Bronze, Sea and Sardinia: Social and Technological Evolution in an Island Society
The island of Sardinia, long considered to have been relatively isolated from developments
in the prehistoric Mediterranean, is now known to have had a long history of significant interactions
with neighboring cultures. By the Late Neolithic, the use of copper and silver are documented, while
during the Bronze Age Sardinia was an important part of an international koine in which copper
oxhide ingots, decorated ceramics, and other materials were exchanged between the eastern and
western Mediterranean. The use of lead isotope analysis to determine the provenance of the ores
used to make oxhide ingots has been the subject of great debate, primarily on grounds of incomplete
or insufficient testing of ore sources, and because of the potential for recycling of scrap metal (see
Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 8, 1995). Analyses by Nöel Gale and Zofia Stos-Gale
suggest that all of the oxhide ingots found in Sardinia are derived from Cypriot ores, a conclusion
which has been challenged as premature at best. Few authors, however, have considered in detail
the circumstances in which oxhide ingots - from any ore source - were present in the Nuragic society
of Bronze Age Sardinia.
A coherent model will be proposed here which accounts for the presence of oxhide ingots
in Sardinia, and for the contacts with eastern Mediterranean cultures which they represent, as
complementary to the extraction, refinement, and use of local ores. This model will be based on the
archaeological evidence for Sardinian metallurgy, and the social and economic character of the
Nuragic culture. Among the archaeometallurgical evidence which will be discussed are a Nuragic
metal workshop where copper-based alloys were cast to form utilitarian objects and weapons, as well
as votive figurines (bronzetti) (Gallin and Tykot 1993); and analyses by Tykot and others (see
Balmuth & Tykot 1998) of Nuragic copper ingots and bronze artifacts.
BALMUTH, M.S. & R.H. TYKOT. 1998. Recipes for Sardinian bronzes, Journal of Roman
Archaeology, supplemental series, in press.
GALLIN, L.J. & R.H. TYKOT. 1993. Bronze Age metalworking at Nuraghe Santa Barbara
(Bauladu), Sardinia, Journal of Field Archaeology 20: 335-345.