NEW DATA ON FUNERAL CUSTOMS AND BURIALS OF THE BRONZE AGE REZNES CEMETERY IN LATVIA

被引:7
|
作者
Vasks, Andrejs [1 ]
Zarina, Gunita [1 ]
Legzdina, Dardega [1 ]
Plankajs, Eduards [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Latvian Hist, Kalpaka Blvd 4, LV-1050 Riga, Latvia
关键词
BONE-COLLAGEN; RADIOCARBON; GRAVES; LIGHT;
D O I
10.3176/arch.2021.1.01
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
The Bronze Age barrow cemetery in Rennes was located on the right hank of the River Daugava on a paleoisland. In total, eight barrows have been recorded in the cemetery. Archaeological excavations took place in the 1930s, led by E. Sturms, and in the 1950s and 1960s, led by J. Graudonis. Altogether, seven barrows have been excavated. Several barrows had secondary burials from the Late Iron Age and the historical period, thus complicating archaeological analysis of this already complex archaeological site. Both Snirms and Graudonis archaeologically dated the cemetery from 1200 to 600 BC. The inhumation layers at the base of the harrow were considered to he the oldest, chronologically followed by cremations. But the youngest were considered to be the burials in stone cists. However, C-14 dates show that the Reznes barrow cemetery was established earlier - in the middle of the 14th century BC - and was used until the 6th century BC. The chronological sequence of the burial types is revisited as well, as the C-14 dates show parallel use of all three types throughout the active use of the cemetery. The differing types of burials might have been determined by the social position of the deceased in society. The anthropological analysis of inhumations was limited due to the very poor preservation of the bones. Only occasionally was it possible to distinguish between adults and sub-adults, but more detailed analysis was impossible. Cremation skeletal material, on the other hand, shows that individuals belonging to all age groups were cremated - adults, juveniles and children. Some cremation pits consist of more than one individual, and in one case - at least 16 different individuals. In addition to the C-14 dating, carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis of collagen were carried out, when possible. Based on previously published isotopic data, different food groups and their contribution to Reznes humans' diets are discussed, arriving to a conclusion that contrary to general suggestions of millet consumption during the Bronze Age, Reznes humans' isotopic data does not confirm that. Distinction between terrestrial and aquatic protein sources is complicated by the highly variable Daugava River isotopic ecology, nonetheless, some dietary trends can be distinguished that slightly correlate with C-14 dates. However, aquatic reservoir effects in human collagen C-14 dates is still an open question and exceeds the limits of this study.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 31
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The ceramic furniture of the Late Bronze Age and the early Iron Age of Mont-Joly in Soumont-Saint-Quentin (Calvados): new data
    Van den Bossche, Benjamin
    BULLETIN DE LA SOCIETE PREHISTORIQUE FRANCAISE, 2007, 104 (01): : 147 - 170
  • [42] Archaeometric investigations of the Molali pottery complex (Bronze Age, Uzbekistan): New data on technology and exchanges at the end of the Oxus Civilization
    Luneau, Elise
    Martinez Ferreras, Veronica
    Boroffka, Nikolaus
    Sverchkov, Leonid
    ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ASIA, 2022, 31
  • [43] New data on different patterns of obsidian procurement in Georgia (Southern Caucasus) during the Chalcolithic, Bronze and Iron Age Periods
    Gratuze, Bernard
    Rova, Elena
    ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ASIA, 2022, 32
  • [44] Minoan wall painting, part 1, The palette of the Aegean and Egyptian painter in the Bronze Age. New analytical data
    Dandrau, A
    BULLETIN DE CORRESPONDANCE HELLENIQUE, 1999, 123 (01): : 1 - 41
  • [45] Birds, quadrupeds and monsters on a vase of Glanum: new data for the interpretation of zoomorphic signs of ceramics from the end of the Bronze Age
    De Soto, Jose Gomez
    Nicolas, Alain
    BULLETIN DE LA SOCIETE PREHISTORIQUE FRANCAISE, 2020, 117 (02): : 340 - 343
  • [46] Polynuclear settlements and urban resilience between Late Bronze Age and Iron Age in the Iberian Southeast: new data from the site of Castellar de Librilla
    Cutillas Victoria, Benjamin
    Ros Sala, Maria Milagrosa
    COMPLUTUM, 2020, 31 (01) : 71 - 96
  • [47] Archaeomagnetism at Ebla (Tell Mardikh, Syria). New data on geomagnetic field intensity variations in the Near East during the Bronze Age
    Gallet, Yves
    D'Andrea, Marta
    Genevey, Agnes
    Pinnock, Frances
    Le Goff, Maxime
    Matthiae, Paolo
    JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2014, 42 : 295 - 304
  • [48] Resilience, innovation and collapse of settlement networks in later Bronze Age Europe: New survey data from the southern Carpathian Basin
    Molloy, Barry
    Jovanovic, Dragan
    Bruyere, Caroline
    Estanqueiro, Marta
    Birclin, Miroslav
    Milasinovic, Lidija
    Salamon, Aleksandar
    Penezic, Kristina
    Ramsey, Christopher Bronk
    Grosman, Darja
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (11):
  • [49] Geomagnetic field intensity variations during the second millennium BCE: new data from the greek middle and late bronze age
    Aidona, E.
    Kondopoulou, D.
    Kyriakidou, E. -G.
    Camps, P.
    Sarafidis, C.
    Polymeris, G. S.
    Orgeolet, R.
    PHYSICS OF THE EARTH AND PLANETARY INTERIORS, 2023, 334
  • [50] New data on the constructions of the Early Bronze Age in the Upper Rhine Valley: the site of Mussig "Mittelweide" (Bas-Rhin, Alsace)
    Thomas, Yohann
    Schmitt, Laurent
    BULLETIN DE LA SOCIETE PREHISTORIQUE FRANCAISE, 2011, 108 (02): : 10 - 13