Firman
Óscar García Vuelta (autor)
Resumen
The archaeological study of ingots has gained in importance in recent years due to their links with metallurgical production, pre-monetary exchange and the emergence of weighing systems. However, in the northwestern Iberian Peninsula, which has one of the most outstanding protohistoric precious metalworking traditions in Western Europe, little attention has been paid to the methods of accumulating raw materials. This article provides the first systematic approach to the chemical composition of the precious metal ingots from this geographical area, based on the elemental analyses of 40 examples datable to the Late Iron Age and the early Roman presence. Two types of ingot are identified from a compositional point of view: gold-silver-copper alloy and silver. The former have compositions that, in general, do not coincide with those documented in the jewellery from the hillforts. This means they could belong to a later period of this precious metalworking tradition, in which the use of cores of less valuable metals was frequent. In addition to their metallurgical function, silver ingots appear to have played an important role in the proto-monetary economy that characterised the early Roman presence. We propose that the different geographical distribution of these types of ingot is related to the diverse interactional dynamics generated between the local communities and the Roman contingents during the long process of conquering this territory (138-19 BC).
Palabras clave
Ancient metallurgy. Metal hoarding. Gold. Silver. Iberia. X-Ray Fluorescence.
Revista o serie
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
2021
Springer