Christopher M. Stevenson, Madeleine Gunter-Bassett, Laure Dussubieux
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引用次数: 0
摘要
1607 年,伦敦弗吉尼亚公司(Virginia Company of London)的殖民者们在詹姆斯河畔建立了詹姆斯堡(James Fort),他们带来了成片的废铜。英国人知道铜在切萨皮克原住民中是一种非常珍贵的材料,因此他们将铜作为贸易物品带来,这在很大程度上是基于早期罗阿诺克殖民地的经验。在弗吉尼亚各地的接触期遗址(约公元 1607-1680 年)中都发现了由欧洲人冶炼的铜(不纯铜和铜合金)制成的工艺品,而詹姆斯堡一直被认为是这种材料的主要集散地。为了验证这一假设,我们分析了詹姆斯堡(1607-约 1625 年)冶炼铜器样品以及弗吉尼亚州中部五个土著遗址铜器样品的元素组成。我们还分析了另一个著名的欧洲要塞遗址--北卡罗来纳州圣胡安要塞(1567-1568 年)出土的铜器样本。研究结果表明,尽管弗吉尼亚州土著网络中流通的冶炼铜有一部分来自詹姆斯堡,但其余铜可能来自东北部的英国、法国或荷兰分布点。
Examining the Seventeenth-Century Copper Trade: An Analysis of Smelted Copper from Sites in Virginia and North Carolina
When the colonists who made up the Virginia Company of London established James Fort on the banks of the James River in 1607, they brought with them sheets of scrap copper. Based in large part on the experience of the earlier Roanoke Colony, the English knew that copper was a highly prized material among Native peoples of the Chesapeake, and they brought it with them as a trade item. Artifacts made from European smelted copper (impure copper and copper alloy) have been found at contact period sites (ca. AD 1607–1680) throughout Virginia, and James Fort has long been hypothesized to be the primary distribution point for that material. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the elemental composition of a sample of smelted copper artifacts from James Fort (1607–ca. 1625), as well as samples of copper artifacts from five Native sites in central Virginia. We also analyzed a sample of copper artifacts from another well-known European fort site—Fort San Juan (1567–1568) in North Carolina. The results suggest that although a portion of the smelted copper that circulated through Native networks in Virginia came from James Fort, the rest of it possibly came from English, French, or Dutch distribution points to the northeast.