At the end of the world? Settlement in the Šumava mountains and foothills in later prehistory

Author:

Dreslerová Dagmar1,Romportl Dušan2,Čišecký Čeněk1,Fröhlich Jiří3,Michálek Jan4,Metlička Milan5,Parkman Marek6,Pták Martin7

Affiliation:

1. Archeologický ústav Akademie věd České republiky Praha, v. v.i., Letenská 4 CZ – 11801 Praha 1 Czech Republic

2. Katedra fyzické geografie a geoekologie PřF UK, Albertov 6 CZ – 128 43 Praha 2 Czech Republic

3. Erbenova 1546 CZ–397 01 Písek Czech Republic

4. Nádražní 120 CZ – 397 01 Písek Czech Republic

5. Západočeské muzeum v Plzni p.o., odd. prehistorie, Zborovská 40 CZ-301 00 Plzeň Czech Republic

6. Prachatické muzeum Velké náměstí 13 CZ-383 01, Prachatice Czech Republic

7. Archeologický ústav FF Jihočeská univerzita v Českých Budějovicích, Branišovská 31a CZ-370 05 České Budějovice Czech Republic

Abstract

Abstract The aim of this paper is to explore and define the boundary of the zone of inland, mainly agricultural settlement in southern and western Bohemia, Czech Republic in the later prehistory, and to try to determine why such settlement appears not to have spread further into the Šumava foothills and mountains. With the help of predictive MaxEnt modelling – used in ecology to determine the degree of uncertainty in the geographic distribution of species – and using a comparison with data on soil productivity, we explore whether in later prehistory the agricultural settlement was limited by unsuitable natural conditions or by other factors. The boundaries of the territory suitable for agropastoral farming most probably moved in time with technological advances, increases in population density, and the changing preferences of inhabitants of the Bronze and Iron Ages. The margin of agricultural settlement in the foothills describes a line beyond which agriculture had become unprofitable; a similar boundary existed throughout the Early Middle Ages. At the same time, there was a good deal of contact across the mountains with Bavaria and Upper Austria, as is shown by archaeology both in the form of similarities between the prehistoric typo-chronological complexes and by finds of bronze and iron items along presumed routes of access. There were also montane sites (whose function is still unknown) situated beyond the margin of the agricultural zone, such as the recently discovered settlements on the Křemelná river. Apart from prospection, a wide range of other activities could have taken place, including those connected with communication and routes of access to Bavaria and Upper Austria, with which Šumava formed a common typo-chronological group.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Archaeology,Archaeology

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