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Revisiting the Dead: Tomb Reuse and Post-Burial Practices at Ascoli Satriano (Pre-Roman Apulia, Seventh–Fourth Century<scp>bc</scp>)

Authors :
Matthias Hoernes
Christian Heitz
Manuele Laimer
Source :
Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 29:261-285
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2018.

Abstract

In the archaeology of death and burial, the premise that the dead were buried ritually and not simply disposed of seems to be accepted without argument. Where graves were reopened and reused for subsequent burials, however, the post-funeral manipulation of ‘older’ depositions is often regarded as having been primarily pragmatic and circumstantial. Countering this interpretative imbalance, we argue that the reuse of tombs was a highly complex procedure that forced communities into negotiating and formalizing, or even ritualizing, the way in which bodies and objects were acted on and engaged with. Taking the necropolis Giarnera Piccola/Ascoli Satriano in pre-Roman northern Apulia as a case study, and employing a microarchaeological-archaeothanatological perspective, we discuss the diverse and sometimes conflicting practices used to deal with pre-existing graves, objects and human remains, identifying tensions between maintaining or reconstructing the integrity of the body and intentionally manipulating and fragmenting it. We argue that repeatedly reused tombs constituted a socially and symbolically charged arena for a prolonged, active relationship with the deceased and for mobilizing, mediating and maintaining inter-generational memories.

Details

ISSN :
14740540 and 09597743
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cambridge Archaeological Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c11d3db4a762156d34615f5a557f081c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0959774318000537