19-2024, tome 121, 4, p 693-718 - Guilaine J., Vaquer J., Costa K., Raynaud C. (2024) – Une épée argarique du Bronze moyen à Bessède-de-Sault (Aude, France)

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19-2024, tome 121, 4, p 693-718 - Guilaine J., Vaquer J., Costa K., Raynaud C. (2024) – Une épée argarique du Bronze moyen à Bessède-de-Sault (Aude, France)

Une épée argarique du Bronze moyen à Bessède-de-Sault (Aude, France)

 

Jean Guilaine, Jean Vaquer, Kévin Costa, Christian Raynaud

 

 

Résumé : La mention de la trouvaille d'une épée en bronze dans la haute vallée de l'Aude, donnée et exposée au syndicat d'initiatives de Quillan, est restée longtemps confidentielle. Une enquête a permis de retrouver cet objet et de situer l'emplacement de sa découverte près du col de Pradels dans la commune de Bessède-de-Sault (Aude). Il s'agit d'une lame d'épée plate et légèrement étranglée à languette large munie de six rivets sur deux rangs, qui présente des caractères typiques des productions de l'étape B de la culture d'El Argar datable au début du Bronze moyen (1600-1400 av. J.-C.). Cette épée argarique est la seconde trouvée en France après celle de la Rouvière à Chusclan (Gard), légèrement différente (plus courte, à un seul rang de rivets) et associée à d'autres lames de style rhodanien de la fin du Bronze ancien. Ces découvertes reflètent les dynamiques d'échanges de productions métalliques liées à la fois à leur rôle fonctionnel et symbolique et aux compétitions techniques et sociales des divers centres européens de fabrication. Pour autant les épées du Bronze ancien et moyen sont rares dans le Midi. La pièce ici évoquée a été mise au jour dans une aire du piémont pyrénéen (le Pays de Sault) encore peu étudiée mais dont les données disponibles renvoient à des cultures locales (Bronze ancien à traditions campaniformes, Bronze moyen à vases polypodes). Dans le contexte plus large nord-pyrénéen, des apports d'objets de cuivre ou de bronze de souche ibérique sont toutefois attestés lors de ces périodes. En composition élémentaire, l'épée de Bessède-de-Sault se révèle être un bronze à fort taux d'étain (10 % Sn) et à faible teneur d'impuretés, et des comparaisons sont proposées avec divers documents de France et de la péninsule Ibérique. La teneur en plomb est faible ; fortement radiogénique, ce dernier élément oriente vers un cuivre de souche égéenne ou, plus vraisemblablement en raison de la typologie caractéristique de la pièce, du sud de l'Espagne.

Est également abordée la question de la genèse des épées dans le sud-ouest de l'Europe. Trois pôles sont reconnus. D'une part certaines épées courtes s'inscrivent dans la tradition des poignards à languette du Chalcolithique ibérique. Un second pôle est constitué par les épées Bonnánaro de type Sant'Iroxi de Decimoputzu de Sardaigne, à rivets et en cuivre arsénié. Les épées argariques, auxquelles se rattache l'épée de Bessède-de-Sault, constituent le troisième de ces pôles de production originaux, à l'écart des foyers de l'Europe continentale.

 

Mots-clés : culture d'El Argar, épée en bronze, métallurgie d'alliages cuivreux, cuivre arsénié, isotopes du plomb, âge du Bronze ancien, âge du Bronze moyen, péninsule Ibérique, Pyrénées.

 

Abstract: The mention of the finding of a bronze sword in the upper valley of the Aude, given and presented to the tourist information office of Quillan, remained confidential for a long time. An investigation made it possible to find this object and locate the site of its original discovery near the Pradels pass in the village of Bessède-de-Sault (Aude). It is a sword with triangular blade and strangulation under the guard, with lenticular section, marked with locally hammered sharp threads. The tongue is trapezoidal, sub-elliptical. The piece has a length of 55.3 cm including 4 cm for the tongue and 51.3 cm for the blade. The maximum width of the tab is 6.4 cm ; it was pierced with 6 rivet holes in two rows, five of which are still in place. The missing hilt was probably made of wood. The arrangement of the rivets (4 aligned, 2 unhooked) is found identically on the swords of the graves 429, 824 and 551 of the eponymous site of El Argar (Almeria) and the copy of the burial 9 of Fuente Alamo (Almeria). Similar ones are known from Puertollano (Ciudad Real, Castile) and Entrambasaguas (Santander, Cantabria). The proximal area of the blade, just below the guard, shows a pattern incised in double low arc. They are marks for the hilt or signs left by a sharp cleaning tool in the contact area between blade and handle.

The blade is well preserved except in the distal part where it was damaged on discovery which blew the patina and the oxidized crust and which probably bent the tip, this one straightened secondarily.

This argaric sword is the second found in France after that of the Rouvière in Chusclan (Gard), slightly different (shorter, with a single row of rivets) and associated with other Rhodanian style blades of the end of Early Bronze Age.

Argaric swords have given rise to typological classifications, the most common of which are those of M. Almagro Gorbea (1972) and D. Brandherm (2003). M. Almagro recognizes two main groups. On the one hand the parts with marked strangulation of the upper third (which gives them an overall appearance pistilliform), with rivet holes arranged on a single row: these would be the oldest (Early Bronze or transition with the Middle Bronze) and most of them would be arsenated copper. The blade of Chusclan belongs to this phase. The second group concerns the narrower triangular blades with straight edges, an enlarged guard and rivets arranged in two rows. It is to this category that the sword of Bessède-de-Sault is attached. It can be dated to stage B of El Argar culture, between 1600 and 1400 BCE. The majority of swords in this group are bronze, those in copper or arsenated copper being rarer. Various typological variants within these two groups have been characterized.

The interest of the sword of Bessède-de-Sault also lies in its place of discovery on the northern slope of the Pyrenees. It is also located in the South of France, where the swords of the Middle Bronze are very rare. In the Aude basin, little was known until now only the sword of Jugnes (La Nouvelle), with massive handle and blade decorated with long chevron patterns and whose style is part of a context of continental Helveto-Germanic influences (Daugas and Vuaillat, 2006). This weapon is related to the type of Cheylounet which include seven swords, perhaps, from the same workshop. Conversely, the sword of Bessède-de-Sault clearly refers to the argaric sphere whose rapiers are the subject of debate as to their function: instruments of combat or emblems of power ?

The sword of Bessède-de-Sault was unearthed in a local archaeological context, the Pays de Sault, still little explored but whose documentation available for the Early Bronze Age and Middle Bronze Age refers to local cultures located on both sides of the Eastern Pyrenees. The sepulchral cavities of Usson (Fontanès-de-Sault, Aude), Gardouch (Belcaire, Aude), Toureil (Mijanès, Ariège) highlight an Early Bronze Age in the Beaker tradition with a strong presence of prismatic V-perforated buttons. The Middle Bronze is notably represented by the Pyrenean-Aquitaine culture with polypod vases (Dourgne cave, Fontanès-de-Sault, Aude). More widely in the Eastern Pyrenees, the metal productions of the Middle Bronze are essentially axes with edges and median constriction (Casteldos, Le Bousquet, Aude ; Arnave, Ariège). Besides this regional metallurgy, one does not exclude the presence of metallic objects of Iberian influence or origin like the long chalcolithic dagger of Vernet (Ariège), the sword of Lafage (Saint-Amadou, Ariège) or the halberd of Hérédèche in Sost (Hautes-Pyrénées). Recall also that a sword with four rivets close to the Iberian models is given as coming from Vieille-Toulouse (Haute-Garonne) but does not in fact have a safe source.

The analysis in elemental composition of the sword of Bessède-de-Sault showed that it was a bronze with 10% tin, a kind of fairly general alloy at the beginning of the Middle Bronze. Arsenic, lead, antimony and silver levels are low. The blade and rivets were made with the same alloy. The best matches are found in various objects of the Iberian Peninsula but some pieces from the South of France present similar compositions. The isotopic analyses showed comparable results between the blade and the rivet. The lead content is low. It is highly radiogenic which limits the hypotheses on the origin of the ore on a European scale. Different approaches (graphic reading, statistical methods) refer to Greek minerals (Laurion, Cyclades) but also to Spanish minerals. The additional analysis by age model tends to confirm these hypotheses, limits remaining however (old geological data, unrecorded deposits in lead isotopy, possible metal recycling). Comparisons with remains from Iberian archæological sites indicate close lead isotopic ratios. In the end, the sword of Bessède-de-Sault shows a compatibility of its metal with certain parts of the argarian area but also with bronzes from northern Spain and the South.

It will never be known who (or what) was the holder (s) of this sword and its (their) gender. Weapons that may have been devolved to women in Argarian society are a hypothesis currently under debate.

In a more general way this weapon invites us to ask the question of the genesis of the oldest swords in South-West Europe. Unlike the swords with massive handle and decorated blade of the Central-European zone, the first rapières produced in the Western Mediterranean and South-Atlantic Europe are distinguished by different characters. Three areas seem to emerge. First an Ibero-Atlantic zone clearly inspired by the local tradition of beaker's tongue daggers. Another production centre is located in Sardinia and concerns the Sant'Iroxi type swords of Decimoputzu, in arsenated copper. The third area is that of the argarian swords to which the sword of Bessède-de-Sault is attached. All three sources favour wooden hilts but which could be set with a cover in silver or gold sheets as on the exceptional example of Guadalajara (Spain).

 

Keywords: Culture of El Argar, bronze sword, metallurgy of copper alloys, arsenated copper, lead isotopes, Early Bronze Age, Middle Bronze Age, Iberian Peninsula, Pyrenees.