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Tombs in Time and Towers in Space

Authors :
Clark Spencer Larsen
Charlotte Marie Cable
Source :
Mortuary and Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Bronze Age Arabia
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
University Press of Florida, 2019.

Abstract

This chapter considers both Hafit Period monumental tombs and Umm an-Nar towers that were developed during the Early Bronze Age in North-Central Oman. The author considers these monuments as communicative to the local community rather than emphasizing the messages that monumental architecture may have served for non-locals. While both monuments may have marked access to resources, they did so in opposite ways. Participation in the mortuary ritual provided access to the living via resources marked by the dead, whereas the tower limited access to water through social and physical exclusion. Simultaneously, these different types of monuments signaled two disparate social ideologies: in one case, group members may have sought to access and leverage specific resource nodes; and in the other, group members may have sought to leverage access to specific resources in order to control access to an entire network of resources.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mortuary and Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Bronze Age Arabia
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........042f5924d24ded56099363ebbd71a424
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683400790.003.0005