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Iron-Age Societies: From Tribe to State in Northern Europe, 500 Bc to Ad 700

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This book is a social, political and economic history of the 1200 years during which the tribal societies of Northern Europe evolved into the earliest Viking states. It offers an analysis and interpretation of the rich archaeological record and of the most recent results of environmental research. The book opens with a consideration of burials and hoards, and of the rituals that can be reconstructed from them. The author isolates successive periods of social transformation that were marked by changes in the use of ritual as a vehicle for both change and its consolidation. She describes the social and political geography of the region, and traces the gradual move from tribal-based military and tributary relations towards the central organization of warfare and tribute. Before the end of the period the North could wield a formidable military force within and beyond the region, which had acted to overshadow earlier village loyalties. Dr Hedeager concludes with an analysis of the ways in which social transformation is revealed and expressed by changes in settlements and in their economic relations with the world beyond. She shows that, by the end of the 7th century, the economic, political and military structures of the archaic states of northern Europe were already clearly evident.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published June 1, 1992

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Lotte Hedeager

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36 reviews15 followers
August 11, 2018
My God this book sucked! Firstly, the title is misleading. It should be called “An Unnecessarily Long and Detailed Study of Why Archaeology Can be Boring as Hell! A Play by Play account of counting a few trinkets and stuff found in Iron Age sites.”

So this is pretty much ONLY about Denmark, and the book could realistically have provided the same information with a few tables and spreadsheets of the results, and you wouldn’t waste a month trying to wade through it, hoping the interesting stuff would be on the next page. But no it doesn’t. This book is boring. I don’t recommend it.
147 reviews2 followers
August 25, 2021
A scholarly work so well written that a lay-person like me found it interesting and understandable.
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