Science  People  Locations  Timeline
Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Home > Iron Age


 

In mythology, the Iron Age is the age following the golden, silver and bronze ages and characterized by a general degeneration of talent and virtue, and of literary excellence. In Roman literature the Iron Age is commonly regarded as beginning after the taking of Rome by the Goths, 410 AD. Throught Greece and Assyrian oral tradition the iron production was believed to have begun with the discovery of iron near the mineral-richness region North of Assyria.

In archaeology, the Iron Age is the stage in the development of any people following the stone and bronze ages and characterized by the use of iron implements in the place of the more cumbrous stone and bronze.

The Iron Age is the last period in the three-age system for classifying pre-historic societies, thus the meaning varies depending on the country or geographical region, but sometimes Nordic Iron Age is equivalent to generally Iron Age, sometimes Roman Iron Age, sometimes others.

For each indiviual region, the period is very hard to state in years, but the Iron Age corresponds to the stage at which iron production was the most sophisticated form of metalworking. The iron's hardness, high melting point and the abundance of iron ore sources made iron more desirable and cheaper than bronze and contributed greatly to its adoption as the most commonly used metal.

Beginning in the mid-2nd millennium BC and orginating in the (late) Andronovo Culture, the base for metallurgical technology is present in Central Asia, Kazakhstan, the Altai Mountains and the Ural Mountains.

The early 1st millenium BC marks the Iron Age in Eastern Europe. In the steppes of the North Black Sea and Azov Sea, as in the other steppe areas of Eurasia, the Iron Age corresponded with the transition of the Eastern European inhabitants from sedentary, pastoral agrarian people to nomadic, animal breeding tribes.

Besides beeing a "stage" in human development, the very early iron (and metal) production is close connected to nomadic hunter-gatherers or animal breeders producing weapons for hunting, such as spearheads and arrowheads. It was earlier considered that some regions using pottery for iron producing, also used the same vessels for household. But this viewpoint is today reconsidered.

1 Near East

The Iron Age is believed to have begun with the discovery of iron smelting and smithing techniques in Anatolia or the Caucasus in the late 2nd millennium BC. From here it spread rapidly throughout the Near East as iron weapons replaced bronze weapons by the early 1st millennium BC.

2 British Isles

In Britain, the Iron Age lasted from about the 5th century BC until the Roman conquest and until the 5th century AD in non-Romanised parts. Defensive structures dating from this time are often impressive, for example the brochs of northern ScotlandScotland or in Scottish Gaelic, Alba is a country and former independent kingdom of northwest Europe, and one of the four nations comprising the United Kingdom. Scotland occupies the northern third of the island of Great Britain. Scotland took part in a p and the hill fortThe term hill fort is commonly used by archeologists to describe the fortified enclosures, located to exploit a rise in elevation for defensive advantage. This fortification consists of one or more circular or sub-circular earth or stone ramparts, often ws that dotted the rest of the islands. Examples of hill forts include Maiden CastleMaiden Castle is a hill fort, mostly dating from the Iron Age, situated 2 miles south of Dorchester, in Dorset, England. The earthworks cover around 180,000 m²; and are up to 6 m high. The site is maintained by English Heritage. The site is the largest hi in DorsetThis page is about the county of Dorset in England. See Dorset (disambiguation) for other places called Dorset Dorset (pronounced 'Dorsit', sometimes in the past called Dorsetshire is a county in the southwest of England. The county town is Dorchester.. Their presence is possibly because of greater tension between better structured groups, although there are suggestions that in the latter phases of the Iron Age they existed simply to indicate wealth. Either way, during the Roman occupationRoman Britain is the term applied to the historical period when Britain was under Roman rule, usually considered AD 44 to 410. Background to the invasion Julius Caesar made two campaigns to Britain, in 55 and 54 BC. While not resulting in the conquest of the evidence suggests that as defensive structures they proved to be of little use against concerted Roman attack. Some continued as settlements for the newly-Romanised Britons. Some were also re-used by later cultures, such as the SaxonThis article is about the Saxons, a Germanic people. For other uses of the term, see Saxon (disambiguation). The Saxons were a large and powerful Germanic people located in what is now northwestern Germany and the eastern Netherlands (but not in the areas, in the early Medieval period.




Read more »

Non User