Passage tombs are the most elaborate monuments that were built during the Irish and British Neolithic, not only because of their complex monumental architecture but also because they are the only type of tomb that has carvings and such a diversity of funerary objects. This article focuses on the spatial organization of these three components of passage tombs and identifies several recurrent structures that are classified into three groups. From these spatial structures, an abstract elementary model is proposed that helps to understand the conceptual principles and the symbolic significations that guided the construction, decoration and use of the monuments
La civilisation celtique insulaire se caractérisait par un fort substrat païen. Le sacré pouvait s’i...
Caves in Ireland, as elsewhere, have been used for shelter and burial over much of recorded time. Th...
The idea of tomb organization within the space of a cemetery and its place in the territory that ext...
Thèse bilingue français-anglais réalisée en cotutelle internationale de thèse avec University Colleg...
Portal tombs, of which there are approximately 180 in Ireland, are the least studied of the great me...
During the fieldwork on Danish megalithic monuments it became more and more clear that the type of m...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...
This thesis sets out to present a critical synthesis of the previous work on portal tombs and to inv...
Passage tombs are widely regarded as the most homogenous prehistoric funerary monument class on the ...
At the heart of this study are the early Neolithic chambered tombs of the Irish Sea zone, defined as...
This paper assesses the measured axial orientations and siting of Irish passage tombs. The distribut...
The broad aim of this study is to examine the way in which people build worlds which are liveable an...
This paper is concerned with the storied landscapes underlying the megalithic tradition of the Irish...
This paper explores how megalithic art may have been viewed during a period when Neolithic monuments...
Comme toute civilisation, l'Occident médiéval confère au tombeau un sens particulier. Basée sur les ...
La civilisation celtique insulaire se caractérisait par un fort substrat païen. Le sacré pouvait s’i...
Caves in Ireland, as elsewhere, have been used for shelter and burial over much of recorded time. Th...
The idea of tomb organization within the space of a cemetery and its place in the territory that ext...
Thèse bilingue français-anglais réalisée en cotutelle internationale de thèse avec University Colleg...
Portal tombs, of which there are approximately 180 in Ireland, are the least studied of the great me...
During the fieldwork on Danish megalithic monuments it became more and more clear that the type of m...
This paper contrasts two ways of thinking about the passage graves of Scotland and Ireland and the r...
This thesis sets out to present a critical synthesis of the previous work on portal tombs and to inv...
Passage tombs are widely regarded as the most homogenous prehistoric funerary monument class on the ...
At the heart of this study are the early Neolithic chambered tombs of the Irish Sea zone, defined as...
This paper assesses the measured axial orientations and siting of Irish passage tombs. The distribut...
The broad aim of this study is to examine the way in which people build worlds which are liveable an...
This paper is concerned with the storied landscapes underlying the megalithic tradition of the Irish...
This paper explores how megalithic art may have been viewed during a period when Neolithic monuments...
Comme toute civilisation, l'Occident médiéval confère au tombeau un sens particulier. Basée sur les ...
La civilisation celtique insulaire se caractérisait par un fort substrat païen. Le sacré pouvait s’i...
Caves in Ireland, as elsewhere, have been used for shelter and burial over much of recorded time. Th...
The idea of tomb organization within the space of a cemetery and its place in the territory that ext...