Terramare
During
the early decades of the 19th century, the word terramare was used to
indicate deposits of organic material dug up from small mounds that were
a regular feature of the landscape of the Po plain. These mounds were
not natural in origin; their soil, which contained many archaeological
remains, was sold as compost to fertilise the fields. For a long time
it was thought that these deposits came from Roman or Celtic dwellings
or burial grounds. Not until 1860, when research into prehistoric Italy
grew more intense, did it become apparent that these mounds were created
by Bronze Age settlements. From that time on, the term terramare has been
used by archaeologists to refer to these settlements. As a result of numerous
excavations the terramare became famous throughout Europe, and their archaeological
remains added to the treasure store of the Region’s museums. Excavations
carried out in the last twenty years have shown that the terramare were
fortified villages dating back to the Middle and Recent Bronze Age (circa
1650 – 1170 BC), surrounded by earthworks and a ditch. The dimensions
of these settlements varied: in their earliest phase they occupied 1-2
hectares, while in their more advanced phase they occupied up to 20 hectares.
The
houses were arranged inside the village following a regular perpendicular
layout and were often built on stilts like pile-dwellings, even if, unlike
the latter, they were not located by lakes or rivers. Narrow streets between
1,5 and 2,5 metres in width ran between the houses. Broader streets were
probably the settlement’s main thoroughfares. Other spaces were
used for livestock, deposits and meeting places.
The villages were very common, and the area between the Emilian plain
and the lowlands in the provinces of Cremona, Mantova and Verona had a
population density that was striking for its time: estimates put the population
at between 150,000 and 200,000.
Society was organised on a participatory model that involved the whole
community, even if the evidence suggests that there were economic and
social differences. Apart from chiefs, the warrior caste was the emerging
elite, and their womenfolk must also have enjoyed privileged status. Craftsmen
who worked with metal played a key role, producing swords, daggers, spears,
broaches, buckles, razors, but also farming implements such as scythes.
During the later phases, differences between the villages must have been
more marked, and more important centres began to emerge. Next to these,
centres of minor importance developed.
Around 1200 BC, the terramare settlements underwent a demise, and within
a couple of decades they disappeared. Archaeologists do not yet know the
reason for this sudden demise, but it is possible that a series of man-made
and natural causes led to the end of the terramare system. Climate change,
albeit slight, may have provoked a crisis in the land-economy system which
sustained the terramare population. However, climate change alone does
not appear to be the only factor in the drastic collapse. Exactly why
the terramare culture ended is still an unresolved mystery.