BEAKER
FOLK
Prior to that time they had come into close contact with a Russian
tribal culture known as the Battle Axe people, with whom they soon merged to
form a single population. The Battle Axe culture is believed to have radically
influenced the speech of the Beaker Folk, both those who migrated into Britain
and those who remained on the European mainland, effectively ensuring the
spread of an Indo-European language into eastern Europe and beyond.
Early in their development as a society, the Beaker Folk pursued skills
in metalworking, first in gold and copper and later in bronze. They are
attributed by some as being instrumental to the beginning of the Early Bronze
Age. At any rate, it is important to understand the Beaker Folk's keen interest
in metals, because it was their search for alternative sources of gold and
copper that brought them into Britain and then convinced them to stay.
Once established in Britain, the Beaker Folk asserted claim to more and
more land, for they were also farmers and herders for whom vast expanses of
land ensured prosperity. Their warlike natures enabled them to expand
territories quickly, and soon they were grazing cattle in much of Britain. They
formed warrior-king societies, which brought drastic change to Britain after
the community-based lifestyle of earlier Neolithic populations.
They built burial barrows, in which a single individual was buried with
an often lavish assortment of grave goods, including gold and copper jewelry,
daggers, cups, and sceptres inlaid with assorted precious stones. They also
buried their dead with pottery beakers of a distinctive horizontal design; it
is from these unique objects that the name "Beaker Folk" was coined.
Barrows were clustered in circles to accommodate different members of a family
group. Many of these practices would suggest the presence of a form of
spirituality in the Beaker culture that embraced a belief in the afterlife.
Both men and women were granted burial in barrows, but in many instances
the orientation of the bodies were different. Men were often interred with
their heads directed east, and women with their heads directed west. The reason
for this is not known, but we can speculate that they may have attributed gender-specific
qualitites to physical direction or certain natural phenomena, or that they
believed the dead should be able to see the sun at different times of the day,
based upon gender.
The Beaker Folk were accomplished archers, and are believed to have been
among the first to employ the use of metal and stone wrist guards to protect
archers' arms from injury. Tanged daggers and copper spearheads were also used
in warfare, which is yet another testament to the level of the skill attained
in metalworking.
They are also believed to have originated the barrow house, comprised of
a low stone wall forming a circular enclosure, and providing a base for wooden
supports and rafters upon which a covering of thatch would be laid. On a
lighter note, the Beaker Folk are also credited with the introduction into
Britain of the first alcoholic drink - a tasty, honey-based mead.
Some sources would attribute the Beaker Folk with the beginning of
construction of stone circles in Britain, but no hard evidence exists to affirm
or refute this. There is evidence that the Beaker Folk were involved in a
renovation of the circle at Stonehenge, and were perhaps to be credited with
expanded earthworks around the original circle. Certainly they were
contemporary with henge construction, since the oldest portion of Stonehenge is
believed to have been constructed beginning around 3,000 B.C.E. and the massive
circle at Avebury beginning around 2,400 B.C.E.