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El. knyga: Towards a Social Bioarchaeology of the Mycenaean Period: A biocultural analysis of human remains from the Voudeni cemetery, Achaea, Greece

  • Formatas: 328 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Jun-2021
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789254853
  • Formatas: 328 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Jun-2021
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789254853

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This book investigates the complex relationship between funerary treatment and wider social dynamics through a contextual analysis of human skeletal remains and associated mortuary data from Voudeni, an important Mycenaean (1450-1050 BC) chamber tomb cemetery in Achaea, Greece. Voudeni is one of the most significant sites of Achaea, thoroughly investigated under the direction of the Honorary General Director of Antiquities, Dr Lazaros Kolonas. Over 60 chamber tombs, spanning the entire Late Helladic III period, have been excavated, yielding an unprecedented wealth of biocultural information. This study explores the post-mortem treatment of the body in the Voudeni cemetery, through a novel interpretive approach that transcends unproductive cross-disciplinary divisions. This biosocial approach integrates traditional archaeology, current reflections in mortuary archaeological theory and cutting-edge bioarchaeological methods, primarily focused on funerary taphonomy and archaeothanatology of commingled skeletal assemblages. The author proposes that the most effective route to explore the social dimensions of mortuary data is through an emic understanding of historically situated actions and experiences, both of the living actors, the mourners, and of the dead themselves. Human skeletal remains are used as the primary strand of evidence, both as the object of the acts of the living and the subject of their own lived experiences. Most importantly, this study aspires to show how reconciliation between abstract theoretical advances and empirical biocultural data may be possible, providing the most insightful path to a better understanding of the archaeological mortuary record.

The book provides a thorough background on Mycenaean mortuary research and explores the topic in successive stages: a) theoretical and methodological framework, b) detailed taphonomic analysis and osteological results of 20 tombs, c) multivariate analysis of bio-cultural data across socio-temporal parameters (with special emphasis on the distinction between the palatial LHIIIA-B and the transitional post-palatial LHIIIC period), and d) final synthesis, addressing questions pertaining to changing social conditions in Achaea and key issues of current Mycenaean mortuary research. These include: tomb re-use; form, diversity, sequence and frequency of mortuary activities; mortality profiles; differential inclusion, visibility and funerary treatment of different groups/identities; changes in treatment of the dead body, reflecting shifts in notions of the self and social relationships. The results shed new light on social developments in Mycenaean Achaea, showing that the complex interaction between changing social conditions and mortuary practice is often reflected in subtle, yet meaningful, shifts of emphasis in the post-mortem treatment of bodies and bones, rather than in blatant radical changes.
List of figures
vii
List of tables
xi
Acknowledgements xv
1 Setting the stage
1(14)
1.1 Introduction
1(2)
1.2 Chronology and terminology
3(1)
1.3 The Mycenaean period: a brief review
4(2)
1.4 Mycenaean Achaea
6(4)
1.4.1 A general background on Mycenaean Achaea
6(3)
1.4.2 The LHIII burial customs in Achaea
9(1)
1.5 The Voudeni cemetery: general background
10(5)
2 Studying mortuary practices
15(10)
2.1 A review of past approaches to mortuary data
15(4)
2.1.1 The early approaches
15(1)
2.1.2 New Archaeology
16(1)
2.1.3 Criticism of New Archaeology and early post-processual approaches
17(2)
2.2 Recent and current interpretive approaches
19(3)
2.2.1 Theory of practice and structuration
19(1)
2.2.2 Agency and personhood
20(2)
2.3 Human remains in mortuary studies: past and current directions in bioarchaeology
22(3)
2.3.1 Studying human remains from archaeological contexts
22(1)
2.3.2 Contemporary trends in social bioarchaeology
23(2)
3 The state of play in Mycenaean mortuary research
25(18)
3.1 Introduction
25(1)
3.2 A brief history of Mycenaean mortuary research
25(5)
3.2.1 Aegean mortuary research: the first 100 years (late 19th century-late 1970s)
25(2)
3.2.2 Recent approaches: the fruitful years, 1980-2000
27(1)
3.2.3 Current research
28(2)
3.3 Key issues in Mycenaean mortuary research
30(5)
3.3.1 The architecture: tomb types and their development
30(2)
3.3.2 Mortuary practice: ritual acts and other activities
32(3)
3.4 Who is buried in the tombs? Aspects of status, identity, and personhood in Mycenaean chamber tombs
35(4)
3.4.1 Vertical status
35(1)
3.4.2 Collective and family identity
36(1)
3.4.3 Gender and age
37(2)
3.5 Current bioarchaeological research of the Mycenaean period
39(4)
4 A holistic bioarchaeological approach to mortuary practices
43(4)
4.1 Basic theoretical premises
43(1)
4.2 Towards a holistic bioarchaeological approach
44(1)
4.3 Scope and aims of this study
45(1)
4.4 Specific questions
46(1)
5 Material and methods
47(16)
5.1 The material: choice of the current sample and related problems
47(1)
5.2 The collection of osteological data: recording standards and procedure
48(1)
5.3 Sex determination and age estimation
49(2)
5.3.1 Sex determination
49(1)
5.3.2 Age estimation
50(1)
5.4 Methodological framework for reconstructing funerary acts in collective tombs
51(10)
5.4.1 Segregation and individuation of commingled remains
52(1)
5.4.2 Minimum Number of Individuals
53(1)
5.4.3 Different aspects of bone preservation: representation, completeness, surface preservation
54(2)
5.4.4 Anatomical articulations and position of skeletal remains
56(1)
5.4.5 Types of disposal and other funerary parameters: terminology and classification
56(2)
5.4.6 Inferring specific secondary acts
58(1)
5.4.7 Inferring date of tomb contexts
58(3)
5.5 A brief background to palaeodemographic analysis
61(1)
5.6 Statistical methods
61(2)
6 Tombs, bones and stories
63(158)
6.1 Tomb 4
63(11)
6.2 Tomb 5
74(11)
6.3 Tomb 9
85(11)
6.4 Tomb 10
96(4)
6.5 Tomb 13
100(9)
6.6 Tomb 14
109(3)
6.7 Tomb 15
112(6)
6.8 Tomb 16
118(14)
6.9 Tomb 17
132(10)
6.10 Tomb 20
142(4)
6.11 Tomb 22
146(9)
6.12 Tomb 24
155(5)
6.13 Tomb 26
160(8)
6.14 Tomb 27
168(12)
6.15 Tomb 28
180(6)
6.16 Tomb 31
186(4)
6.17 Tomb 39
190(7)
6.18 Tomb 40
197(9)
6.19 Tomb 42
206(7)
6.20 Tomb 44
213(8)
7 Exploring the data
221(42)
7.1 The tombs
221(6)
7.1.1 Spatial variables
221(4)
7.1.2 Tomb chronology
225(2)
7.2 The demographic data
227(15)
7.2.1 Minimum Number of Individuals, age, and sex distributions
227(1)
7.2.2 Exploring mortality profiles
228(6)
7.2.3 Sex distributions and age-specific mortality by sex
234(4)
7.2.4 Exploring frequency of use in different tomb groups
238(1)
7.2.5 Exploring age and sex distributions in different tomb groups
239(3)
7.3 Types of funerary disposal and preservation patterns
242(8)
7.3.1 Characteristics of Voudeni's tomb contexts
242(4)
7.3.2 Preservation patterns
246(1)
7.3.3 Distinguishing the character of ambiguous tomb contexts
247(1)
7.3.4 Exploring age and sex distributions in contexts of different type of disposal, date, and location
248(2)
7.4 The funerary practices
250(13)
7.4.1 The assessment of specific secondary acts: bone removal to outside the tomb and differential bone retention
250(6)
7.4.2 The burial attributes of primary and disturbed primary contexts
256(7)
8 Understanding funerary practice
263(22)
8.1 Bioarchaeological reconstruction of funerary practices in LHIII Voudeni
263(5)
8.1.1 Formation process of diverse skeletal assemblages
263(1)
8.1.2 The diversity of funerary practices: specific acts of primary and secondary treatment of bodies and bones
264(1)
8.1.3 Assessing frequency and sequence of funerary events
265(2)
8.1.4 Diversity in funerary practices across time
267(1)
8.1.5 Tomb characteristics and funerary practices
267(1)
8.2 Demographic aspects of funerary diversity
268(3)
8.2.1 Understanding Voudeni's mortality profiles
268(1)
8.2.2 Demographic differences between the LHIIIA-B and LHIIIC periods
269(1)
8.2.3 Differential funerary treatment across sex and age
270(1)
8.3 Seeking meaning in funerary practice
271(7)
8.3.1 The motivation for interference with past remains: surpassing the ritual-practical dichotomy
271(1)
8.3.2 Bodily fragmentation and enchainment practices
272(3)
8.3.3 Associations between tomb attributes and vertical status differentiation
275(1)
8.3.4 The place of children in mortuary practices at Voudeni
276(2)
8.4 Mortuary practice in its historical context
278(7)
8.4.1 Continuity and change: the main distinctions between the LHIIIA-B and LHIIIC mortuary practices at Voudeni
278(1)
8.4.2 The LHIIIC conceptual shift in mortuary practice at Voudeni
279(3)
8.4.3 The relationship between shifts in mortuary practice and wider social developments: some concluding remarks
282(3)
9 Towards a social bioarchaeology of the Mycenaean period
285(4)
Appendix: Supplementary information 289(8)
Bibliography 297
Ioanna Moutafi is a Research Associate at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, UK. She specialises in the contextual analysis of human remains from the prehistoric Aegean and has worked extensively as leading bioarchaeologist in various archaeological projects in Greece. Her research interests lie primarily in the social dimensions of mortuary practices, which she primarily investigates through social bioarchaeology and funerary taphonomy.