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Book Cover
E-book
Author Harding, D. W. (Dennis William), author.

Title Death and burial in Iron Age Britain / D.W. Harding
Edition First edition
Published Oxford, United Kingdom : Oxford University Press, 2016

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Description 1 online resource (xiv, 328 pages) : illustrations, maps
Contents Defining issues -- Mortuary practices, problems, and analysis -- Communities of the dead: formal cemeteries and burial grounds -- Dead among the living landscape -- Focal and signal burials -- Graves and grave-goods -- Social and ritual violence and death -- Gender issues -- Animal burials and animal symbolism -- Conclusions: death and burial in the Iron Age
Summary Archaeologists have long acknowledged the absence of a regular and recurrent burial rite in the British Iron Age, and have looked to rites such as cremation and scattering of remains to explain the minimal impact of funerary practices on the archaeological record. Pit-burials or the deposit of disarticulated bones in settlements have been dismissed as casual disposal or the remains of social outcasts. In Death and Burial in Iron Age Britain, Harding examines the deposition of human and animal remains from the period - from whole skeletons to disarticulated fragments - and challenges the assumption that there should have been any regular form of cemetery in prehistory, arguing that the dead were more commonly integrated into settlements of the living than segregated into dedicated cemeteries. Even where cemeteries are known, they may yet represent no more than a minority of the total population, so that other forms of disposal must still have been practised. A further example of this can be found in hillforts which, in addition to domestic and agricultural settlements, evidently played an important role in funerary ritual, as secure community centres where excarnation and display of the dead may have made them a potent symbol of identity. The volume evaluates the evidence for violent death, sacrifice, and cannibalism, as well as age and gender distinctions, and associations with animal burials, and reveals that 'formal' cemetery burial or cremation was for most regions a minority practice in Britain until the eve of the Roman conquest
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Iron age -- Great Britain
Tombs -- Great Britain
Funeral rites and ceremonies -- Great Britain
Britons.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Death & Dying.
Britons
Celtic antiquities
Funeral rites and ceremonies
Iron age
Tombs
SUBJECT Great Britain -- Antiquities, Celtic
Subject Great Britain
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780191511349
019151134X
9780191918384
0191918385