Brozne Age in Europe WNHS-AR-BAE
- https://teams.microsoft.com/l/team/19%3arrpsDxiYpeM3DDQ1OEJ3KLh_yAXjtnpatg-Lil_JiUc1%40thread.tacv2/conversations?groupId=d55a388c-8e1b-485d-ad5e-acc1015662f7&tenantId=12578430-c51b-4816-8163-c7281035b9b3
- https://teams.microsoft.com/l/team/19%3ab1c597d006824433921a2cd2f5347566%40thread.tacv2/conversations?groupId=7fc906b0-c242-4bbf-a4b8-b5fb32264bf4&tenantId=12578430-c51b-4816-8163-c7281035b9b3 (w cyklu 2022/23_Z)
At the turn of the second millennium BC. The introduction of Bronze metallurgy i.e. amalgamating copper and tin, led to the mass production of an effective new material with which a vast array of tools, weapons and ornaments were formed. This would however make a crucial impact not only on methods of production but on the structure society as a whole. The fact that both copper ore and the rarer element tin are found in specific regions with are often located far apart from each other and the fact that large parts of Europe, including Poland and Scandinavia had nor ores at all made the existence and maintenance of communication and exchange networks imperative. Moreover, the specialist craftsmanship which bronze metallurgy demanded, i.e. prospectors, minors, metalworkers and traders led to the emergence of a social cast not involved in primary food production. This social stratification was enhanced by the emergence of a weapon bearing elite whose power resulted from controlling, storing and distributing this new indestructible resource. The emergence of ostentatious and monumental burial practices in different parts of Europe in the Early Bronze Age, but also the votive hoarding of metals as well as the appearance of strongholds are symptoms of the reactions to this new culture of metallurgy. Another leitmotif of the Bronze age is the core/periphery interactions between the emerging Mediterranean civilizations and the transalpine world as well as intensive communication between the metal rich Alpine and Carpathian Zones and the Metal hungry north. Finally, the late Bronze Age sees the emergence of a unified “Urnfield” culture which homogenized foodways, burial and sacrificial practices over most of the continent.
Student activity / workload in hours:
Participation in lectures: 30 hours
Preparation for lectures and exam: 60 hours
Total hours: 90 hours = 3 ECTS
E-Learning
Grupa przedmiotów ogólnouczenianych
Poziom przedmiotu
Symbol/Symbole kierunkowe efektów uczenia się
Typ przedmiotu
Koordynatorzy przedmiotu
W cyklu 2020/21_Z: | W cyklu 2024/25_Z: | W cyklu 2023/24_Z: | W cyklu 2022/23_Z: | W cyklu 2021/22_Z: |
Efekty kształcenia
Student:
- will have organized detailed knowledge of the archeology of Europe and the Mediterranean Basin,
- will have basic knowledge of the raw materials used by ancient communities and the methods of their processing and use,
- will have the ability to understand and analyze socio-cultural phenomena occurring in the past; will be able to identify their causes and effects,
- will be able to recognize various types of cultural products studied archaeologically and carry out their critical analysis and interpretation using typical methods, in order to determine their meanings, social impact and place in the historical and cultural process.
Kryteria oceniania
Lectures are conducted in the form of e-learning in MS-Teams.
Conditions for completing the classes:
1. active participation in classes (possible two absences, the third - even excused, requires additional written work).
2. positive grade for the exam at the end of the course.
Conditions for obtaining a specific grade:
- 2 - student has no basic knowledge of Brozne Age in Europe,
- 3 - student has basic knowledge of Brozne Age in Europe,
- 4 - student has deepened knowledge of Brozne Age in Europe and is able to formulate opinions and discuss a given topic,
- 5 - student has deepened and detailed knowledge of Brozne Age in Europe and is able to formulate opinions and discuss a given topic.
Praktyki zawodowe
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Literatura
Kaczanowski Piotr. 1998. Epoka brązu – pomiędzy centrami cywilizacyjnymi Bałkanów i Alp a Skandynawią In: Piotr Kaczanowski, Janusz Krzysztof Kozłowski - Najdawniejsze dzieje ziem polskich (do VII w.) (Oldest history of Polish lands (until the 7th century,) Kraków.
Hensel, Witold (ed.). 1979. Prahistoria ziem polskich, t. 4, Od środkowej epoki brązu do środkowego okresu lateńskiego, Wrocław.
Harding Anthony and Fokkens Harry. 2013. The Oxford Handbook of the European Bronze Age.
Harding, Anthony. 2000. European Societies in the Bronze Age, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Coles John and Harding Anthony. 2014. The Bronze Age in Europe: An Introduction to the Prehistory of Europe C.2000-700 B.C. London: Routkege.
Schofield Louise. 2006. The Mycenaeans. Los Angeles, CA: J. Paul Getty Museum.
Uwagi
W cyklu 2022/23_Z:
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W cyklu 2023/24_Z:
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W cyklu 2024/25_Z:
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Więcej informacji
Dodatkowe informacje (np. o kalendarzu rejestracji, prowadzących zajęcia, lokalizacji i terminach zajęć) mogą być dostępne w serwisie USOSweb: