Castro of Vila Nova de São Pedro

Castro of Vila Nova de São Pedro (Castro de Vila Nova de São Pedro)
Castro
Named for: Vila Nova de São Pedro
Country  Portugal
Region Alentejo
Subregion Lezíria do Tejo
District Lisboa
Municipality Azambuja
Location Vila Nova de São Pedro
 - elevation 75 m (246 ft)
 - coordinates PT 39°13′11.16″N 8°50′25.33″W / 39.2197667°N 8.8403694°W / 39.2197667; -8.8403694Coordinates: PT 39°13′11.16″N 8°50′25.33″W / 39.2197667°N 8.8403694°W / 39.2197667; -8.8403694
Length 55 m (180 ft), West-East
Width 50 m (164 ft), North-South
Architects unknown
Style Chalcolithic
Material Limestone
Origin 2700 BCE
Discovery 1936
Owner Portuguese Republic
For public Public
Easiest access Torre de Penalva
Management Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico
Status Property of Public Interest
Imóvel de Interesse Público
Listing Decree 516/71; DG274, 22 November 1971
Location of the Castro cultures of the Iberian peninsula, with the locational influence of the castro of Vila Nova de São Pedro

The Castro of Vila Nova de São Pedro is a Chalcolithic archaeological site in the civil parish of Vila Nova de São Pedro, municipality of Azambuja, in the Portuguese Estremadura area of Lezíria do Tejo. It is important for the discovery of thousands of arrowheads within its fortified settlement, associated with the Chalcolithic period of human settlement. associated with the long-lived fortified town, or castro, of Zambujal, near the municipality of Torres Vedras. The period of "urban" settlement lasted from 2600 to 1300 BCE, and was a contemporary of the southeastern Spanish settlements of Los Millares and El Argar.

Architecture

The rural site, is located on a small hilltop dominated by the ruins of a castle, and intersected in the north, east and west by the Ribeira de Alcoentre, Ribeira do Carrascal and Ribeira do Massuca (respectively).[1]

The castro settlement was built during two phases: initially (associated with the VNSP I culture), an open settlement; followed by a fortified settlement (VSNP 2) encircled by wall of rocks (covered in clay).[2] Within its perimeter are the vestiges of a semi-circular domed oven/kiln, alongside a limestone space and cistern.[1][2] Many of these pre-existing structures were dismantled and/or destroyed during a phase of settlement (VNSP III), followed by a fourth period of occupation which resulted in another phase of destruction (VNSP IV), leading to the construction of a new system of defense.[1][2]

The oven and ancillary space (where was discovered full of pottery from the VSNP 2 era) constitutes a group associated with the industrial fabrication of ceramics, receiving water from the cistern for its operation.[2] These structures were destroyed and substituted for new spaces (VNSP III) when the spaces were expropriated for the metallurgic manufacture of copper, spinning and weaving, and the manufacture of dairy products, etc.[1][2]

History

Reproduction of a sun-like carving from the castro
Reproduction of a deer carving discovered in the Castro
Palmela-style arrow points produced in the region influenced by the VNSP

The southwestern region of the Iberian peninsula is a focus of Megalithism, predating by 1000 years the megalithic region of western France: The erection of dolmens, menhirs and castros developed over a long period of southern and central Portugal. At about the beginning of the 3rd millennium BCE, contemporaneous with metallurgy associated with the copper and precious metals, new types of tomb-building appeared in the western Mediterranean regions. There has been some debate as to whether these developments originated in the Eastern Mediterranean or whether they are independent of these cultures, although there is little evidence to support the hypothesis, other than the use of the term tholoi (which can be seen as a more contemporaneous development).[3]

VNSP I

It has been determined that early inhabitants in this region began building fortifications around 2700 BCE,[2] with the Dolmen of Herdade de Zambujal being the more central, with a very complex plan and up to six reconstructions in its lifetime. These cultures left behind many traces of their culture: stylized cups, crescents of clay, sticks of slate and the so-called plate-idols, that some archaeo-astronomers consider to be precise calendaries. Nevertheless, the exchange with other groups, particularly Los Millares, is also present in the archaeological record. The inhabitants of the fort had its economy based on agriculture and grazing, which was suitable to the surrounding lowlands.[1][2]

VNSP II

But, trade proved to have greater interest: the first settlers brought with them red-tinged pottery, more delicate then later ceramics, with excellent decoration, suggesting their contact with peoples of a superior civilization (something that they could not produce with similar quality).[1][2] With the arrival of the Beaker peoples around 2200 BCE, the local culture entered a new period of development that mixed the Beaker people burial rites, while maintaining other traditions. It is likely that the Beaker people's presence within this region also resulted in secondary phase of development of this culture. The inter-cultural exchanges between groups were more frequent, and their influence spread to distances of 1000 kilometres or greater, as was the case with the Treilles, in the French Languedoc. Local artifacts associated with these cultures, such as the Palmela arrowheads or bell-shaped beakers, were commonly found dispersed in the western half of the Iberian peninsula, suggesting an origin in the region. After 1900 BCE there is a decentralization in the Iberian peninsula, resulting in a dispersion of many of theses artifacts to as far as Bohemia.

With the arrival of Bronze Age technologies in southern Iberia after 1800 BCE (particularly in El Argar), the influence of the castro culture of Vila Nova de São Pedro begins to slowly decline. Finally, around 1300, it merges with the wider culture associated with internally burnished pottery, including most of Portugal and the wider Atlantic Bronze Age cultures.

Excavations

The site was discovered in 1936 by Raposo, and followed in 1937 by excavations under the auspices of the Associação dos Arqueólogos Portugueses (Association of Portuguese Archaeologists). Between 1941-1948, 1949–1954, 1959 and 1960–1967, Afonso do Paço was responsible for the dig.[1]

In 1961, the Direcção Geral dos Edifícios e Monumentos Nacionais (DGMEN) (General Directorate for Buildings and National Monuments) also conducted investigations, in conjunction with the Serviços de Monumentos Nacionais(National Monument Services branch).[1]

Following the authorization of Vitor Manuel dos Santos Gonçalves, in 1985, new archaeological investigations were undertaken at the site.[1]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Noé, Paula (1991). SIPA, ed. "Castro de Vila Nova de São Pedro, no Lugar de Torre de Penalva" (in Portuguese). Lisbon,Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Martins, A. (2011). IGESPAR, ed. "Castro de Vila Nova de São Pedro" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
  3. While tholoi seem to have a clear Eastern origin (since Cypriot and the mainland cultures of Tell Halaf built them earlier), the other types, mainly artificial caves, have been found in the West. Also, while tholoi are common in Los Millares and other regions, the evolved type of tomb that appears in Vila Nova de São Pedro is the artificial cave, which is also common in southeastern France.

Sources

See also

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