No. Bronze is a mixture of copper and tin.
Bronze
Bronze and iron were an important introduction because they were a new, stronger medium for weaponry. By creating bronze and iron weapons, warfare was revolutionized.
Bronze does not rust the way that iron does, bronze will corrode, but at a much slower rate than iron.
Cast iron is typically heavier than bronze. This is due to the different compositions of the two materials - cast iron is a ferrous metal alloy, while bronze is a copper alloy. The density and weight of cast iron are generally greater than that of bronze.
Copper, bronze, and iron are all metals and conductors of electricity.
Wrought iron is not as strong as hardened bronze. If you work the iron ore into steel, then it would be harder and stronger than bronze.
Because bronze was found before Iron and they named it "the age"
Gold and iron are types of metals, while bronze is a metal alloy.
The Iron Age is after the Bronze Age.
Bronze was used before iron because it was easier to make by combining copper with tin. Bronze weapons and tools were stronger and more durable than pure copper implements, making it a preferred choice for early civilizations. The technology and knowledge required to extract and work iron were developed later, leading to the transition from bronze to iron usage.
Bronze was used before Iron because it was easier to find, mine, and mold to the uses that they needed. People did not have the technology or the wherewithal to mine, use, or sustain Iron ore in the mainstream economy. The primary reason Bronze was used in toolmaking well before Iron has to do with the fact that Iron melts at a much higher temperature than either Tin or Copper (the component metals in Bronze). Both Tin and Copper can be melted at temperatures obtainable by wood fires, while Iron requires special "boosted" fires based on charcoal or coal. The understanding of how to create these very-high-temperature fires is critical to the use of iron; thus, Iron was not used until someone was able to invent such higher-temperature fires.
Iron replaced bronze in the making of weapons and tools. Iron weapons were stronger and more durable than bronze, leading to the Iron Age. This shift occurred around 1200 BCE.