Prehistory of Wielkopolska (Greater Poland):
reindeer hunters
forest trapers
first farmers
monumental tombs
stone battleaxes
first gold rush in history
hillgraves of mysterious sovereigns and their tresaures
inhabitants of the hill-forts
warlike Scythians
face urns
valuables from the Roman Empire
The Amber Route
Great Migrations
The first
archaeological exhibition open to the public was mounted in Poznan in
1882. It was organized by the Museum at the Friends of Science Society
of the Poznań region. Later exhibitions were arranged both by Polish
and German institutions, and after the independence in 1918 the role
of the organizer was taken over by the Wielkopolskie Museum, from which,
following the Second World War, Prehistoric Museum (now: Archaeological
Museum) split off as a separate entity.
The present Exhibition is yet another
permanent display showing the prehistory of Wielkopolska from the beginnings
of human settlement until the close of the Ancient period. Today we know that
in its investigation of human prehistory archaeology bases overwhelmingly on
the remains of material culture and is unable to reconstruct the life of past
societies in all its aspects. Still, the abundance of archaeological artefacts
in Wielkopolska allows us to gain a fairly extensive knowledge about the region`s
past and to demonstrate its prehistory at the Exhibition. The authors of the
programme concentrated their efforts on presenting the cultural framework in
which archeological artefacts existed and, consequently, their function.
The present, new Exhibition shows
one or more main elements of a particular age, with the remaining constituents
of the exhibition arranged around them so as to display the essentials in a
compact way. They are, eg, reconstructions of dwellings, graves, various constructions
such as kilns and workshops, and figural scenes.
The Older Stone
Age, the age of the - hunter-gatherers is displayed by a shelter next
to which people`s everyday life is demonstrated, including the two most important
activities: hunting and food gathering, together with the production of necessary
tools, mainly flint.
In the Younger
Stone Age, when agriculture and animal husbandry became the mainstay of
subsistence, this major change in economy and its influence on other aspects
of life (such as construction of permanent settlements with wooden houses,
pottery production, weaving and changes in the burial ritual) are manifested
in the erection of sizable graves with earth-work mounds or stone-work constructions
(megaliths).
The Bronze Age, which witnessed
the introduction of the new metal, also saw the growth in material culture,
changes in the system of beliefs manifested in the dominance of crematory burial
rites, and finally, at the turn of the Iron Age, the advent of wooden fortified
settlements (grody); the one in Biskupin is among the best known.
In the Iron
Age, with the emergence of a distinctive burial ritual, new graves appeared
in the forms of stone chests to contain cinerary urns, often decorated with
images of human faces (face cinerary urns twarzowe), with incinerated bones
of the dead inside. At this time the Polish territories saw the expansion
of the Celts, who introduced great changes into the cultures of peoples inhabiting
Europe. New inventions appeared (potter`s wheel, an improved
tool for milling grain - a rotary quern) and the religious beliefs underwent a transformation.
The rhythm of changes in Wielkopolska was identical with those in other Polish
regions.
The political and cultural expansion
of Roman
Empire intensified the contacts between Central Europe and the Mediterranean
world, and led to economic growth of the communities inhabiting the region.
Melting of iron and other metals developed on a great scale, different crafts
appeared and evolved, and the material culture became more diversified and
sophisticated. The end of the age, or, more precisely, of this particular part
of the Iron Age, came together with the fall of the Roman Empire and the wanderings
of peoples of the "barbaric" Europe in the 5th century after Christ. This led
to depopulation of Central Europe and its conquest by the Slavs - and marked
the beginning of a new era in the history of Europe - the Middle
Ages.
Tomasz Kasprowicz
Exhibition Curator:
Danuta Prinke, M.A.
programme of the exhibition:
Older Stone Age:
Danuta Prinke, M.A.
Małgorzata Winiarska-Kabacińska, Ph.D.
Middle Stone Age:
Danuta Prinke, M.A.
Małgorzata Winiarska-Kabacińska, Ph.D.
Younger Stone Age:
Danuta Prinke, M.A.
Bronze Age:
Tomasz Skorupka, M.A.
Beginnings of the Iron Age:
Elżbieta Świerkowska-Barańska, M.A.
Tomasz Skorupka, M.A.
Iron Age - times of the Roman influence:
Alicja Gałęzowska, M.A.
Tomasz Kasprowicz, M.A.
General artistic design:
Jerzy Stiller, Academy of Arts
Cooperation:
Barbara Bednarczyk
Janina Karczewska-Nowak, Academy of Arts
Jan Śliwiński, Academy of Arts
General conception of the exhibition - work coordination:
Prof. Lech Krzyżaniak, Ph.D.
Eliza Naumowicz-Śmigielska, M.A.
Consultants:
Józef Bednarczyk, Ph.D. (Prehistory Institute, Adam Mickiewicz University,
Poznań)
Lech Czerniak, Ph.D. (Institute of Archeology and Ethnology,
Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznań Branch)
Piotr Dmochowski, M.A. (Prehistory Institute, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań)
Jacek Kabaciński, Ph.D. (Institute of Archeology and Ethnology,
Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznań Branch)
Mzalendo Kibunija, Ph.D. (The National Museum, Nairobi, Kenya)
Prof. Michał Kobusiewicz, Ph.D. (Institute of Archeology and Ethnology,
Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznań Branch)
Prof. Aleksander Kośko, Ph.D. (Prehistory Institute,
Adam Mickiewicz Institute, Poznań)
Marek Lemiesz, M.A. (Archeological Museum, Poznań)
Henryk Machajewski, Ph.D. (Prehistory Institute,
Adam Mickiewicz Institute, Poznań)
Prof. Tadeusz Makiewicz, Ph.D. (Prehistory Institute,
Adam Mickiewicz Institute, Poznań)
Daniel Makowiecki, Ph.D. (Institute of Archeology and Ethnology,
Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznań Branch)
Prof. Tadeusz Malinowski, Ph.D. (Higher School of Pedagogy, Zielona Góra)
Henryk Mamzer, Ph.D. (Institute of Archeology and Ethnology,
Polish Academy of Sciences, Poznań Branch)
Anna Wrzesińska, M.A. (The Early Piasts` Museum in Lednica)
Plastic design:
Barbara Bednarczyk (costumes)
Wiktor Bromski (mannequins)
Piotr Dmochowski, M.A. (copies of artefacts)
Zbigniew Juszkiewicz (copies of artefacts)
Janina Karczewska-Nowak (painting)
Kuraszkiewicz Studio (visual information)
Jarosław Strobin, M.A. (copies of artefacts)
Jan Śliwiński (mannequins, copies of artefacts)
Exhibits:
Poznań Archeological Museum
collections of the Prehistory Institute, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań
(Department of Polish Prehistory, Department of General Prehistory of Iron
Age)
The exhibition has been funded by the Municipal Office of Poznań