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VII.

THE IRON AGE

The beginning of the Iron Age: the pre-Scythians | 177

THE BEGINNING OF THE IRON AGE:


THE PRE-SCYTHIANS
(8th century B.C.)
Tibor Kemenczei
In Europe, iron metallurgy first appeared in ancient
Greece, whence it spread to Central Europe, where the use
of bronze was gradually supplanted by iron from the early
1st millennium B.C.
Iron ores were mined in two areas in the Carpathian Basin during this period. One lay in western Hungary, in the
Alpine foreland and the Somogy Hills, the other in the
northern mountainous region, in the Bkk and Mtra
Mountains. Owing to the availability of local ore resources,
the use of iron became quite common by the 8th century
B.C., this being the reason that the commencement of the
Iron Age, lasting until the Roman conquest, is usually dated
from this period.
In the earlier Iron Age, the areas east and west of the
Danube were parts of two separate culture provinces. The
eastern variant of the Hallstatt culture was distributed in
Transdanubia, while the Great Hungarian Plain and the
northern mountainous region was part of the steppean preScythian and, later, the Scythian culture province. The two
regions were eventually united under the Celts in the last
decades of the 5th century B.C.
At first, the local late Urnfield population of Transdanubia only adopted a few elements of the new culture in
the early Hallstatt period. The relation between the two
neighbouring cultures is reflected in the pottery finds from
the tumulus burials unearthed beside the hillfort at Pcs
Jakabhegy that include vessels made in both the late
Urnfield and the eastern Alpine Hallstatt tradition. The
communities in southern Transdanubia also maintained
close ties with the pre-Scythian population of the Great
Hungarian Plain, as shown by a bronze harness set, dagger
and iron axe of eastern type recovered from grave 75 of the
PcsJakabhegy cemetery.
The 8th century archaeological assemblages from the
Great Hungarian Plain diffrer markedly from the preceding
Late Bronze Age finds. Earlier villages were abandoned, the
deceased were buried according to new rites and the craftsmen made entirely different artefact types.
Two main find categories, namely grave assemblages and
hoards, can be distinguished in the archaeological heritage
of the Early Iron Age communities living in the Great Hungarian Plain. Very few settlements are known from this period (Hdmezvsrhely, Kompolt), even though this area
of Hungary has been extensively researched, as shown by
the settlements from other periods. The reason for the apparent lack of settlements is that the Early Iron Age communities of the Great Hungarian Plain practiced a form of
nomadic stockbreeding and their transient settlements left
few traces in the archaeological record.

Most of the burial grounds from this period are known


from the Mtra and the Bkk piedmont and the southern
part of the Great Hungarian Plain. A total of fifty-five
graves were uncovered at Mezcst, twenty-one at FzesabonyKettshalom, thirteen at Fzesabonyregdomb, eight at Sirok and eight at SzegedAlgy. The
finds from these cemeteries and other related assemblages
have been labelled the Mezcst culture by Hungarian
prehistorians.
The Early Iron Age communities of the Great Hungarian Plain buried their dead in small family or clan
cemeteries. The dead were laid to rest in an extended or
contracted position, with pottery and chunks of cattle
and sheep meat placed beside them (Fig. 1). Bronze buttons and parts of the costume, as well as antler plaques
decorated with geometric patterns were often found in
the burials. The wealthier members of the community
were buried together with bronze or iron bits, strap distributors (Fzesabonyregdomb, Mezcst) and iron
axes (Doboz).
The bronze and gold hoards from the Early Iron Age,
Fig. 1. Grave 35 of the pre-Scythian cemetery at Mezcst

178 The Iron Age


Some prehistorians have argued that the eastern artefact
types and the eastern burial rite of the Early Iron Age in the
DanubeTisza region are proof of the westward migration
of a Cimmerian group. However, the Cimmerians were but
one of the many groups populating the steppe and thus the
identification of this eastern population with a specific
steppean people is no more than speculation.
Bronze and iron harness sets and harness ornaments are
typical elements of the Early Iron Age hoards from the
DanubeTisza region (such as the one from Biharugra: Fig.
2). The bit type with a mouthpiece of two jointed canons
was developed in the metal workshops of the Kuban valley,
north of the Caucasus. The bridle ornament decorated with
three interlocking bird heads also reflects the artistic spirit
of the steppe.
The Early Iron Age weapons arrowheads (Kunszentmikls), maces (Biharugra, Prgy), daggers with an iron blade
(Mtra region, PcsJakabhegy), iron axes (Doboz, PcsJakabhegy), spearheads (Dunakmld, PcsJakabhegy) and
bronze lances (Biharugra, Dunakmld, Kakasd) correspond to the typical equipment of mounted warriors. Each of
these weapon types can be traced to an eastern prototype.
On the testimony of the gold hoards, gold metallurgy
again flourished during the Early Iron Age in the Danube
Tisza region. The style of this goldwork, however, reflects an
Fig. 2. Bronze bit, strap distributors, mace and dagger sheath from
Biharugra

such as the ones found at Biharugra, Fgd, Prgy, Szanda,


Dinnys, Dunakmld, BesenyszgFokoru, Budapest
Angyalfld and Pusztaegres, often contained articles that
were not the products of the metal workshops of the Tisza
region. These artefact types were not developed by local
craftsmen since most of them are demonstrably modelled
on similar types in the pre-Scythian assemblages of the
steppe north of the Pontic.
Prehistorians have since long been aware of the similarities between the Early Iron Age horse harness and weapons
from the Carpathian Basin and the steppe. In their study on
the pre-Scythian bits from the Carpathian Basin published in
1939, Sndor Gallus and Tibor Horvth noted that these
finds were part of the archaeological heritage of an eastern,
mounted nomad population. Some prehistorians shared this
view, while others believed that these Early Iron Age harness
finds reached the Carpathian Basin through trade or as a result of contact between the lites of these two regions.
The Early Iron Age burials from the Great Hungarian
Plain provided important new information for settling this
controversial issue since the burial rite resembled the mortuary practices of the pre-Scythian period in the steppe. It
therefore seems likely that the Mezcst communities were
not descended from the local Late Bronze Age population,
but had arrived to the Great Hungarian Plain from the east.
According to the Greek historian Herodotus (484425
B.C.), the steppe was inhabited by the Cimmerians, a
mounted nomad people, in the 9th8th centuries B.C.

Fig. 3. Gold hoard from BesenyszgFokoru

The Middle Iron Age: Scythians in the Tisza region | 179


entirely different artistic taste than the ornaments and jewellery of the Late Bronze Age. The diadem of sheet gold and
the four ornamental discs of the hoard discovered at BesenyszgFokoru in 1877, weighing 2.1 kg, one of the gold cups
in the hoard from BudapestAngyalfld, the winged beads of
the PusztaegresPusztahatvan hoard are all typical representatives of this new style that exhibits certain traits of Cimmerian art. Other articles in the Besenyszg hoard included fibulae made in the Thracian style of the northern Balkans, as
well as armrings and neckrings continuing the local metalworking traditions of the Tisza region (Fig. 3).
Although the Early Iron Age communities of the Great
Hungarian Plain occupied a relatively small territory, they
nonetheless exerted a considerable influence on the crafts of
neighbouring and more distant populations as shown by the
countless horse harness finds from late Urnfield and early
Hallstatt assemblages in Transdanubia, Austria, Bohemia
and southern Germany, as well as the burials of the VillanovaEste culture of northern Italy. These Early Iron Age
communities were in command of skills, such as mounted
warfare and a developed iron metallurgy, that were new to
Central Europe and their spread had a major impact on
both economic and cultural development.

THE MIDDLE IRON AGE: SCYTHIANS


IN THE TISZA REGION
(7th5th centuries B.C.)
The mid-7th century marked the beginning of a new period
in the territories east of the Danube: the Great Hungarian
Plain and the mountain areas. This region became part of
the extensive eastern culture province created earlier by the
Scythians in the steppe north of the Pontic.
The history of the Scythians is known mainly from the
writings of Greek historians. Scythia and the Scythians appeared on the horizon of the Greek world through their
contact with the Greek colonies dotting the Pontic littoral

Fig. 4. Golden stag from


MezkeresztesZldhalompuszta

(e.g. Histria, Tyras and Olbia). The names of the peoples


inhabiting the steppe are known from Herodotus writings;
his description of their settlement territories would suggest
that Transylvania was occupied by the Agathyrsoi, while the
Tisza region by the Sigynnae. The archaeological record
confirms that these areas had indeed been settled by groups
with a Scythian culture.
Scythia and the Scythians also played a prominent role in
Hungarian historical tradition and in many early theories and
ideas about the origins of the ancient Hungarians. The medieval chroniclers of Hungary Anonymus, Simon de Kza,
Mrk Klti, Jnos Thurczi and Bonfini were the first to
suggest that the Scythians, the Huns and the Hungarians
were one and the same people. These chroniclers ultimately
drew from a chronicle written by a certain Regino (d. 915), an
abbot in the Prm monastery, who wove together information from various Greek and Byzantine sources. In these
writings, however, the label Scythian was generally applied
to any eastern people Huns, Avars, Hungarians, Cumanians rather than to one specific population group.
The national identity of medieval Hungarian nobility
was determined by these chronicles and the belief in an ancestral Scythian homeland and a relation with the Huns.
This belief was widely popular in the 19th century, when
national Romanticism flourished, and they still colour popular attitudes today.
Since the 19th century, Hungarian archaeologists have
published a number of finds that were identified as the heritage of the Scythians. The studies by Jzsef Hampel, Nndor Fettich, Mrton Roska and Mihly Prducz have shed
light on the eastern traits and eastern origins of these finds.
BURIALS
The distribution of finds with a Scythian flavour encompasses the central and northern areas of the Great Hungarian
Plain, the Northern Mountain Range and the northern part
of the Little Hungarian Plain. Most of the finds were

180 The Iron Age


to the steppe region, isolated burial mounds have also been
found in the Great Hungarian Plain. The golden stags from
MezkeresztesZldhalompuszta and Tpiszentmrton
were recovered from such kurgans. The wooden burial caskets uncovered at Csanytelekjhalast and the wooden
burial chamber containing a rich inventory of grave goods
excavated at Cegld have much in common with the
Scythian burials of the steppe.
The burials also shed light on the economy of these communities. The horse burials suggest that horse-breeding
played an important role. Fourteen horse burials have been
found at SzentesVekerzug (Fig. 6), two at Csanytelekjhalast and one at Tpiszele. The horses were usually buried with their harness; these animals were no doubt the saddle horses of the warriors, buried in a separate section of the
cemetery. One of the burials at SzentesVekerzug also contained a four-wheeled wagon. The custom of burying horses
can again be traced to the east, confirmed also by the fact that
the horses belonged to the Asian tarpan species.
SETTLEMENT AND ECONOMY

Fig. 5. Bronze hydria from rtnd

recovered from burials. The best known cemeteries from this


period are Tpiszele (455 graves), Csanytelekjhalast
(233 graves), Szabadszlls (199 graves), Alstelekes (183
graves), Oroshza (153 graves) and SzentesVekerzug (151
graves). These burials show a colourful variety of burial practices. There were two basic modes of burial: inhumation,
with the deceased laid to rest in an extended or a contracted
position, and cremation, with the ashes placed in an urn or
scattered over the floor of the grave pit. The ratio of these
burial modes differed from region to region, depending on
whether the community was predominantly of local stock or
had an eastern, immigrant ancestry.
The grave goods indicate that the wealthier individuals
were buried together with their costume ornaments and
weapons. Iron axes, spearheads, knives, daggers, bronze arrowheads, quiver ornaments and whetstones were often
placed into male burials and warriors graves, while
womens graves contained gold dress ornaments, bronze or
gold lockrings, bronze or iron armrings, pins, glass and amber beads, clay spindle whorls and clay stamp seals. Both
male and female burials were provided with clay pots, jugs,
bowls and cups. A few burials, no doubt the graves of tribal
or clan leaders, were lavishly furnished. The stag shaped
golden shield ornaments from MezkeresztesZldhalompuszta (Fig. 4) and Tpiszentmrton, the gold jewellery,
the bronze Spartan hydria (Fig. 5), the eastern Alpine
bronze cauldron, the bronze mail and the iron weapons
from rtnd signal the high status of the deceased.
The graves in these cemeteries lay quite close to each
other and there was no grave mound above them. Similarly

The settlements and their finds clearly show that the Great
Hungarian Plain was settled by communities engaged in agriculture and stockbreeding during the Scythian Age. The
excavations at NyregyhzaMandabokor brought to light
Fig. 6. Grave 16, a horse burial, from SzentesVekerzug

The Middle Iron Age: Scythians in the Tisza region | 181

Fig. 7. Excavated remains and reconstruction of a Scythian house. NyregyhzaMandabokor

sunken huts with wattle and daub walls and a thatched roof
resting on wooden posts (Fig. 7). Similar buildings have
been uncovered at Endrd and SzolnokZagyvapart.
Beside crop cultivation, the economy of these communities was based on a highly developed iron metallurgy and
horse-breeding. Exploiting the iron ore deposits in the
Northern Mountain Range, the workshops turned out weapons and a wide range of tools and implements, catering to the
needs of the population of the Great Hungarian Plain.
The trade in iron products and horse allowed these communities to acquire valuable imports, such as the magnificent bronze hydria from Sparta made around 570560 B.C.
found at rtnd in a princely burial (cp. Fig. 5) and a bronze
cauldron, produced in one of the eastern Alpine workshops
of the Hallstatt culture.
The various commodities reaching
regions east of the Danube include a
variety of bronze jewellery and
lovely clay vessels. Various products of the metal and pottery workshops in the Great Hungarian
Plain were traded from the Balkans
to Central Europe. These commodities included iron bits, axes, bronze arrowheads, lockrings, various objects ornamented with animal figures, clay
stamp seals and wheel-turned pottery.
Many of the artefact types produced in
these workshops originated from the
steppe. The Greek wares included the
metalwork of the goldsmiths of Olbia,
such as the bronze quiver ornaments decorated with animal figures, mirrors and
gold jewellery. Many vessel types of
Scythian pottery imitated Greek wares
and the wheel-turned pottery itself was
made using Greek potting techniques.
Trade routes led to the south through
the Balkans along the VardarMorava valley and along the Lower Danube to the
Greek town of Histria. Another route led

through the Upper Tisza region, through the Carpathian


passes to the Dniester and thence to Olbia on the Black Sea.
An ancient trade route leading along the Danube linked the
Great Hungarian Plain with Central Europe and the west.
The workshops in the Great Hungarian Plain and Upper
Hungary turned out horse harness, weapons and a variety of
artefacts decorated with animal motifs in the Scythian style.
HORSE HARNESS AND WEAPONS
The most important piece of the horse harness was the iron
bit with side-bars. Many of these have been recovered from
male graves and the associated horse burials (rtnd,
Gyngys, SzentesVekerzug, Tiszavasvri). This bit type was well suited to
controlling and directing horses, this
being the reason that the type was
adopted by the Thracian and Illyrian tribes of the northern Balkans,
as well as by the Hallstatt communities of the eastern Alpine region.
Fine examples of bridle distributors
came to light among the finds from
grave 16 of SzentesVekerzug. The cast
bronze discs were covered with gold foil
that glittered on the one-time bridle. Ornaments of this type were intended to display
the rank and wealth of the mounted warrior.
The most important item of the Scythian
warriors equipment was his bow and arrows.
Its significance was also expressed in the
burial rite. Many warriors were buried with a
quiver and arrows. The highest number of
the distinctive Scythian trilateral arrowheads
were found at Cegld and Mtraszele:
thirty-five were brought to light at the former site, and twenty-five at the latter.
Fig. 8. Antler hafting plates from Nyregyhza
Mandabokor

182 The Iron Age


The iron weapons daggers, axes, spears, lances and
knives include a few handsomely crafted pieces, such as the
long dagger, called akinakes, the typical weapon of the
steppean mounted warriors. Grave 10 at SzentesVekerzug
and grave 17 at Csrdaszlls yielded short swords whose hilt
was covered with an antler plaque carved in the form of an
eagle head. Similar antler carvings have been found in one of
the pits at the NyregyhzaMandabokor settlement. These
finds reflect the spirit of Scythian art (Fig. 8).
ANIMAL STYLE ART
Steppean art was dominated by animal figures: deer, rams,
panthers, lions, eagles, griffins and horses abound among
the ornamental motifs, as do animal combat scenes. The
two golden stags of embossed sheet gold represent the most
outstanding relics of goldwork in the Scythian style from
the Great Hungarian Plain.
A grave assemblage of a golden stag (cp. Fig. 4), a gold
chain decorated with lion figures, 136 semispherical gold
spangles and a gold pendant was found in 1928 on the outskirts of Mezkeresztes, in an area called Zldhalompuszta.
The excavation conducted at the findspot revealed that
these finds had originally been deposited beside the ashes of
the deceased under a kurgan burial.
Another golden stag came to light from a burial mound
containing a cremation burial excavated at Tpiszentmrton in 1923.
The counterparts of these two golden stags are
known from the Scythian princely burials of the
steppe. These animal figures were made in the
workshops of the Greek colonies dotting the
Pontic littoral that also catered to the needs of the
Scythian lite. They were shield ornaments, intended
to display the power and rank of their owner.
The golden stags were earlier dated to the 5th4th
centuries B.C. However, the discovery of Scythian finds
in the same style from Kelermes, a site in the Kuban
valley dated to the mid- or later 7th century B.C.,
suggests the Hungarian pieces can hardly be much
later and their date is now usually put in the 6th
century.
Fine examples of the Scythian animal style
have also been found at Gyngys and Nagytarcsa. One of the cremation burials discovered
at Gyngys in 1907 during vine cultivation
contained six bronze rattles, each topped with the
figure of a deer. Two similar rattles, ornamented
with bull figures, were found at Nagytarcsa in 1964,
together with a broken rattle, eight cow-bells and
four iron bits (Fig. 9).
Several explanations have been proposed for the
function of bronze rattles decorated with animal
figures, recovered from the steppean kurgans.
These range from wagon ornaments to military in-

signia and tent pole ornaments. The ones from Nagytarcsa appear to have been part of the paraphernalia used
by a shaman. The rattle was fixed to a wooden handle and
the small iron ball inside the openwork rattle gave a clanking sound when shaken. By shaking these rattles, the shaman no doubt created the mystical atmosphere needed for
the ritual.
Other relics of Scythian animal art from the Danube
Tisza region include cross shaped quiver ornaments (Budajen, Mtraszele, Mezlak, Trkszentmikls), bronze mirrors (Muhi, Piliny, Szcsny), swords (Csrdaszlls, Penc,
SzentesVekerzug, Veszprm), cheek-pieces (Miskolc
Disgyr, SzentesVekerzug), bridle distributors (rtnd,
Buj, Sajszentpter) and lockrings (Csanytelek, Piliny,
Tiszavasvri).
The rich assortment of articles decorated with animal
figures suggest that the Scythian Age communities of the
Great Hungarian Plain and the northern mountainous region did not simply adopt certain elements of the animal
style born on the Eurasian steppe, but themselves had a
mind-set that inspired this artistic view. These finds also indicate that the craftsmen of the Great Hungarian Plain
were fully aware of the symbolic meaning of these animal
figures and their use of these figures to ornament various
articles was a conscious act.
POTTERY
The Scythian Age communities of the Tisza region can be
credited with the dissemination of one of the most important prehistoric innovations in the Carpathian Basin, namely the use of a potters wheel. Wheelthrown pottery includes a variety of one-handled
jugs, flasks bowls, amphorae, post and urns. The
prototypes of these vessel forms can all be traced
to the wares produced in the Greek colonies on the
Pontic littoral. These vessels and their manufacturing techniques were adopted by the communities
with a Scythian culture living in the Middle Dniester region sometime in the later 7th century B.C.
The use of the potters wheel was transmitted to
the Carpathian Basin from this region. The high
number of wheel-thrown pottery from the 6th
century burial grounds in the Great Hungarian
Plain indicates that this innovation spread fairly
rapidly (Fig. 10).
Some of the Scythian period finds show a striking similarity with the grave finds of the 7th6th century kurgans in the Kuban valley, north of the Caucasus, while others resemble the Scythian finds from
the forested steppe of the DnieperDniester region.
Russian scholars have convincingly demonstrated

Fig. 9. Bronze rattle from Nagytarcsa

The Early Iron Age in Transdanubia: the Hallstatt culture | 183

THE EARLY IRON AGE IN


TRANSDANUBIA: THE HALLSTATT
CULTURE
Erzsbet Jerem

Fig. 10. Wheel-thrown jugs from Tiszavasvri

that by the mid-7th century B.C., the Scythian tribes had


extended their rule to the areas west of the Dnieper. This
advance eventually also reached the Carpathians and, sometime later, the DanubeTisza region. The Middle Iron Age
population of the Great Hungarian Plain and the Northern
Mountain Range was an amalgam of the local population
and the newly arrived groups from Scythia. This population
created a flourishing economy and craft industry during the
6th century B.C. Their independence came to an end with
the Celtic conquests in the late 5th century B.C. The finds
from the Celtic period cemeteries and settlements in this
region nonetheless suggest that the earlier communities of
eastern origin survived, as did many elements of their material and spiritual culture during the centuries of Celtic rule
in the Tisza region.

Fig. 11. Fortified settlements of


the Iron Age in Transdanubia

Hallstatt period is the label given to the period between the


decline of the Urnfield culture and the arrival of the Celts to
the Carpathian Basin, spanning the roughly 350 years between the 8th century and the mid-5th century B.C. In the
lack of written sources, the history of this period can only be
reconstructed from the archaeological record.
The use of iron artefacts grew conspicuously during the
9th8th centuries B.C. in Central and South-East Europe.
Although the occasional iron article, mostly a piece of
jewellery, already appeared during the late Urnfield period,
weapons, as well as tools and implements continued to be
made from bronze. In the Hallstatt period iron weapons,
horse harness and wagon fittings also appear, together with
various tools and implements, as a result of the technical advance made in iron metallurgy, reflecting the cultural influence of the urban cultures of the Mediterranean.
NEW RESEARCH RESULTS
The research of the Hallstatt period showed a definite upsurge from the 1970s both in Hungary and in Europe. The
finds from a number of earlier excavated cemeteries were
published (Vaszar, Somlvsrhely), several already known
sites were re-investigated (PcsJakabhegy, NagyberkiSzalacska, Regly, Szzhalombatta, Stt, Tihanyvr, Sop-

184 The Iron Age

Fig. 12. The Regly hillfort


from the north, with the onetime meanders of the Kapos and
Koppny rivers. 1. The rampart,
2. the plateau of the hillfort

ronVrhely, Velem) together with the excavation of a number of new ones (Fehrvrcsurg, Vaskeresztes, Sopron
Krautacker, Szentlrinc). The results of these new investigations were presented at the international conferences held in
Veszprm (1984) and Sopron (1994). The two conference
volumes and Erzsbet Pateks monograph from 1993 offer a
good overview of what we know about the Hallstatt period in
Transdanubia. A recent exhibition catalogue presents the
most outstanding finds from the 1st millennium B.C.
The upswing in Iron Age studies is indicated by the proliferation of studies on regional groups and their interrelations in Slovakia, Austria and Slovenia and discussions of
the finds from the Alpine foreland and the western half of
the Carpathian Basin. A new regional and chronological
framework for the Pannonian assemblages, based on the
study of the relevant finds, is now available.
The earlier chronological framework has also been
greatly refined, especially as regards little known and controversial transitional periods, such as the Late Bronze Age
Early Iron Age and the HallstattLa Tne transition. Although these transitional periods varied from region to region, there is now a general consensus that there was a continuous, unbroken development between the periods in
question.
HILLFORTS AND FORTIFIED SETTLEMENTS
A glance at the Early Iron Age settlements in Transdanubia
reveals that the currently known settlements all lie in the
uplands and that most are fortified in one way or another;
in contrast, plainland settlements are hardly known, especially from the early phase of this period. This can in part be
explained by the lack of research on such sites since a series

of extensive flat settlements and their cemeteries, lying at


more or less regular distances from each other on river terraces, have been identified and investigated in neighbouring
Burgenland and Lower Austria.
The hillforts built along major trade routes or at the intersection of roads and strategically important locations
(Fig. 11) were protected with a palisade or a ditch and rampart since the Late Bronze Age Urnfield period (Fig. 12).
These constructions continued in the Hallstatt period, and
especially during the later phase of the Late Iron Age, in the
2nd1st centuries B.C. The construction of outer defenseworks was often coupled with the transformation of the settlements internal layout (Fig. 13). Traces of these rebuildings have been documented during recent excavations,
whose main goal was the clarification of the age of these
defenseworks (Velem, SopronBurgstall, GrKpolnadomb, BudapestGellrthegy).
The construction of these defenseworks suggests that
the population was prepared for times of crisis and that
these defended sites also acted as places of refuge for the
occupants of neighbouring settlements. This latter assumption, however, is at present mere speculation since the exact
reason for the construction of these fortified sites and their
actual function still need to be clarified in many cases. Although it seems likely that they acted as a central place
(Zentralsiedlung) controlling a particular region, their nature and function no doubt varied from site to site. The rise
of these hillforts and the growth of their importance has
more recently been explained by a combination of economic factors and the deterioration of the climate and environmental changes brought on by climatic fluctuations at
the close of the Late Bronze Age. This issue cannot be resolved at present since very few of these sites have been extensively investigated; at the same time, the impressive

The Early Iron Age in Transdanubia: the Hallstatt culture | 185

Graves
Trenches

Fig. 13. Section of the rampart protecting the fortified settlement


at Tihanyvr

Hallstatt period finds from Velem and Sghegy (Fig. 14) reflect a peaceful industrial activity and an extensive network
of contacts with adjacent regions. Social stratification and
the desire to acquire valuable commodities, especially prestige articles symbolizing wealth, rank and power, can be
demonstrated from the Late Bronze Age on, together with
the spread of various customs adopted from the Balkans,
central and northern Italy and Slovenia. This is reflected in
the burial rites and in the various depictions appearing on
vessels, even if the number and quality of Mediterranean
imports falls far behind those reaching the western
Hallstatt province.
BURIAL MOUNDS AND RELIGIOUS BELIEFS
The roads leading to some of the hillforts, such as the one at
SopronBurgstall (Fig. 14), SopronWarischberg, Somlhegy, Sghegy, Stt, Tihany, Szzhalombatta, Ttika,
Szalacska and PcsJakabhegy are flanked by cemeteries,
most of which contain many hundreds of tumulus burials in
Fig. 14. The hillfort and the
tumulus burials at Sopron
Burgstall

Fig. 15. The hillfort at


Sghegy, viewed from Mesteri

186 The Iron Age

Fig. 16. SopronBurgstall.


Detail of grave 131 during
clearing and the drawing of the
grave

which the occupants of these settlements were laid to rest.


Even though the number and size of the burial mounds, as
well as the funerary rite and the chronology of these burials
varies, they do indicate a certain uniformity in the beliefs
concerning afterlife (Fig. 16).
In the first half of the Early Iron Age (Ha C and early
Ha D), the deceased were first cremated on a funeral pyre
and the ashes were deposited into the grave. This rite
Fig. 17. Tumulus burial and the reconstructed grave chamber at
Szzhalombatta

gradually gave way to inhumation at the close of the Ha D


period. A closer look at these burial mounds reveals that
their construction, the number and composition of the
grave goods in them varied considerably even within a single cemetery. The graves were constructed of stone or
wood, or a combination of both, and an earthen mound
supported by a ring of stones was then raised over the
burial (Fig. 17).

The Early Iron Age in Transdanubia: the Hallstatt culture | 187


INURNED BURIALS
Beside tumulus burials, plainland cemeteries with inurned
burials were also used in the Hallstatt period. In addition
to the urn containing the calcinated bones, these burials
also contained a number of smaller vessels and metal articles; in some cases, the ashes were not placed into an urn,
but simply scattered over the ground. The urn burials
were often covered with large stone slabs or with a stone
packing. The pottery and metal finds are similar to the
grave goods from tumulus burials, although these burials
are conspicuously poorer. It was earlier believed that
these inurned burials could be associated with the commoners and that the two different burial rites reflected
social differences. The generally favoured explanation today is that these inurned burials are the graves of the surviving Late Bronze Age communities who clung to their
traditional mortuary practices.
The biritual cemeteries of the 6th5th centuries B.C. reflect more stable social conditions, irrespective of the funerary rite. The number of vessels deposited into the graves
declined: a bowl, a cup and a flask or a pot (perhaps a drinking set) was the standard pottery assemblage. Beside various
costume ornaments and jewellery, the grave goods include
weapons in male burials and spindle whorls and knives in female burials. The finds also testify to the lively trade connections of this period. Cemetery analyses allow a number
of conclusions concerning beliefs about the afterworld and
the society of the one-time communities.
WEAPONS, HORSE-HARNESS, COSTUME:
THE FINDS FROM MALE BURIALS
The most important weapon of this period was undoubtedly the lance. Richly equipped burials contained at least
two, but sometimes more lances, some of which were
provided with a protective cover or a sheath. These weapons were placed into graves until the end of the Hallstatt D period and they have also been recovered from
Fig. 18. Bronze helmet with riveted iron band from Csnge

Fig. 19. Boar tusk bit from tumulus 114 at Szzhalombatta

inhumation burials, although the latter usually contained


one specimen only. The other weapon type often placed
into graves was the double-edged (winged) axe, known
also from various depictions, that served as an insignia of
rank and power. Socketed axes also occur quite frequently, but these can be regarded as tools, rather than
weapons. Offensive weapons, such as swords and daggers,
are extremely rare, and the currently known specimens
were without exception stray finds; none have been recovered from excavations. Bronze and iron arrowheads
are also rare finds, and they are usually found in later,
6th5th century burials. The range of defensive weapons
is much poorer: a single helmet (Fig. 18) and a bronze
shield can be assigned here. Male burials usually contained horse harness and, more rarely, wagon fittings. Although the harness sets are often incomplete, the presence of a bit and its fittings, strap distributors and bridle
ornaments reflects the importance of horse-breeding in
times of both war and peace (Fig. 19). The rimmed iron
discs, iron hoops and nails from the tumulus burials of
Nagybarti, Somlvsrhely, Vaszar, Csnge and Boba
were all that remained of the axles and iron tyres of the
wagons deposited in these graves. Male costume accessories included bronze and iron pins (such as the so-called
Mehrkopfnadel), the occasional fibula (iron harp fibulae)
and the suspension rings attached to the belt, from which
the whetstones and the tanged iron knives were suspended.
FEMALE COSTUME AND JEWELLERY
Female burials yielded a variety of personal jewellery and
dress ornaments, as well as the occasional tool. Beads
made from glass paste, bronze, iron and clay became
quite popular by the Hallstatt C period; amber beads and
beads made from precious metals appear at a later date,

188 The Iron Age

Fig. 20. Velem type fibula


from SopronKrautacker

together with ocellus beads. Cowrie shells, believed to


possess apotropaic properties and regarded also as symbols of fertility, were sometimes strung among the beads.
Neckrings and bronze chains were also found in some female graves, together with a variety of pendants that were
worn around the neck.
Most valuable in terms of dating are the fibulae, an important part of female costume during the Hallstatt period.
The arc fibulae were followed by a wide variety of boat fibulae. The so-called Golasecca fibula with a ribbed bow, originating from Italy, has been found at fewer sites; its use can
be dated to the late 7th and the 6th century B.C. Another
rare fibula is a Balkanic arc fibula type of which only six
specimens have been found to date. The latest variants of
the boat fibulae were succeeded by Certosa fibulae, fashionable from the early 5th century to the mid-4th century or
even later.
The Early Iron Age finds from the SopronBurgstall settlement and cemetery date to the 6th century B.C. The unusual bronze fibula decorated with an animal figure testifies
to the craftsmanship and artistic imagery of the metal workshops in northwestern Transdanubia, as do the Velem type
fibulae (Fig. 20) and the animal headed Certosa crossbow
fibulae, distributed in the southeastern Alpine Hallstatt
province and the northern Alpine periphery. Fibulae of this
type have also been recovered from burials and settlements
in the Sopron area (Fig. 21).
The so-called astragalus belt of cast bronze links fixed to
leather and held together by a buckle also served for fastening
garments. There is only
scanty evidence for the use of
Fig. 21. Eastern Alpine animal
headed Certosa crossbow fibula
belts ornamented with
from Balf
bronze plaques. The bronze
plaques and rosettes provided with small perforations
and ornamented with a variety of embossed and other
patterns, as well as the
bronze and iron spangles and
buttons recovered from cremation burials suggest that
female costume was lavishly
ornamented.
Together with necklaces
and neckrings, bracelets
were also highly popular
pieces of jewellery. Closed
and open varieties of bronze

Fig. 22. Breast ornament decorated with human figures from Balf

and iron bracelets occur in girls and womens graves. Spindle whorls symbolizing weaving, an important activity performed by women, were often placed into the grave. The
most attractive specimens of these spindle whorls date from
the Hallstatt period. Bronze sceptres have only been found
in female burials; together with votive statuettes, these no
doubt played a role in various rituals.
The most eloquent example of the centuries long unbroken development is a breast ornament (Fig. 22) whose prototypes are known from central Italy, although the ornamental technique and the depiction itself link it to the metalwork of northern Italy and the Sulm valley. The 5th century B.C. was characterized by lively cultural and trade connections, reflected also in the variety of the finds. This period saw the emergence of a Celtic culture rooted in local
traditions, reflected also by the appearance of new settlements and cemeteries from the Bavarian Danube region to
Transdanubia.
MASTERPIECES OF THE POTTERS CRAFT
Nothing has yet been said about pottery, the perhaps most
important corpus of finds from the Hallstatt period. This
impressive body of finds, with its wide range of forms and

The Early Iron Age in Transdanubia: the Hallstatt culture | 189

Fig. 23. Decoration of the urn from grave 27 of SopronBurgstall

ornamentations, calls for a more detailed overview. The


overwhelming majority of the pottery finds comes from
burials; this needs to be emphasized since some of the vessels deposited into the graves were made specifically for this
purpose (grave pottery). This is reflected in the poor quality
of these vessels and the symbolic depictions on them that

can be associated with the funerary cult. Of the vessels


found in the burials, only one or two served as urns for the
ashes of the deceased. The deposition of vessels into the
grave can be associated with the custom of providing the
deceased with food and drink. Most of the grave pottery can
be regarded as part of drinking sets, made up of larger liquid

Fig. 24. Urn with relief decoration from Stt

Fig. 25. Decorated urn from a Hallstatt period tumulus at


NagyberkiSzalacska

190 The Iron Age

Fig. 26. Small


kantharos shaped
vessel from
Szentlrinc

containers, small dippers and various cups. Another part of


these vessels such as wide bowls, urns with plastic animal
heads or stylized animal figures, lids, vessels with incised
human and animal representations and the fire-dogs were
placed into the burial because of the religious beliefs concerning afterlife.
The Iron Age sites in the Sopron area, especially the
Burgstall and the Warischberg sites, owe their renown to
the pottery with figural representation recovered during
late 19th century excavations. These symbolic depictions,
rooted in Late Bronze Age traditions, were enriched with
new elements, many of which reflect cultural influences
from northern Italy and the eastern Alpine Hallstatt
province. Harking back to classical Greek and Etruscan
prototypes, the depictions on bronze situlae were transplanted in a manner that allows the interpretation of individual motifs and the mythological background of the
scenes. The scenes evoking epic narratives, festive processions, sacrifices and offerings presented as part of the
funerary ritual, as well as depictions concentrating on a
single detail with a symbolic meaning such as the
woman with upheld arms in the classical praying posture,
a scene with a horse and wagon, a man or woman playing
the harp can be regarded as expressions of a coherent
set of beliefs (Fig. 23).
Dating to the later Hallstatt period (Ha C2/D1), these
human and animal depictions allow a glimpse both into everyday life and the realm of religious beliefs. The frequent
appearance of female figures perhaps representing goddesses can perhaps be interpreted as symbols of life, death
and fertility. The female figures depicted with a spindle, a
loom and scissors or a knife (SopronBurgstall, grave 27)
evoke the classical goddesses of fate who spin, weave and
cut the thread of life.
The symposiums were occasions not only for festive
meals and meetings, for dining and wining with the gods
and for presenting animal sacrifices, but also for sport
races, music and dancing. The depiction of such scenes
recurs regularly on the cultic bronze vessels (situlae) containing liquids, but also on the urn from grave 28 of SopronBurgstall, accompanied by hunting scenes and the
depiction of a wagon.
Although only fragments of the vessel from grave 80

have survived, the presence of the praying woman, the


horse and the wagon suggests a scene with a meaning resembling the above. The scene with the stylized Tree of
Life resembling a similar painted scene on a vessel from a
Slovakian burial is especially striking since it can be regarded as yet another portrayal of the goddess as the mistress of life and death, as well as a symbol of fertility. The
lyre and cithara are both characteristic motifs of the Sopron
group of the Hallstatt complex.
The Hallstatt period pottery reflects contact with many
different regions. The traditions of the Urnfield culture undoubtedly played an important role in its emergence (Fig.
24). The closest links, however, are visibly with the finds
from the cemeteries in western Slovakia, Lower Austria and
the Burgenland: the graphitic pottery and the urns decorated with bull heads of the Kalenderberg group. Together
with meander and spiral motifs, the bucchero-like ornamentation can be traced to eastern Alpine and northern
Italian traditions (Fig. 25). The late Hallstatt D period saw
the adoption of new vessel forms and decorative motifs, as
well as the increasing cultural influence of the DravaSava
region in the south (Fig 26); another new element is a demonstrable similarity with finds from northwest Bohemia
and Slovakia, indicating yet another direction of cultural
contact.
RURAL SETTLEMENTS
Lifeways and mortuary practices can best be reconstructed
from the evidence gained from the excavation of settlements. Although our knowledge of settlements remains extremely scanty, it is clear that the Hallstatt period population lived in timber framed, sunken huts with wattle and
daub walls. Many of these houses had smaller benches and
pits inside them, with the fireplace positioned in one of the
corners or in the centre. Storage bins and other pits lay directly beside these houses. In addition to pottery sherds and
animal bones, the fill of the sunken part of these houses
usually contained loom weights and spindle whorls, suggesting that spinning and weaving were everyday activities.
Very few agricultural implements have been found; the few
bone artefacts indicate that the appearance of iron tools did
not automatically replace the wooden, bone and stone ones.
Iron knives no doubt played an important role in food
preparation since they are often found near fireplaces. The
high number of domestic animal remains indicate that
stockbreeding played at least as important a role as crop
cultivation.
The Sopron settlement had smaller timber framed,
sunken huts with wattle and daub walls in the 6th5th centuries B.C. The entrance to the houses usually lay on the
southeastern side, protected from the wind. Cereals, fruit
and meat were stored in large beehive shaped pits or in
large storage jars placed into cellar-like roofed structures.
Various tools and implements, as well as costume orna-

The Early Iron Age in Transdanubia: the Hallstatt culture | 191

Fig. 27. Excavation and reconstruction of an Iron Age house. SopronKrautacker, house 270

ments and the occasional lost jewellery was found together


with pottery and animal bones in the houses and the pits. A
comparison of the beads, dress fastening pins, bracelets and
anklets from settlements and burials often enables a more
precise dating. Articles made of organic materials, such as
wood, leather and textile, and the interior furnishing of
houses only survive under exceptional conditions. The
spindle whorls and loom weights found in the houses indicate that spinning and weaving were daily activities at the
Sopron settlement (Fig. 27).
CRAFTS AND INDUSTRY
Pottery manufacture visibly attained a high level of craftsmanship, and in spite of firing at a relatively low temperature, the potters created magnificent wares, characterized
by a wide range of forms and sophisticated decoration.
The use of stamps to decorate pottery can be noted from
the very beginning of the Hallstatt period; the incised

and stamped patterns were often filled and enhanced with


a light paste. The use of graphite for ornamenting pottery, initially as a variant of painting and, later, by mixing
it into the clay (to ensure heat retention) also sheds light
on trade relations. Metalworking is indicated by moulds
and semi-finished products, found for example at Velem,
Sghegy and KeszthelyAptdomb, although it seems
likely that metalsmiths were also active on smaller settlements. Iron articles were probably produced in various
Transdanubian workshops since the weapons and horse
harness finds show a rather uniform picture both as regards their types and their technical standard. Jewellery
and other metalwork include various imports, as well as
pieces that were clearly modelled on foreign prototypes.
The distribution of certain artefact types can only be explained through trade relations. This trade was conducted along more or less permanent trade routes, outlined by the finds themselves and the sites on which they
were they found; most of these roads are known from the
description of various classical authors.

192 The Iron Age

THE LATE IRON AGE: THE CELTS OF


THE LA TNE PERIOD
Erzsbet Jerem

sessment. The joint, AustrianHungarian publication of a


volume of Celtic studies and the lavish catalogues accompanying the exhibition of Hungarian Iron Age finds in France
and Germany can most certainly be seen as the fruits of
continuous work in this field of research.

NEW ADVANCES IN THE RESEARCH


OF THE CELTS

HISTORY OF THE CELTS

The international Celtic conference and the accompanying


exhibition organized at Szkesfehrvr in 1974 represented
an important milestone in Celtic studies that showed an impressive revival after World War 2. Not only did the most
important finds from the Carpathian Basin finally come to
the notice of international scholarship, but a new generation of Hungarian researchers of the Celtic period joined
the mainstream of European research. Combined with
modern analytical procedures, the stylistic and technological study of distinctive Celtic find types, such as swords,
stamped and relief ornamented pottery, as well as pseudofiligree jewellery, most certainly contributed to a re-assessment of earlier findings in this field. A number of trade and
cultural contacts were set in a new perspective, together
with the nature and chronology of cultural influences from
the classical world. The research of the transition between
the Early and the Late Iron Age in the 6th5th centuries B.C. too received a new impetus and resulted in the
identification of the earliest La Tne A assemblages in
northwestern Transdanubia and along the Danube. Many
aspects of the Romanization of Pannonia were also clarified, as were problems of the survival of the native Celtic
population into the Roman Age. The various tribes forming
separate political and administrative entities retained their
independence until the Flavian age or even longer in the interior of the province. The research of Celtic settlement
patterns gained a new impetus from regional field surveys,
large-scale excavations and the rescue excavations preceding the motorway constructions. Settlement finds were earlier only known from a few smaller sunken houses; recent
excavations in various parts of Hungary have brought to
light extensive settlements, enabling observations on the
environment of villages and smaller hamlets or farmsteads
that, in turn, enriched our knowledge on the economy of
this period. The two volumes of a new series, the Corpus of
Celtic Finds, have made accessible the finds from hitherto
unpublished cemeteries and settlements in Transdanubia
and northeastern Hungary. Mikls Szabs pioneering
studies on the synchronization of historical data and the
find assemblages, the creation of a modern chronology have
been summarized in a synthesizing monograph published in
French. The finds from Hungary presented at major international exhibitions and the accompanying catalogues have
made the Celtic assemblages known to international scholarship and the wider public; the conferences accompanying
these exhibitions have provided excellent opportunities for
setting these finds in a new perspective and for their re-as-

Some of the changes in the prehistory of the Carpathian


Basin at the turn of the 5th4th centuries B.C. are also
mentioned in the written sources. With the appearance of
the Celts, the Danube region caught the interest of the
writers of antiquity, and even though the relevant passages
of their works have mostly survived in later abridgements,
they are immensely helpful in complementing the archaeological evidence.
The influence of the La Tne culture can be felt from
the early 5th century B.C. in eastern Austria, on both sides
of the Lajta Mountains, in the Fert Basin and in southwestern Slovakia. The late Hallstatt settlements and cemeteries indicate a continuous occupation, with some surviving up to the La Tne B2/C1 period, i.e. the 3rd century B.C. The immigrant Celts, the people of the flat
cemeteries first appear in the early 4th century B.C., a
date corroborated by the both the written and the archaeological evidence. According to Justins abridgement of the
lost works of Pompeius Trogus, a historian of Celtic origin
living in the later 1st century B.C., Italy and Pannonia
were occupied at roughly the same time; the main drive
behind the Celtic expansion was no doubt overpopulation.
The same event is recounted by Livy, according to whom
Ambigatus, king of the Bituriges, sent his cousins, Bellovesus and Sigovesus into battle with an army of 300,000
Gauls. Most of these troops headed for Italy and advanced
as far as Sicily, as shown by a series of battles and the sack
of Rome in 38887 B.C.
The names of the Celtic tribes settling in Hungary are
not known. The distribution of early La Tne sites suggest that the conquerors came from the west, with smaller
groups advancing along the river valleys, primarily along
the Danube and its tributaries in northern Transdanubia
to Lake Balaton and the northwestern corner of the lake,
including the Zala valley where there is a dense concentration of these early sites. It seems likely that the Celts
reached the northsouth section of the Danube and
crossed the river in the earlier 4th century B.C. as shown
by a number of La Tne B cemeteries in the Danube
Bend and northeastern Hungary (Fig. 28). Transylvania
too came under Celtic rule. The La Tne B cemeteries in
northwestern Transylvania and in the Transylvanian Basin offer ample evidence for this rapid expansion. The
study of the finds and their origin revealed that additional
immigrants from Italy, Champagne and the Upper Rhine
region can be reckoned with during the 4th century B.C.
This period is characterized by dynamic migrations,

The Late Iron Age: the Celts of the La Tne period | 193

Fig. 28. Distribution of early La Tne sites in Transdanubia

reflected in the great diversity of the find assemblages.


No finds predating the La Tne B period have yet been
reported from southern Transdanubia and the adjacent
areas (Steiermark, Carinthia and Slovenia). According to
Pompeius Trogus, the Celts waged a war against the native population of these areas for many years, implying
that the communities living south of Lake Balaton resisted the Celtic advance and preserved their independence for almost a century. The communities of the Great
Hungarian Plain had no reason to fear an imminent
Celtic conquest at this time. This situation changed in the
late 4thearly 3rd century B.C., when tribes from the
Middle Rhine region set out to conquer new territories in
the south. They first fought a series of battles in northern
Thrace and then marched against the Balkans under
Belgios and Brennos; defeated in 279 and 277 B.C., they
were forced to retreat and after breaking up into smaller
bands, they looked for new homelands. The sudden and
conspicuous increase in the number of sites in southern
Transdanubia, northeastern Hungary and the Great
Hungarian Plain implies that these areas too came under
Celtic control. Celtic graves appear in the Scythian cemeteries of the Great Hungarian Plain from the mid-3rd
century B.C., while settlements features yielding distinctively Celtic finds can be dated to roughly the same time,
suggesting that the Celtic expansion was relatively peaceful and did not meet with a particularly great resistance.
The Scordisci under Bathanatos settled in the DravaSava
interfluve and founded Singidunum, the ancestor of modern Belgrade. The Scordisci successfully defeated the
Dardani, the Pannonian and the Moisoi tribes in the 2nd
century B.C.; their rule was first shaken by a defeat suffered from the Romans in 156 B.C. The Celtic rule in the
Carpathian Basin was first weakened by the Cimberian attack in 114 B.C. The political situation became a bit complicated at this point. The northern part of the Carpathian Basin was ruled by the Boii, the southwestern regions by the Taurisci, while the southern ones by the

Scordisci. The northern Transdanubian, northeastern


Hungarian and southern Slovakian territories occupied by
the Boii formed a loose confederation of some sort, with a
centre in Pozsony (Bratislava). In 88 B.C., the Roman
army led by Scipio Asiagenus dealt a crushing blow to the
Scordisci their defeat marked the onset of the Pannonians expansion.
In the earlier 1st century B.C., the powerful Dacian
Kingdom ruled by Boirebistas inflicted a crushing defeat on
the Scordisci and, some time later, on the Taurisci and the
Boii. The Dacians advanced as far as the Tisza region and
even occupied a part of Slovakia, pressing forward to the
Danube in the west.
From this time on, the written sources only mention the
names of the regional tribes: the Boii in the northeast, the
Eravisci in the Danube Bend, the Hercuniates (Hercunias?)
south of Lake Balaton, the Osus and the Cotinus east of the
Danube, and the Anartius and the Taurisci on the eastern
fringes of Transylvania.
With its loose political and military organization, the
Celtic population did not pose a serious obstacle to the Roman conquest. Although the Celtic population was organized into civitates after the conquest of Pannonia, their
tribal territories were left untouched, and even though
Romanization affected their culture, the Celts of Pannonia
preserved their earlier lifeways, workshop traditions, religion and names for many hundreds of years. The Pannonians proved tough adversaries, who revolted repeatedly
against the aggressive Roman expansion Agrippa and
Tiberius fought many bloody battles with them in the last
two decades of the 1st century B.C. The PannonianDalmatian revolt, led by the Breucus and Desidiates tribes east
of the Drava, broke out in 6 A.D. and it took Rome three
years to finally crush it.
CELTIC CEMETERIES AND BURIAL CUSTOMS
Beside the narratives of the historians of antiquity, our
knowledge about the Celtic tribes settling in Hungary
comes from the archaeological finds. The excavated settlements and cemeteries offer a fairly accurate picture of the
everyday life of the Late Iron Age communities.
Burials are an especially important source of information since the Celts regarded death an important rite of
passage, believing that afterlife was on par with life in this
world. This attitude is reflected in the composition and
arrangement of the grave goods. The available corpus of
finds has greatly increased in the wake of new excavations, even if in many cases the excavation techniques and
documentation practices fall below the required standards, owing in part to the lack of adequate funding and
the necessary infrastructure, and in part to the circumstances under which many rescue excavations are conducted. The determination of the exact date and internal
chronology of many cemeteries is often hindered by the

194 The Iron Age


lack of traditional anthropological analyses, especially in
the case of cremation burials. Although a variety of sampling techniques and archaeometric analytical procedures
for dating and furthering our knowledge about this period are now available (such as the analysis of food and
beverage remains, organic materials, plant remains, the
determination of tree species, etc.), unless these procedures become a routine exercise, we can only rely on the
relative chronology based on the uncertain, and often
subjective, comparison of the finds themselves.
The determination of the genuine number of burials in
a cemetery, i.e. the actual size of the community that used
the burial ground is hindered by the lack of completely
excavated burial grounds. While it is true that earlier it
was rarely possible to completely excavate a burial site, today this is chiefly impossible owing to objective difficulties (belated notification about the discovery of finds, the
site is ploughed up, the site is built over). According to
our present knowledge, a number of new cemeteries were
established from the mid-6th century B.C., accompanied
Fig. 29. Amphora shaped glass beads from an early Celtic inhumation
grave. PilismartBasaharc, 4th century B.C.

by the transformation of burial practices and the spread of


inhumation. The first burials in the early cemeteries can
be assigned to the later part of the Hallstatt D period, the
latest ones to the early La Tne B period, although some
communities used the same burial ground until the 2nd
century B.C. The number of graves in La Tne B cemeteries obviously varied; although a number of smaller
burial grounds with a few graves only probably used by
a single family are known from this period, the
Pilismart cemetery conclusively proves that larger ones
with fifty to sixty burials can also be reckoned with (Fig.
29). Some cemeteries were established in the early or late
La Tne B period and remained in use until the end of the
La Tne C period. The 150180 years spanned by these
burial grounds contained the graves of several successive
generations, indicating the permanent settlement of a
smaller or larger community. Other cemeteries, used over
a briefer period of time and containing fifty to eighty
burials, were opened in the 3rd century B.C. and reflect
the higher population density during the heyday of Celtic
rule in the Carpathian Basin. Relatively few cemeteries
are known from the decades immediately preceding the
Roman conquest. The lack of burial grounds that can be
associated with fortified sites is especially striking; it
seems likely that the change in funerary practices can be
traced to changes in the historical circumstances and
other factors. The flat cemeteries of the Celtic period are
fairly well documented; in contrast, the only references to
tumulus burials come from reports on excavations conducted by enthusiastic laymen, but even so, their existence cannot be wholly rejected. The determination of
the distribution of inhumation and cremation burials, as
well as their chronological relation to each other is one of
the most important task of future studies since this may
also shed some light on the ethnic background of the
Celtic period. A comparison of the cemeteries excavated
earlier (SopronBcsidomb, Gyrjszlls, Csabrendek)
with the evidence from systematically and professionally
investigated burial sites (Rezi, Mnfcsanak, Sopron
Krautacker, Pilismart, Kosd, Vc, Muhi) indicates that
the two rites were practiced simultaneously in the earliest
cemeteries. It seems likely that concurrently with the appearance of flat cemeteries containing inhumation burials
throughout Europe, the custom of inhumation also
spread in northern Transdanubia and that cremation
burials reflect the survival of earlier traditions. Inhumation and cremation burials were both covered with
stones or were marked with a single stone; in some cases,
a ditch was dug around the grave, a custom that has also
been observed in the contemporary cemeteries of Austria
and Slovakia. The majority of the inhumation burials
have the deceased laid to rest in an extended position,
sometimes with one of the arms folded across the chest. A
slightly contracted position is rare and usually occurs in
graves without any grave goods.
The orientation of the burials varied, with a south to

The Late Iron Age: the Celts of the La Tne period | 195
north or north to south orientation being more frequent
than an east to west orientation. There are few observations
concerning unusual or unique forms among the grave pits
or on the use of coffins. Scattered cremation and inurned
burials occur until the very end of the La Tne period, often
within the same cemetery.
GRAVE GOODS AND COSTUME
A study of the known burials in terms of gender, age and
grave goods (and their regularly occurring combinations)
can enrich our knowledge of the Celts and their society in
many ways. Many male burials contained weapons. The
sword and its fittings were always laid on the right side,
spears were found on both sides of the body, usually beside
the head and, more rarely, by the feet (Fig. 30). Early graves
often lacked a sword. The burial of the deceased with one or
more spears suggests a different type of armament. Helmets
are extremely rare finds, suggesting that only warriors with
outstanding prowess were worthy of wearing one and it is
likely that helmets also signalled status. More recent finds
have also demonstrated that in contrast to earlier assumptions, shields were used from the end of the La Tne A period. Belts and suspension rings, as well as sword chains
were also part of the male costume. A large fibula fastened
the cloak at the shoulder, although smaller iron fibulae were
sometimes also used for this purpose. There is also evidence
for torcs and armlets, worn on the left arm, or an armring
worn on the upper arm, as well as for anklets.
The finds from womens burials indicate the wear of two
to three or more fibulae, as well as of armrings and anklets.
Other pieces of jewellery included neckrings, bead necklaces, rings and belts. Pairs of fibulae linked by a chain, such
as the ones from SopronBcsidomb, Mnfcsanak and
Litr, occur from the early La Tne period and have their
counterparts among the finds from the Traisen valley, the
Burgenland and southwestern Slovakia. These fibula pairs
were used for fastening garments at the shoulder, while a
third fibula was usually found on the chest (Fig. 31). The
right to wear a torc was apparently linked to social rank or
status within the family. Sets of armrings and anklets, as

Fig. 31. Pair of linked, animal


headed bronze fibulae from
SopronBcsidomb

Fig. 30. Iron sword with its scabbard, decorated with a pair of
dragons (zoomorphic lyre). Kosd, grave 15, earlier 3rd century B.C.

well as belts were the most characteristic pieces of jewellery


worn by Celtic women. The grave goods from female burials also included simple tools and implements, mostly spindle whorls.
The custom of depositing food and beverage into the
grave, and of animal sacrifices as part of the funerary rite
is indicated by the vessels and the animal bones, most of
which came from pig, sheep and poultry. The carefully
documented burials show that a scissor or a knife lay beside the animal bones, implying that these implements
were used for carving up the meat. The deposition of the
vessels also followed a specific pattern since most were

196 The Iron Age

Fig. 32. Situla shaped vessel,


with a Waldalgesheim style
incised pattern on the shoulder.
Alspl, later 4th century B.C.

found either on the right side, or in a group by the head


or feet. The usual combination was a so-called Linsenflasche, a flask with globular belly, two or three bowls and
the occasional pot (Fig. 32).
Child burials are characterized by amulets beads,
bronze pendants, shells, snails and animal teeth and a
variety of fibula and ring ornament (Ringschmuck) sets
(Fig. 33).
The finds also reflect the wide circle of contacts main-

tained by these communities.


The assemblages dating from
the 5th4th centuries B.C. offer
many clues as to the ultimate origin of certain artefact types,
while locally made products betray cultural influences from the
earlier local population. Other
influences can be traced through
various import articles, reaching
the Carpathian Basin through
trade or with new immigrant
groups. Copies of these articles
with a distinctive Celtic flavour
were then turned out by local
workshops in the Carpathian Fig. 33. Masked bead.
Basin. The heyday of Celtic Vc, grave 29, later 3rd
craftsmanship in this region can century B.C.
be put in the late 4th century
and the 3rd century B.C., when the finest swords with elaborate, engraved patterns and bronze belts with enamel inlay
were made together with an assortment of other articles reflecting the cultural impact of Scythian culture. The concentration of the population on fortified settlements from
the 2nd1st centuries B.C. gave rise to mass-production
and the emergence of new product types. Pottery manufacture, ironworking and coinage were the most important
among these (Fig. 34).

Fig. 34. Celtic pottery kiln and its products. SopronKrautacker, earlier 3rd century B.C.

The Late Iron Age: the Celts of the La Tne period | 197
SETTLEMENT HISTORY
Our knowledge of the settlement history of the Celtic
population of the Carpathian Basin has been greatly enriched during the past few decades. The La Tne period
settlements uncovered in adjacent regions and the field
surveys and excavations conducted in Hungary all point
to the fact that the Celts did not particularly like upland
regions. This is all the more understandable since their
economy was based on crop cultivation and animal husbandry, both of which called for settlement near water
and arable land. This also explains why small farmsteads
and hamlets, vicus-type settlements occupied by a few
families, occur beside villages. The largest open settlement known to date was investigated at SopronKrautacker (Fig. 35). The observations made on this site and on

Fig. 35. Late Hallstatt and La


Tne period settlement.
SopronKrautacker, 6th1st
centuries B.C.
Fig. 36. Remains of an L shaped
Celtic house with the floor level.
SopronKrautacker,
4th century B.C.

smaller settlements excavated elsewhere (Ivn, Lbny,


Keszhtelysztat, ReglyFzfs, Acsa), as well as the
findings of the rescue excavations preceding the construction of the M3 motorway (Polgr, Sajpetri) allow a
glimpse into the everyday life of the Celts. The sunken
oblong houses, measuring 23 m by 46 m, had a pitched
roof resting on timbers aligned along the short side of the
house. Smaller huts were probably roofed with thatch or
wattling; the postholes and the daub fragments with twig
impressions suggest that the walls were of the wattle and
daub type (Fig. 36). Benches, smaller pits, fireplaces and
the occasional oven made up the interior furnishings of
these houses that were ringed by pits on the outside,
some of which were used for the extraction of clay, while
others functioned as storage bins or refuse pits.
A variety of agricultural implements made from iron

198 The Iron Age

Fig. 37. Remains of a pig and cattle sacrifice on the floor of a Celtic
house. SDoberd, house 2

ploughs, spades, sickles, scythes made land cultivation


more efficient than ever before. Cultivated species included wheat, barley, rye and millet, as well as various
vegetables and vine. Stockbreeding also played an important role. The rich animal bone samples collected at
Celtic sites indicate a wide range of domestic animals and
are, at the same time, proof of a sedentary lifeway. Animals were kept for their draught power, as well as for
their meat and milk, as shown by the high number of cattle, sheep, goat and pig bones. The food offerings placed
into graves were usually prepared from the meat of these
animals.
The ratio of hunted animals aurochs, red deer, roe
deer and boar varied from site to site. Hare was not
hunted solely for its meat. Antler and bone were used as
raw material for tools and implements; pig, deer, dog and
horse played an important role in funerary and other cults
(Fig. 37).
MASTERPIECES OF CELTIC CRAFTSMANSHIP
The occupants of the major settlements no doubt included
various craftsmen, engaged in the production of iron,
bronze, leather, wood, bone and clay articles needed for day
to day life. Although none of the metalworking centres of
the early La Tne period have been identified, the known
iron ore deposits and the occurrence of iron slag suggests
that iron smelted from bog iron and meadow ore was used
for the manufacture of weapons and other articles in northwestern Transdanubia. Iron imported in the form of bars

was also was also used. Evidence for bronzeworking is


similarly scanty, but since
the ornaments and pieces of
jewellery rarely include imports from faraway regions,
we may assume that their
majority was made in the
Carpathian Basin, a supposition supported by the fact
that the known types show
the survival of local traditions (Fig. 38).
The most experienced
metalsmiths worked as Fig. 38. Crucible from a bronze
weaponsmiths. Spearheads workshop. SopronKrautacker,
and knives with engraved 4th century B.C.
decoration, daggers with
anthropomorphic and pseudo-anthropomorphic hilt, the
punched sword blades and engraved scabbards are genuine masterpieces of their craft. The stamped blades enable the determination of individual craftsmen and workshops, as well as the regional and cultural contact of these
workshops.
The other major and exceptionally sophisticated craft
practiced by the Celts was pottery manufacture. Potting
had reached a degree of development by the Hallstatt period that allowed not only the adoption of new pottery making techniques, but also the creation of vessels suited to the
Fig. 39. Flask with stamped decoration from an early Celtic male
burial. SopronBcsidomb, early 4th century B.C.

The Late Iron Age: the Celts of the La Tne period | 199
Celtic taste. A workshop producing vessels with elaborate
stamped ornaments was active in the region of Lake Fert,
perhaps at Sopron, in the early La Tne period. Pottery
with stamped decoration retained its popularity until the
very end of the Celtic period, its influence surviving until
the 2nd century A.D., even if the ornamental repertoire and
the vessel forms changed over time (Fig. 39).
With the exception of the most common types, the pottery from sites in the Great Hungarian Plain differs from
the Transdanubian wares both in form and ornamentation,
no doubt as a result of the local traditions from the preceding Scythian period.
One outstanding group of vessels had handles decorated
with human and animal heads or human figures (Fig. 40).
These vessels reflect cultural impacts from various regions.
From the mid-2nd century B.C. a part of the population moved to the fortified hillforts (Velem, Sopron
Burgstall, Tihanyvr, Balatonfldvr, NagyberkiSzalacska, Regly, Szzhalombatta, BudapestGellrthegy,
EsztergomVr, Bkkszentlszl; Fig. 41). The reason
for this migration can in part be traced to the conflict and
armed clashes between the various tribes and in part to
Fig. 41. Northwestern section of the rampart at SopronBurgstall

Fig. 40. Kantharos shaped


vessel with ram head
terminalled handles. Csobaj,
grave 1, 3rd century B.C.

some imminent external danger. Be as it may, the craft


centres now lay in the defended hillforts; one result of the
concentration of craftsmen to a few major settlements
was that mass-production began in earnest and that new
craft industries also appeared.
The improvement of ironworking is reflected in the
wide range of tools and implements manufactured in
these hillforts. The efficiency of these tools and implements is proven by the fact that the basic types changed
little over the ensuing centuries.
Celtic minting was also practiced on these fortified settlements, functioning also as tribal centres, from the 2nd
century B.C. (Fig. 42). These coins, mostly silver mints intended for inter-tribal trade, were copies of a silver
tetradrachm known as the Philippeus. Gold coins are rare
and by the turn of the millennium even silver coins were replaced by bronze ones. Concurrently with monetary debasement, a change can be noted in the coin design. The
coinage of the Boii and the Eravisci usually has a legend
with Roman letters, reflecting the influence of Roman prototypes.
Fig. 42. Audoleon type silver coins hidden in a vessel with stamped
decoration. Egyhzasdengeleg, earlier 3rd century B.C.

The pottery workshops continued to turn out good quality


vessels on a mass scale, although the repertory of forms was
greatly reduced. Decoration took the form of smoothed-in,
geometric and painted patterns (Fig. 43).
Glass articles, such as beads, rings and armrings, including some truly magnificent pieces, were also produced locally.

200 The Iron Age


finds from the cemetery, a total of ten Celtic and seven late
Roman burials excavated by Andrs Uzsoki, have been published in Volume I of the Corpus of Celtic Finds. Uzsoki was
certain that the one-time burial ground extended beyond
the area he had investigated. The Celtic graves were all
inhumation burials, graves 4 and 10 were double burials.
The warriors graves were equipped with spears, swords and
knives; one grave also contained the iron mounts of a
wooden shield. One of the female burials yielded a lavish set
of jewellery: a torc, a necklace, a pair of armrings and a pair
of anklets. The investigation of the site has recently been
resumed as part of the excavation projects preceding the
motorway constructions.
THE CELTIC SITE AT MNFCSANAK
Andrea Vaday

Fig. 43. Vessel with painted decoration. BudapestGellrthegy,


Tabn, 1st century B.C.

An 80,000 m2 large area was investigated in 199394 preceding the construction of the Mnfcsanak bypass between Road 83 and the M1 motorway.
A section of the cemetery lying on an elevation in the
floodplain of the Old Rba fell into the investigated area.
The earliest Celtic graves from Hungary were uncovered in
this burial ground (Fig. 45). It was earlier believed that the
Celts only occupied the Burgenland and Transdanubia in
Fig. 44. Gold hoard. SzrazdRegly, earlier 2nd century B.C.

RELIGION
The hillforts were not only economic, industrial and trade
centres, but also the settings for various ceremonies and rituals. Although there is little archaeological evidence for
these practices from Hungary, we know that there were
special sacred precincts for cult life in the Celtic oppida or
their immediate neighbourhood.
The hoard found near the Regly hillfort was probably
deposited as part of a votive gift in the bog between Szrazd
and Regly (Fig. 44). Animal depictions can usually be associated with totemistic beliefs or some sort of fertility cult.
The boar statuette from Bta is one of the outstanding creations of Celtic small sculpture in terms of its artistry.
Aside from a monumental stone relic, the Janus-head
from BadacsonyLbdi, Celtic art in Hungary is represented by a wide array of imaginative and superbly crafted
small objects.
The Celtic tribes living in Hungary can be credited with
the introduction of important technological innovations,
such as the mass-production of wheel-thrown pottery and
the development of lasting iron tool sets, as well as with laying the foundation of urban civilization and a road network
linking distant areas that became permanent from the Roman period.
One of the most important Celtic sites is the settlement
and burial ground lying on the northwestern outskirts of
Mnfcsanak, on an ancient terrace of the Rba river. The

The Late Iron Age: the Celts of the La Tne period | 201
the 4th century B.C. Now, however, the date of the Celtic
occupation can be put earlier in view of the finds from
Mnfcsanak. The bead necklaces worn together with or
without a torc and the fibula pairs for fastening the upper
garment from womens grave indicate an early costume
type. The later graves of this cemetery usually contained a
third fibula that was most often found lying on the chest.
The finds from the earliest burials have their best analogies
among the assemblages from Jogasses, Drrnberg bei
Hallein (late 6thearly 5th century B.C.), Hlubne (later
5th century B.C.) and the so-called Marne horizon of
Epernay (later 5th century B.C.).
The grave assemblages include both old and new artefact
types, often in the same burial, indicating that the immigrant Celts adopted many elements of the local material
culture. The military nature of the cemetery is reflected in
the numerous weapons placed into the graves: the male
graves yielded an assortment of large shields with metal
mounts, double-edged swords and spears (Fig. 46).
Many burials were enclosed by a rectangular grave ditch, a
Fig. 45. Double burial in the early Celtic cemetery at Mnfcsanak

Fig. 46. Spear types from the Celtic cemetery at Mnfcsanak

phenomenon known also from other Celtic cemeteries, such


as the one at Franzhausen in Lower Austria from the 5th century B.C., where graves with single and double burials were
similarly enclosed by rectangular or circular ditch. The
Franzhausen cemetery also resembles the Mnfcsanak one
in that it was biritual, containing both inhumation and cremation burials. Graves enclosed by a ditch are also known
from Champagne and from other Celtic burial grounds of the
Marne region, as well as from eastern Yorkshire. At La Perrire, a cemetery dating from the 3rd century B.C., a row of
unmarked graves lay between the ones enclosed by a rectangular or circular ditch. Comparable graves have also been reported from Mal Kosihy and Dubnik in Slovakia.
The Mnfcsanak cemetery was used by several successive generations. The early graves can be dated to the period preceding the Celtic expeditions against the Balkans,
while the late ones to the transition between the early and
middle La Tne period. Many graves were double burials.
This phenomenon has also been documented in other
Celtic cemeteries, for example at MnsingenRain and
Drrnberg. Some graves were marked with a stone, a practice observed also at SopronBcsidomb, Kosd and Cserszegtomaj.
The internal chronology of the Mnfcsanak cemetery is
fairly clear. The graves enclosed by a grave ditch form distinct groups, with the unmarked burials lying between
them. A family member was sometimes later interred in one
of the already existing graves. The relative chronology of
the burials can be established on the basis of the various features and the finds using the Harris matrix. Of the Celtic
cemeteries in the Carpathian Basin, only the forty-seven
burials of the Chotin cemetery in Slovakia have been analyzed using this method that enabled the identification of
the several generations buried there.
The area investigated at Mnfcsanak also included the
section of an extensive Celtic settlement, whose excavated
features could be dated to the La Tne B2B2/C1 period
(Fig. 47). The survival of the native Celtic population could
be traced until the Severan age. The settlement features

202 The Iron Age

Fig. 47. Groundplan and reconstruction of a Celtic house

included sunken houses, storage and refuse pits, ditches and


fences, and a well with an oakwood structure. The exact
date of the well could be determined from the dendrochronological analysis of its wood. Smaller structures, used
for storing raw materials, such as blocks of graphite, were
also found. Raw graphite was from the 5th century B.C. on
imported by the pottery workshops lying far from the
graphite sources. The presence of these graphite depots at
Mnfcsanak indicate trade relations with the west. Local
metalworking is indicated by the remains of a stone-lined
smelting furnace, together with iron slag and raw iron bars.
Iron too was imported from the west, from Austria.
The analysis of the pottery finds showed that the Mnfcsanak settlement maintained close ties with Sopron
Krautacker in the late 4th and early 3rd century B.C. and
with the Celtic potters of ataj in Slovakia during the 2nd
century B.C. The best analogies to the vessels ornamented
with stamped and radial patterns can be quoted from Balf,
cs, Koronc, Hidegsg and Sopron, as well as from other
sites in the Fert Basin (Mrbisch, Oggau, Pttsching).
On the testimony of the written sources, Boirebistas,
King of the Dacians defeated the Celtic army led by Kritasiros in the mid-1st century B.C. and made the territory
of the Boii, who had arrived sometime around 60 B.C., a
wasteland (deserta Boiorum). It would nonetheless appear
that the Celtic Boii of Mnfcsanak, the occupants of the
latest phase of the settlement preceding the Roman conquest, survived well into the Roman period.

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