Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages
By moving livestock to summer farms, fodder at the home base is saved but the milk and other animal products produced during the animals’ absence are no longer immediately available to those left at the home base. In this paper I shall explore the economic implications of the use of summer farms, in...
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| Format: | Book Section |
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JR Collis Publications
2016
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| Online Access: | https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35573/ |
| _version_ | 1848795111327006720 |
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| author | Pearce, Mark |
| author2 | Collis, John R. |
| author_facet | Collis, John R. Pearce, Mark |
| author_sort | Pearce, Mark |
| building | Nottingham Research Data Repository |
| collection | Online Access |
| description | By moving livestock to summer farms, fodder at the home base is saved but the milk and other animal products produced during the animals’ absence are no longer immediately available to those left at the home base. In this paper I shall explore the economic implications of the use of summer farms, in particular the effect on carrying capacity, on the number of livestock which can be over-wintered, and on the use of the milk produced while the animals are at the summer grazing lands.
I then explore archaeological evidence from the Bronze and Iron Ages of the Italian uplands (Apennines and Alps). I argue that the production of hard cheese, which converts milk into an easily conservable and transportable commodity, is key to the expansion of summer farms in the Bronze Age of Italy. Cheese production is an essential part of models for the pastoral use of Mediterranean uplands in prehistory but it is commonly held that in the Alps the production of hard cheese only begins in the Middle Ages. I examine the literary and archaeological evidence for the prehistoric production of hard cheese and argue that its production in prehistory is the most parsimonious explanation for the summer use of high mountain pastures and thus for the origins of the Alpwirtschaft economy in the southern Alps. |
| first_indexed | 2025-11-14T19:26:53Z |
| format | Book Section |
| id | nottingham-35573 |
| institution | University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus |
| institution_category | Local University |
| last_indexed | 2025-11-14T19:26:53Z |
| publishDate | 2016 |
| publisher | JR Collis Publications |
| recordtype | eprints |
| repository_type | Digital Repository |
| spelling | nottingham-355732020-05-04T18:06:29Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35573/ Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages Pearce, Mark By moving livestock to summer farms, fodder at the home base is saved but the milk and other animal products produced during the animals’ absence are no longer immediately available to those left at the home base. In this paper I shall explore the economic implications of the use of summer farms, in particular the effect on carrying capacity, on the number of livestock which can be over-wintered, and on the use of the milk produced while the animals are at the summer grazing lands. I then explore archaeological evidence from the Bronze and Iron Ages of the Italian uplands (Apennines and Alps). I argue that the production of hard cheese, which converts milk into an easily conservable and transportable commodity, is key to the expansion of summer farms in the Bronze Age of Italy. Cheese production is an essential part of models for the pastoral use of Mediterranean uplands in prehistory but it is commonly held that in the Alps the production of hard cheese only begins in the Middle Ages. I examine the literary and archaeological evidence for the prehistoric production of hard cheese and argue that its production in prehistory is the most parsimonious explanation for the summer use of high mountain pastures and thus for the origins of the Alpwirtschaft economy in the southern Alps. JR Collis Publications Collis, John R. Pearce, Mark Nicolis, Franco 2016-08-19 Book Section PeerReviewed Pearce, Mark (2016) Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages. In: Summer farms: seasonal exploitation of the uplands from prehistory to the present. Sheffield archaeological monographs (16). JR Collis Publications, Sheffield, pp. 47-56. ISBN 9780906090558 Alpwirtschaft Pastoralism Milk Cheese Bronze Age https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/summer-farms/ |
| spellingShingle | Alpwirtschaft Pastoralism Milk Cheese Bronze Age Pearce, Mark Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages |
| title | Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages |
| title_full | Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages |
| title_fullStr | Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages |
| title_full_unstemmed | Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages |
| title_short | Hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the Italian Bronze and Iron Ages |
| title_sort | hard cheese: upland pastoralism in the italian bronze and iron ages |
| topic | Alpwirtschaft Pastoralism Milk Cheese Bronze Age |
| url | https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35573/ https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35573/ |