Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T08:25:57.841Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Separate worlds? Interpretation of the different material patterns in the archipelago and the surrounding mainland areas of east-central Sweden in the Stone Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Agneta Åkerlund*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Stockholm University

Abstract

This paper draws attention to the fact that east-central Sweden consisted of an extensive archipelago throughout the Stone Age. An image of the Mesolithic cultural landscape is beginning to take shape, since a large number of sites have been found and excavated in recent years. The remains of the sub-regions on the mainland and at the inner margin of the archipelago are interpreted as reflecting changes in material culture without any corresponding change further out. In considering why people of some sub-regions were more susceptible to new ideas than those of others, the specific physical setting and the strong social order prevailing in fishing and seal-hunting communities are regarded as factors which prevent rapid changes.

L'article attire l'attention sur le fait que la Suède centre-orientale est constituée d'un immense archipel tout au long de l'âge de la pierre. L'image du paysage culturel mésolithique commence à prendre forme maintenant qu'un grand nombre de sites ont été découverts et fouillés ces dernières années. Les vestiges des sous-régions de la zone côtière et de la frange intérieure de l'archipel, selon l'auteur, témoignent de changements dans la culture matérielle qui ne trouvent pas d'équivalent ailleurs. En s'interrogeant sur la capacité des populations de certaines régions à réagir aux idées nouvelles plus vite qu'ailleurs, l'auteur considère que l'environnement physique particulier et l'ordre social rigide qui prévaut dans les communautés de pêcheurs et chasseurs de phoques sont des facteurs qui empêchent les changements rapides.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Dieser Artikel richtet seine Aufmerksamkeit auf die Tatsache, dass das östliche Mittelschweden während der gesamten Steinzeit aus einem extensiven Archipel bestand. Da eine große Anzahl von Fundplätzen in den letzten Jahren entdeckt und ausgegraben wurde, entsteht heute ein Bild der mesolithischen Kulturlandschaft. Die Hinterlassenschaften der Subregionen des Festlands und des inneren Saums des Archipels werden dahingehend interpretiert, dass sie Veränderungen in der materiellen Kultur widerspiegeln, die ohne entsprechende Veränderungen in entfernteren Räumen bleiben. Bei der Überlegung, warum die Bewohner mancher Subregionen weniger leicht von neuen Ideen zu beeinflussen waren als jene anderer Regionen, werden die spezifische physische Umwelt und auch die starke soziale Ordnung, die in Gemeinschaften von Fischern und Seehundjägern vorherrschte, als Faktoren betrachtet, die schnelle Veränderungen verhinderten.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 Sage Publications 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ahlfont, Karin, Michel, Guinard, Elinor, Gustafsson, Carina, Olson and Stig, Welinder, 1995. Patterns of Neolithic farming in Sweden. Tor 27(1):133184.Google Scholar
Åkerlund, Agneta, 1996. Human Responses to Shore Displacement. Living by the Sea in Eastern Middle Sweden During the Stone Age. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet Arkeologiska undersökningar Skrifter nr 16.Google Scholar
Åkerlund, Agneta, 1997. Interpretation of expected and unexpected results from multi-method analyses of a PWC pottery context. In Jungner, Högne and Lavento, Mika (eds), Proceedings of the Seventh Nordic Conference on the Application of Scientific Methods in Archaeology: 107116. Helsinki: Iskos 11.Google Scholar
Åkerlund, Agneta, Jan, Risberg, Urve, Miller and Per, Gustafsson, 1995a. On the applicability of the C-14 method to interdisciplinary studies on shore displacement and settlement location. In Hackens, Tony, Königsson, Lars-König and Possnert, Göran (eds), C-14 Methods and Applications: 5384. Rixensart: PACT 49.Google Scholar
Åkerlund, Agneta, Dag, Hammar and Roger, Wikell, 1995b. Pioneers in the archipelago of eastern middle Sweden. In Marie Robertsson, Ann, Hicks, Sheila, Åkerlund, Agneta, Risberg, Jan and Hackens, Tony (eds), Landscapes and Life. Studies in Honour of Urve Miller: 109120. Rixensart: PACT 50.Google Scholar
Åkerlund, Agneta, Eva, Olsson, Per, Gustafsson and Urve, Miller eds, in press. Södertörn. Interdisciplinary Investigations of Stone Age Sites in Eastern Middle Sweden. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet Arkeologiska undersökningar Skrifter.Google Scholar
Björck, Niclas, 1997. New perspectives on the Pitted Ware culture in northern Sweden. Current Swedish Archaeology 5:1939.Google Scholar
Björck, Svante, 1995. Late Weichselian to early Holocene development of the Baltic Sea — with implications for coastal settlements in the southern Baltic region. In Anders, Fischer (ed.), Man and Sea in the Mesolithic: 2334. Exeter: Oxbow Monograph 53.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard, 1993. Altering the Earth. The Origins of Monuments in Britain and Continental Europe. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Monograph series No. 8.Google Scholar
Bratlund, Bodil, 1994. A survey of the subsistence and settlement pattern of the Hamburgian culture in Schleswig-Holstein. Jahrbuch der Römisch-Germanische Zentralmuseums Mainz 41:5993.Google Scholar
Callahan, Erret, 1987. An Evaluation of the Lithic Technology in Middle Sweden During the Mesolithic and Neolithic. Uppsala: Archaeological Studies, Uppsala University, North European Archaeology (Aun) 8.Google Scholar
Carlsson, Anders, 1987. Three Stone Age cultures in the province of Södermanland, eastern central Sweden - fact or fiction? In Göran Burenhult, Anders Carlsson, Åke, Hyenstrand and Torstein, Sjøvold (eds), Theoretical Approaches to Artefacts, Settlement and Society. Studies in Honour of Mats P. Malmer: 231239. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 366).Google Scholar
Chapman, John, 1988. From ‘space’ to ‘place’: a model of dispersed settlement and Neolithic society. In Burgess, C., Topping, P. and Mordant, D. (eds), Enclosures and Defences in the Neolithic of Western Europe: 2146. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 403).Google Scholar
Chapman, John and Pavel, Dolukhanov, 1993. Cultural transformations and interactions in Eastern Europe: Theory and terminology. In John, Chapman and Pavel, Dolukhanov (eds), Cultural Transformations and Interactions in Eastern Europe: 136. Avebury: Worldwide Archaeology Series 6.Google Scholar
Damm, Charlotte Brysting, 1991. Continuity and Change. An Analysis of Social and Material Patterns in the Danish Neolithic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
De Geer, Gerard, 1896. Om Skandinaviens geografiska utveckling efter istiden. Stockholm: Sveriges Geologiska Undersökning C 161a.Google Scholar
Drotz, Margareta and Tomas, Ekman, 1999. Jordbromalm. Säl-och vildsvinsjägare i Haninge under senmesolitikum. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet UV Mitt Rapport 1998:48.Google Scholar
Engelstad, Ericka, 1990. The meaning of sedentism and mobility in an archaeological and historic context. Acta Borealia 7(2):2135.Google Scholar
Engelstad, Ericka, 1991. The symbolism of everyday life in prehistory. In Baudou, Evert (ed.), Report from the 2nd NORDIC TAG Conference Umeå 1987: 2332. Umeå 5 Archaeology and Environment 11.Google Scholar
Eriksen, Berit Valentin, 1996. Regional variation in late Pleistocene subsistence strategies. Southern Scandinavian reindeer hunters in a European context. In Larsson, Lars (ed.), The Earliest Settlement of Scandinavia and its Relationship with Neighbouring Areas: 721. Lund: Acta Archaeologica Lundensia Series in 8, No. 24.Google Scholar
Fischer, Anders ed., 1995. Man and Sea in the Mesolithic. Coastal Settlement Above and Below Present Sea Level. Exeter: Oxbow Monograph 53.Google Scholar
Forsberg, Lars, 1996. The earliest settlement of northern Sweden - problems and perspectives. In Lars, Larsson (ed.), The Earliest Settlement of Scandinavia and its Relationship with Neighbouring Areas: 241250. Lund: Acta Archaeologica Lundensia Series 8, No. 24.Google Scholar
Forsberg, Lars and Lars, Larsson, 1994. Early hunting cultures. In Klas-Göran, Selinge (ed.), Cultural Heritage and Preservation: 1015. The National Atlas of Sweden.Google Scholar
Foucault, Michel, 1977. Discipline and Punish. New York: Vintage.Google Scholar
Gustafsson, Per, 1998. The earliest Stone Age occupation of eastern middle Sweden. Current Swedish Archaeology 6:4762.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hallgren, Fredrik, Ulrika, Djerw, Maarit, Af Geijerstam and Mortens, Steineke, 1997. Skogsmossen, an early Neolithic settlement site and sacrificial fen in the northern borderland of the Funnel-beaker culture. Tor 29:49111.Google Scholar
Hodder, Ian, 1982. Symbols in Action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Honko, Lauri and Löfgren, Orvar (eds), 1981. Tradition och miljö. Lund: Liber läromedel.Google Scholar
Hulthén, Birgitta and Stig, Welinder, 1981. A Stone Age Economy. Lund: Akademilitteratur.Google Scholar
Hyenstrand, Åke, 1987. Stone Age frontiers - an example from middle Sweden. In Göran, Burenhult et al. (eds), Theoretical Approaches to Artefacts, Settlement and Society. Studies in Honour of Mats P. Malmer: 209230. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 366).Google Scholar
Hyenstrand, Åke, 1989. Southern Sweden: an archaeological field of research. In Thomas, B. Larsson and Hans, Lundmark (eds), Approaches to Swedish Prehistory: 325. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (International Series 500).Google Scholar
Janzon, Gunborg O., 1984. A megalithic grave at Alvastra in Östergötland. In Göran, Burenhult (ed.), The Archaeology of Carrowmore: 361366. Stockholm: Theses and papers in North-European Archaeology 14.Google Scholar
Jones, Sîan, 1997. The Archaeology of Ethnicity. Constructing Identities in the Past and Present. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kars, Eva, Henk, Kars and McDonnell, R.D., 1991. Greenstone axes from eastern central Sweden: a technological petrological approach. Archaeometry 34(2):213222.Google Scholar
Kent, Susan, 1990. Domestic Architecture and the Use of Space. An Interdisciplinary Cross-cultural Study. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Knutsson, Kjel and Christina, Lindgren, in press. Making sense of quartz. In Agneta Åkerlund et al. (eds), Södertörn. Interdisciplinary Investigations of Stone Age Sites in Eastern Middle Sweden. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet Arkeologiska undersökningar Skrifter.Google Scholar
Knutsson, Kjel, Christina, Lindgren, Fredrik, Hallgren and Niclas Björac, 1999. The Mesolithic of eastern middle Sweden. In Joel, Boas (ed.), The Mesolithic in Central Scandinavia. Oslo: Universitetets Oldsaksamlings Skrifter 22:87123.Google Scholar
Lidén, Kerstin, 1995. Prehistoric Diet Transitions. Stockholm: Theses and papers in scientific archaeology 1.Google Scholar
Lindgren, Christina, 1999. Material culture and site variability. In Pierre, Bintz and Andre, Thévenin (eds), L'Europe des Derniers Chasseurs. Epipaléolithique et Mesolithique en Europe: peuplements, systèmes culturels et paléoenvironnement: 367375 (Proceedings from the 5th Mesolithic conference in Grenoble, September 1995).Google Scholar
Lindgren, Christina and Pehr, Lindholm, 1999. En mesolitisk boplats vid Jordbro industriåde. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet UV Mitt Rapport 1998: 73.Google Scholar
Olsen, Bjørnar, 1988. Interaction between hunter-gatherers and farmers: ethnographical and archaeological perspectives. Archeologia Polski XXXIII(2):425433.Google Scholar
Olsson, Eva, 1996. Stenåldersboplats vid Häggsta. Stockholm: Riksantikvarieämbetet UV Mitt Rapport dnr 2987/84.Google Scholar
Orme, Bryony, 1998. Dogger Bank: a speculative survey. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 64:4581.Google Scholar
Risberg, Jan, Miller, Urve and Lars, Brunnberg, 1991. Deglaciation, Holocene shore displacement and coastal settlements in eastern Svealand, Sweden. Quaternary International 9:3337.Google Scholar
Schulz, Hans-Peter, 1990. On the Mesolithic quartz industry in Finland. Iskos 9:723.Google Scholar
Segerberg, Ann, 1985. Bälinge mossar. Hunters and farmers during the early and middle Neolithic in central Sweden. In Torsten, Edgren (ed.), Proceedings of the Third Nordic Conference on the Application of Scientific Methods in Archaeology: 157163. Helsinki: Iskos 5.Google Scholar
Sjögren, Karl-Goran, 1986. Kinship, labor and land in Neolithic southwest Sweden: social aspects of megalithic graves. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 5(3):229265.Google Scholar
Tilley, Christopher, 1994. A Phenomenology of Landscape. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Tuan, Yi-Fu, 1974. Topophilia. A Study of Environmental Perception, Attitudes and Values. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Tuan, Yi-Fu, 1977. Space and Place. The Perspective of Experience. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Vinsrygg, Synnøve, 1988. Archaeology — as if people mattered. A discussion of humanistic archaeology. Norwegian Archaeological Review 21(2):120.Google Scholar
Welinder, Stig, 1971. Överåda. A Pitted Ware culture site in eastern Sweden. Meddelanden från Lunds universitets historiska museum 1969–1970: 598. Lund: Lunds universitets historiska museum.Google Scholar
Welinder, Stig, 1973. The Pre-pottery Stone Age of Eastern Middle Sweden. Stockholm: Antikvariskt Arkiv 48.Google Scholar
Welinder, Stig, 1977. The Mesolithic Stone Age of Eastern Middle Sweden. Stockholm: Antikvariskt Arkiv 65.Google Scholar
Welinder, Stig, 1978. The acculturation of the Pitted Ware culture in eastern Sweden. Meddelanden från Lunds universitets historiska museum 1977–1978: 98110. Lund: Lunds universitets historiska museum.Google Scholar
Widgren, Mats, 1985. Archaeology and geography in Sweden. Common research themes and contrasting views in the last twenty years. In Backe, Margareta et al. (eds), In Honorem Evert Baudou: 155162. Umeå: Archaeology and Environment 4.Google Scholar