On Thursday
Professor Ian Ralston took us on a tour of the rich but puzzling site of
Bourges in central France. This settlement is described in Caesar’s De Bello Gallico as well as Livy’s Ab Urbe Condita as the home of the
Bituriges Cubi tribe. The main site, a promontory rising above the low plains
is today a bustling town, but excavations around the edge of the built up area
as well as the occasional rescue dig in the centre have turned up evidence of a
cosmopolitan town in the 5th century BC that was as as well
connected as the modern conurbation on top of it.
Professor Ralston
first related the history of archaeological excavation in the area, from
antiquarian finds in graves at the edge of town to the modern excavations on
French army property. From the beginning finds of Greek and Roman pottery such
as those at the Route de Dun grave made it apparent that this site was well
connected to the Mediterranean world. More modern excavations at the heavily
urbanised hilltop turned up further high-status material, from more
Mediterranean pottery to local rilled ware. Waste shows that unusual, and most
likely hunted, foods such as the crane were being consumed. Alongside this, a
partial building with painted plaster walls and another of mud-brick
construction show that this was a very well-to-do part of town in the early Iron
Age.
It is on the
outskirts of this ancient city where evidence of a more puzzling nature is
found. To the Southeast and East are two areas of workshops of the type found
at the German site of Hochdorf: semi-subterranean and apparently built without
foundations or postholes. These workshops were the source of plenty of
manufacturing-type finds, such as pins discarded midway through construction
due to defects. Alongside these however, were the same sort of high-status
finds recovered from the hilltop; yet more Greek red and black figure pottery
along with Amphorae from Marseille indicating the import of fine wine. The high
status locally made rilled ware was also present.
The extent of
these manufacturing ‘suburbs’ is impressive; the Eastern area, Port Sec, has
turned up 98 workshops so far with separate ‘districts’ for the manufacture of
bronze and iron objects.
The puzzle lies in
the fleeting life of this town. All features relating to the workshops date to
within 475-450 BC and all are infilled by the mid 5th century.
Professor Ralston believes the central promontory was the focal point of a town
conservatively estimated to be 2 kilometres squared in size, though he proposes
it could be as large as 8 square kilometres. Bourges fits into a larger pattern
of mid 5th century collapse seen in sites like Vix. It seems a
fragile Proto-state system began to grow around this time without the top-down
wealth concentration system seen in other periods. An echo of its collapse
could be what Livy mentions when he talks of the King of the Bituriges cubi
sending his sons away from his Kingdom due to a population problem in Ab Urbe Condita.
Whatever the
cause, Professor Ralston’s tale of Bourges was a highly enlightening talk about
the early stages of the European Iron age (and, as was pointed out, a little
jealousy-causing to Irish archaeologists who do without the presence of such
rich sites).
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