Mycenae, the
Danube and
Homeric Troy
In Danube
in Prehistory, Gordon Childe tells of the “fierce controversy” occasioned
by the various attempts at dating the Hungarian urnfields. Did they belong
to the Late Bronze Age (before ca. 1100 B.C.) as some authorities argued,
or should the indications of their close relation to the Iron Age or the
Halstatt period that begins ca. 800 B.C. be considered decisive, as another
group of scholars urged?1 There is much to be said for the Iron Age dating—the objects
from the Hungarian urnfields have numerous parallels in the Iron Age pottery
of Silesia and Hallstatt. “Near the urnfields or settlements themselves
we have noticed objects ofuncontestably Iron Age date,” wrote Childe.
“On this line of reasoning the urnfields just described would . . . last
from 1000 to 600 B.C.” Yet, “Aegean connections . . . are scarcely compatible
with the low chronology.”2 Several lines of evidence converged to date the urnfields
“on the whole to the epoch between 1400 and 1000 B.C.”3 even while it had to be admitted that this high chronology,
which Childe favored, involved “difficulties” which could not be disguised.
Certainly, Aegean
and Anatolian connections both pointed in the direction of a higher chronology:
Decorative motifs on pottery related some of the urnfield cultures to
Hittite and Minoan ware, and there were convincing links to Macedonian
Bronze Age pottery; also, analogies of pottery decoration from the earlier
urnfields with motifs of Mycenaean ware dated to the fourteenth century
were undeniably present. “The scheme based on the Aegean connections,
however, involves serious difficulties when relations with Italy come
to be considered.”4 The period in which Villanovan culture, predecessor of the
Etruscan (whose introduction into Italy is usually placed in the eighth
century), spread its influence to the north and east toward the Danube
cannot be put earlier than the eleventh century.5 There is an obvious affinity between the Villanovan pottery
types and some of the finds from the urnfields, showing that they were
“roughly contemporary.”
Pulled in two
opposite directions, trying to respond “to the clamours of the Italian
archaeologists” and also “meet the needs of the Aegean prehistorians,”6 Childe reluctantly opted for an early dating, accepting
the antiquity of some finds to be as high as 1400 B.C., and letting others
be as late as 1000 B.C. He acknowledged that dates five hundred or more
years lower were plausible: “We therefore only adopt the higher dating
provisionally until excavations at other stratified sites—of which there
are plenty—have settled the issue.”7
A good illustration
of the predicament faced by Childe and by all other scholars in the field
is the chronological placement of the key Vattina culture of the Hungarian
plain. Some scholars are convinced that the later phases of the Vattina
culture should be dated approximately to between 700 and 400 B.C.8—Childe notes what he terms a “striking correspondence with
the pottery of the inhabitants of Troy VIIa”9 the very stratum which Carl Blegen later identified as the
remains of the Troy of Homer, and accordingly dated to the mid-thirteenth
century.10 At the time that Childe wrote, the stratum was known as
a settlement of squatters and was dated by Wilhelm Doerpfeld to slightly
before 700 B.C.
References
Childe,
The Danube in Prehistory (London, 1929), pp. 291-295, 386-387,
416-417. The Halstatt period in Europe corresponds to the Geometric
period in Greece and the early Iron Age in general. See A. Mahr, et
al., Prehistoric Grave Material from Carnida, etc. (New York,
1934), pp. 9-11.
Ibid.,
p. 92.
Ibid.,
p.295.
Ibid.,
pp.293ff.
Ibid.,
p. 294.
Ibid.,
p. 417.
Ibid.,
p. 387.
Childe
cites, especially, B. Milleker, Vattinai oestelep (Temesvar,
1905).
Childe,
op.cit., p.386.
C. W.
Blegen, Troy and the Trojans (New York, 1963).
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