- EAN13
- 9782356680228
- ISBN
- 978-2-35668-022-8
- Éditeur
- MOM EDITIONS
- Date de publication
- 22/05/2012
- Collection
- Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée
- Nombre de pages
- 608
- Dimensions
- 21 x 3,9 cm
- Poids
- 2150 g
- Langue
- allemand
- Fiches UNIMARC
- S'identifier
Ancestral Landscapes
Burial Mounds int the Copper and Bronze Ages. (Central and Eastern Europe – Balkans – Adriatic – Aegean, 4th-2nd millennium B.C.)
Autres contributions de Elisabetta Borgna, Sylvie Müller-Celka
Mom Editions
Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée
Offres
This volume provides a comprehensive study of the burial mound phenomenon which emerged in large parts of Europe during the Copper and Bronze Ages, with a major focus on the Mediterranean and eastern European regions.
Fifty-one papers are grouped into broad sections dealing with the symbolism of burial mounds, the relationship between landscapes, landmarks and cultural identity, burial customs as rituals and a new look at theories on diffusionism. They define the natural and cultural contexts in which tumulus burial architecture first appeared in these parts of the world and attempt to explain the ideological, social and ritual meaning of burial mounds as community monuments. Most contributions include new evidence from excavations and surface surveys, some provide a welcome re‑examination of old data, including skeletal remains.
The subjects discussed concern not only funerary practices and beliefs but also further archaeological issues such as landscapes and land use, early exploitation of metal resources, the organization of long‑distance exchange, interaction networks, and the emergence of complexity in human societies.
Fifty-one papers are grouped into broad sections dealing with the symbolism of burial mounds, the relationship between landscapes, landmarks and cultural identity, burial customs as rituals and a new look at theories on diffusionism. They define the natural and cultural contexts in which tumulus burial architecture first appeared in these parts of the world and attempt to explain the ideological, social and ritual meaning of burial mounds as community monuments. Most contributions include new evidence from excavations and surface surveys, some provide a welcome re‑examination of old data, including skeletal remains.
The subjects discussed concern not only funerary practices and beliefs but also further archaeological issues such as landscapes and land use, early exploitation of metal resources, the organization of long‑distance exchange, interaction networks, and the emergence of complexity in human societies.
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