aim to promote scholarly interest in the issue and propose new directions for research on this topic.

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