Stone witnesses: Armed stelae between the international Tagus and the Douro, Iberian Peninsula

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Abstract

Few places in Europe concentrate as many stone stelae as the area between the Tagus and the Douro. Archaeology has shown the ample possibilities for metal mining, the modern region of Castelo Branco being the epicentre in the area. From the first discoveries of such unique objects as the São Martinho stelae to the current record, the variety and diachronicity of stone stelae and menhirs is exceptional on the Iberian and European scales. The traditional interpretation that differentiated between the old menhirs and Late Bronze Age stelae has been nuanced by the evidence of similar themes and techniques. Another argument presented here is the use of the old stones as the basic material to produce the Late Bronze Age stelae. Human images carved on these memorial stones express elaborate social narratives. The graphic sequences described here demonstrate the 'political' role of these stones and material justification of ancestral pasts. They were undoubtedly imbued with oral tales about old ancestors and new leaders, to justify the order of the economic system associated with mining and metal trade.

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Ramírez, P. B., Bermejo, R. B., De Balbín Behrmann, R., & Salvado, P. (2019). Stone witnesses: Armed stelae between the international Tagus and the Douro, Iberian Peninsula. SPAL, 28(2), 143–164. https://doi.org/10.12795/spal.2019.i28.17

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