The first human remains in the municipality of Calp date from this period (2nd millennium - 1st half of the 1st millennium BC).

The characteristic habitat of the Valencian Bronze Age lies in the settlements located on the top and slopes of hills, in places suitable for territorial defence and control. The villages of Cocentari and Ifach are examples of this.

Typical tools include handmade pottery (there was no potter’s wheel), metal tools (copper or bronze), bone and stone tools. The latter includes stone axes and grinders and the characteristic flint "sickle teeth".

All of this attests to the presence in Calp of people dedicated mainly to agriculture, probably along with other activities such as hunting, fishing and livestock farming.