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Curves turning into squares. Late Prehistoric landscape change and the changing morphology of ritual structures. Causality? An assessment of the evidence

Curves turning into squares. Late Prehistoric landscape change and the changing morphology of... During the later Bronze Age several parts of north-west Europe saw accelerated deforestation and expansion of agricultural land. In densely populated areas the first (man-made) open landscapes came into being. Simultaneously in the Netherlands and elsewhere more stable settlement patterns appeared as well as extensive and planned allotment. Within a relatively short period of time the landscape became much more ‘cultural’ and planned. The dominance of straight lines and rectangles in this open, parcelled-out and compartmentalised landscape markedly contrasts with the ‘natural’ curved lines and organic' shapes of the preceding half- open and spatially dynamic ‘wood-pasture’ type landscapes. The new landscape had a distinctly different morphology and this may have influenced the way humans perceived their environment. This altered landscape perception then may explain the shift from curvilinearity to rectilinearity in the shaping of ritual enclosures and burial monuments. The sole ambition of this short paper is to argue the case within available evidence, rather than claiming to be the last word on the topic. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Landscape History Taylor & Francis

Curves turning into squares. Late Prehistoric landscape change and the changing morphology of ritual structures. Causality? An assessment of the evidence

Landscape History , Volume 32 (2): 13 – Jan 1, 2011
13 pages

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
2160-2506
eISSN
0143-3768
DOI
10.1080/01433768.2011.10594656
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

During the later Bronze Age several parts of north-west Europe saw accelerated deforestation and expansion of agricultural land. In densely populated areas the first (man-made) open landscapes came into being. Simultaneously in the Netherlands and elsewhere more stable settlement patterns appeared as well as extensive and planned allotment. Within a relatively short period of time the landscape became much more ‘cultural’ and planned. The dominance of straight lines and rectangles in this open, parcelled-out and compartmentalised landscape markedly contrasts with the ‘natural’ curved lines and organic' shapes of the preceding half- open and spatially dynamic ‘wood-pasture’ type landscapes. The new landscape had a distinctly different morphology and this may have influenced the way humans perceived their environment. This altered landscape perception then may explain the shift from curvilinearity to rectilinearity in the shaping of ritual enclosures and burial monuments. The sole ambition of this short paper is to argue the case within available evidence, rather than claiming to be the last word on the topic.

Journal

Landscape HistoryTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2011

Keywords: Later Bronze Iron; Age Age; landscape morphology; curvilinear; rectangular; field systems; ritual structures; landscape perception

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