Mediterranean Southwest Europe (4,365–2,638 BCE) | Late…
4365 BCE to 2638 BCE
Mediterranean Southwest Europe (4,365–2,638 BCE) | Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic: Fortified Villages, Megaliths, and Copper Horizons
Geographic & Environmental Context
-
Los Millares culture in SE Iberia built fortified settlements with stone walls and bastions.
-
Sardinia developed megalithic tombs; Sicily saw Castelluccio culture; Malta constructed Ġgantija temples.
-
Po Valley formed early Terramare-like settlements.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
-
General stability; some late 4th millennium BCE aridity pulses.
-
Farmers expanded into uplands with terrace cultivation.
Subsistence & Settlement
-
Larger villages, some fortified; dry-farming cereals/pulses; sheep/goat pastoralism in uplands.
-
Coastal fisheries remained important.
-
Island cultures innovated: Sardinia (collective tombs, proto-Nuragic towers), Malta (monumental ritual architecture).
Technology & Material Culture
-
Pottery diversified; weaving and textiles widespread.
-
Copper metallurgy began in Iberia and Italy.
-
Beads, ornaments, figurines.
-
Megalithic architecture widespread: dolmens, passage graves, stone circles.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
-
Maritime exchange: Sardinia ⇄ Sicily ⇄ Malta ⇄ Iberia.
-
Overland: Ebro and Po valleys linked to Central Europe.
-
Obsidian trade from Sardinia, Lipari, Pantelleria.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
-
Ancestor cults in collective tombs; Malta temples hosted elaborate rituals.
-
Rock art: schematic human/animal engravings.
-
Ritual feasting in fortified villages.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
-
Fortifications secured food and livestock.
-
Storage and trade hedged against climate variability.
-
Island sanctuaries reinforced cohesion in isolated communities.
Transition
By 2,638 BCE, Mediterranean Southwest Europe had fortified Chalcolithic cultures, copper metallurgy, and monumental ritual landscapes, ready for Bronze Age intensification.
Geographic & Environmental Context
Mediterranean Southwest Europe includes:
-
Iberia: Andalusia, Murcia, Valencia, Catalonia, Extremadura, La Mancha, Madrid, Aragon, SE Rioja, SE Navarra, Algarve, Alentejo, Balearic Islands, Andorra.
-
Italy: entire peninsula, Sardinia, Sicily, and Venice lagoon.
-
Malta.
Anchors:
-
Guadalquivir valley, Sierra Nevada, Ebro basin, Turia/Júcar/Segura valleys, Balearic coves, Tiber & Po valleys, Apennines, Sardinia’s Massifs, Sicily’s coastal plains & Etna, Maltese limestone plateaus, Venetian lagoon.
-
Los Millares culture in SE Iberia built fortified settlements with stone walls and bastions.
-
Sardinia developed megalithic tombs; Sicily saw Castelluccio culture; Malta constructed Ġgantija temples.
-
Po Valley formed early Terramare-like settlements.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
-
General stability; some late 4th millennium BCE aridity pulses.
-
Farmers expanded into uplands with terrace cultivation.
Subsistence & Settlement
-
Larger villages, some fortified; dry-farming cereals/pulses; sheep/goat pastoralism in uplands.
-
Coastal fisheries remained important.
-
Island cultures innovated: Sardinia (collective tombs, proto-Nuragic towers), Malta (monumental ritual architecture).
Technology & Material Culture
-
Pottery diversified; weaving and textiles widespread.
-
Copper metallurgy began in Iberia and Italy.
-
Beads, ornaments, figurines.
-
Megalithic architecture widespread: dolmens, passage graves, stone circles.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
-
Maritime exchange: Sardinia ⇄ Sicily ⇄ Malta ⇄ Iberia.
-
Overland: Ebro and Po valleys linked to Central Europe.
-
Obsidian trade from Sardinia, Lipari, Pantelleria.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
-
Ancestor cults in collective tombs; Malta temples hosted elaborate rituals.
-
Rock art: schematic human/animal engravings.
-
Ritual feasting in fortified villages.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
-
Fortifications secured food and livestock.
-
Storage and trade hedged against climate variability.
-
Island sanctuaries reinforced cohesion in isolated communities.
Transition
By 2,638 BCE, Mediterranean Southwest Europe had fortified Chalcolithic cultures, copper metallurgy, and monumental ritual landscapes, ready for Bronze Age intensification.