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El. knyga: Mortuary Landscapes of North Africa

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  • Formatas: 270 pages
  • Serija: Phoenix Supplementary Volumes 43
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Dec-2007
  • Leidėjas: University of Toronto Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781442659414
  • Formatas: 270 pages
  • Serija: Phoenix Supplementary Volumes 43
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Dec-2007
  • Leidėjas: University of Toronto Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781442659414

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Unique in both scope and perspective, this volume will prove invaluable to a cross-section of archaeological scholars.



Cemetery and landscape studies have been hallmarks of North African archaeology for more than one hundred years. Mortuary Landscapes of North Africa is the first book to combine these two fields by considering North African cemeteries within the context of their wider landscapes. This unique perspective allows for new interpretations of notions of identity, community, imperial influence, and sacred space.

Based on a wealth of material research from current fieldwork, this collection of essays investigates how North African funerary monuments acted as regional boundaries, markers of identity and status, and barometers of cultural change. The essays cover a broad range in terms of space and time - from southern Libya to eastern Algeria, and from the seventh century BCE to the seventh century CE. A comprehensive introduction explains the importance of the 'landscape perspective' that these studies bring to North African funerary monuments, while individual case-studies address such topics as the African way of death among the Garamantes, the ritual reasons for the location of certain Early Christian tombs, Punic burials, Roman cupula tombs, and the effects of rapid state formation and imperial incorporation on tomb builders. Unique in both scope and perspective, this volume will prove invaluable to a cross-section of archaeological scholars.

List of Figures
vii
Preface xi
Funerary Monuments and Mortuary Practices in the Landscapes of North Africa
3(29)
David L. Stone
Lea M. Stirling
Interculturality and the Punic Funerary World
32(11)
Habib Ben Younes
Monuments on the Margins: Interpreting the First Millennium B.C.E. Rock-cut Tombs (Haouanet) of North Africa
43(32)
David L. Stone
The `Mausoleum Culture' of Africa Proconsularis
75(35)
Jennifer P. Moore
The Koine of the Cupula in Roman North Africa and the Transition from Cremation to Inhumation
110(28)
Lea M. Stirling
The African Way of Death: Burial Rituals beyond the Roman Empire
138(26)
David J. Mattingly
Changing Urban Landscapes: Burials in North African Cities from the Late Antique to Byzantine Periods
164(40)
Anna Leone
Peopling the Mortuary Landscape of North Africa: An Overview of the Human Osteological Evidence
204(37)
Michael MacKinnon
Index 241


David L. Stone is an assistant professor in the Department of Classics at Florida State University.





Lea M. Stirling is an associate professor in the Department of Classics at the University of Manitoba and holds a Canada Research Chair in Roman Archaeology.