A Traditional History of the Bronze Age

Tim Concannon
5
This should be in every school and library in the land.
Wheeze
5
An excellent work of scholarship lifting the mist on this obscure and mysterious time.
Adam de Beasoleil
A Traditional History of the Bronze Age
ISBN Kindle: 
978-0-9576688-0-5

5000 years ago Western Europe was a very different place. A world of Priest-kings, stone circles, temples, great heroes and sea-raiders. A heady mix of archaeology, traditional history and folklore gives us a window into that turbulent period, where we find the origins of the Greek and Gaulish gods, the Wagnerian Ring Cycle, Robin Hood and even King Arthur himself. Thirty year of scholarship and hands-on experience at an experimental construct of a prehistoric farmstead in Southern England gives the author a unique take on some very old traditions.

This book, first published fifteen years ago is now brought right up to date with the benefit of the latest advances in Archaeology and Genetics.

Tim Concannon

Tim Concannon has been involved in the world of archaeology and prehistoric legend for more than thirty years.  A scion of a well-known family of Gaelic scholars, his forebears had their own bards, some of whose work appears in the following pages. He learned his first Gaelic from his father and uncle.  Over the years he has translated a few of the more obscure pieces of Old Gaelic into modern English for the benefit of the anglophone archaeological world, which has sometimes been an uphill struggle.

He has been involved in Butser Ancient Farm in Hampshire since 1985 and was a close personal associate of the late Dr Peter Reynolds, the founder.  Over that period, he has told many of the old tales to audiences sitting, in time-honoured fashion, around the fire of a great round house and led theatrical interpretations of ancient rituals, including burning the wicker man.

As an English barrister, he has a wide knowledge of the evolution of the common law in Western Europe and the Near East, including its insular derivatives in Ireland and Wales, the concepts of which frequently underlie the stories.

This particular work was first published in 1998,has now been completely revised and updated it to take into account the advances in the last fifteen years, particularly in DNA studies.  Having had his own DNA analysed, he finds that his mother was descended from an individual named Helena by the researchers, who lived 22,000 years ago in what is now Southern France.  Her direct descendants have been in the Gloucestershire area for 12,500 years.

On his father’s side, he is part of the High O’Brian sept of the Connachta, whose reputed ancestry goes well into the prehistoric period with such illustrious names as Queen Maeve of Connacht and Tuathal Techtmar, who was said to be the Irish Prince who sought the aid of Julius Agricola, the Roman Governor of Britain, against his enemies.

5
Wheeze

Tim Concannon is an expert on the subject who generates an infectious enthusiasm which cleverly manages to reach out to adults and to younger readers. His position is that the Bronze Age in Britain and Europe is important: it matters because it is our history, and yet most of us know more about the Greeks of Classical Athens than we do about the inhabitants of Sussex, or indeed Ireland, who predate them by three thousand years or more. This is a world we reach by archaeology and leave by magic, meeting heroes, gods, and monsters on the way. As a central player in the re-creation and building of the Butser Ancient Farm in Hampshire, Mr Concannon is literally a hands-on guide to a period which was history by the time the Romans reached this country. This should be in every school and library in the land.

5
Adam de Beasoleil

Having finished reading Jared Diamond's excellent 'Guns, Germs, and Steel,' I was struck by my complete ignorance of the prehistory of Britain. I had a number of questions I wanted answering about life here 5000 years ago. Were people hunter-gatherers or had we made the move to sedentary farming? What was everyday life like and what did our diet consist of? Stephen Pinker's 'Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined' also led me to ask how violent life was. Historians and forensic archaeologists have discovered that the average pre-state society had a homicide of 15%. Was Britain any different?

Tim Concannon's 'A Traditional History of the Bronze Age' answered all of these questions with amazing depth. This is a perfect book for anybody, whether an expert or a layman, looking to get a better understanding of Britain (and Ireland) between 3000 and 1200 BC. From the start the author addresses the difficulty historians have in getting an understanding of an age when most people were illiterate. He has studied a variety of different sources (which are established in the first chapter) ranging from the archaeological - the author has decades worth of hands on experience with an ancient farm - to the mystical. Over the course of the book the reader will learn of the many myths, legends, and fables that dominated the culture and formed folklore.

There is an excellent breakdown of the diet of early forest dwelling peoples (more varied than I thought) and how this lifestyle was eventually replaced with a more sedentary one. The sort of tools used to make this transition are explained and there are plenty of images which show them in detail. As expected, this also gives way to the domestication of pets and the organisation of communities with laws and customs. The book also includes a fine chronology of the era which I found especially interesting and useful in seeing the key events and individuals across the many years it covers.

There is considerably more to this book than I can write in one review. It is an excellent work of scholarship from an era that will never have the benefit of the sort of paper trails that make modern history so much easier to write. Timothy Concannon has done a tremendous job in lifting the mist on this obscure and mysterious time.

 

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