Cremation in the Early Middle Ages

Death, fire and identity in North-West Europe

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Cremation in the Early Middle Ages draws together the latest research and thinking on early medieval cremation practices. The book takes you on a journey through 19 chapters exploring cremation practices from the fifth to the eleventh centuries CE in Fennoscandia, the UK and Ireland, Frisia, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, and France. In this way, the book aims to be a central resource for anyone interested in early medieval cremations, or indeed funerary practices more generally. Notably, the structure and style of this book represent a departure from the norm. As well as a co-authored introduction, chapters constitute a conversation between the editors and key researchers captured via structured interviews, supported by a series of fact boxes highlighting key ideas, methods and techniques, sites, graves and discoveries. Cremation was no single disposal tradition in the Early Middle Ages: it constituted but one dimension of local, regional and supra-regional deathways operating across different locales and with varying degrees of expenditure, meanings and materials, as well as involved a complex range of resources, environments, practices and performances both before, during and after the burning of the bodies. Where cremation is not the dominant burial rite, our authors reflect on the potential under-representation of cremation in our models. Ethnic and cultural labelling of the early medieval cremated dead are countered and critiqued by various authors. Important themes that are touched upon are the long-term collectivity and longue durée of cremation depositions, variability within cremation practices, the pre-burial life of cinerary containers, ideas of personhood, the immersion of cremains in watery locations, the socio-political and economic context of burial rites, monumentalisation, the interpretation of mixed-rite (bi-ritual) cemeteries, the importance of human-animal entanglements viewed through the lens of cremated deposition, the potential for greater experimental and osteoarcheological, experimental, isotopic, radiocarbon, and genomic research, and the effect and usefulness of written texts as a window onto early medieval cremation practices, in particular regarding the relationship between cremation and Christianisation.

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Specificaties
ISBN/EAN 9789464271003
Auteur Howard Williams
Uitgever Sidestone Press
Taal Engels
Uitvoering Gebonden in harde band
Pagina's 300
Lengte
Breedte
Foreword: Death and Fire Frans Theuws Introduction: Death and Fire in Early Medieval North-West Europe Femke Lippok and Howard Williams Cremation in Finland Anna Wessman Western Slavic Cremation Practices:Past Work, Current Perspectives and Future Directions Leszek Garde?a Cremations in Central Sweden during the Vendel and Viking Periods John Ljungkvist Western Norwegian Cremation Practices from the Viking Age:Opulent Grave Goods, Absent Bones, and Elemental Archaeologies Leszek Garde?a Cremation in Southern Scandinavia: The Case of South-West Jutland Sarah Croix Cremation in Northern Germany: from the Bronze Age to the Viking Age Helene Agerskov Rose Early Medieval Frisia – Cremation Practices Alongside the southern North Sea Coast Egge Knol Cremation on the Frankish Northern Periphery Rica Annaert Cremation Practices in Early Medieval Southern Germany Raimund Masanz Cremation Practices in Merovingian and Carolingian Cemeteries from Northern France Vanessa Brunet, Erwan Nivez and Astrid A. Noterman The Bioarchaeology of Early Medieval Cremation Practices in England Kirsty Squires Potted Histories: Insights into Early Medieval Cremation Practices from the Study of Funerary Ceramics Gareth Perry Historiography and Archaeology, the Adventus Saxonum, and the Politics of the Early Middle Ages James M. Harland Isotopes and Halls of Marrow: Investigating the Viking Age Cremations at Heath Wood, Ingleby Tessi Löffelmann Cremation Practices from Early Medieval Ireland: Burnt Christians and Interpretative Paradigms Patrick Gleeson Burning Questions: Learning to See Cremation in the Long Iron Age of Northern Britain Adrián Maldonado Early Medieval Cremation Burials in Atlantic Northern Britain Russell Ó Ríagáin Cremation in Context: Scientific Applications Going from ‘Meh’ to ‘Yeah!’ Barbara Veselka How to Build a Cremation Pyre: Insights from Experimental Archaeology Austin Mason

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