Is it relevant to treat bog bodies as its own category within the archaeological research? This paper examines how scholars and researchers, through their publications and depictions of the preserved prehistoric individuals, are helping to create such a category. What has changed in the way scholars look at and describe these astounding finds? Also examines the various theories researchers provide regarding bog bodies and how they are deposited
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studi...
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studi...
For several centuries, peat harvesters in Northern Europe have been finding the mummified remains of...
Is it relevant to treat bog bodies as its own category within the archaeological research? This pape...
Bog bodies are among the best-known archaeological finds worldwide. Much of the work on these often ...
Lindow Man, the British Bog Body discovered in 1984, and the Danish examples Tollund and Grauballe M...
The ‘bog bodies’ of north-western Europe have captured the imagination of poets as much as archaeolo...
The authors set a relatively small and little-known corpus of human remains recovered from Iron Age ...
This paper is inspired by new materialist gender theory and the way it reconfigures the analysis of ...
Bog body studies have focused on rich individual biographies, largely neglecting broader spatial and...
By Jacqui Mulville How did ancient people alter the basic human form? Without written records we re...
This paper draws attention to records of a number of historical discoveries of human remains from Sc...
Past studies of archaeological bog finds, such as bog bodies, wooden trackways and a wide variety of...
Roman authors such as Strabo, Lucan and Tacitus who describe the religious practices of the tribal p...
The authors set a relatively small and little-known corpus of human remains recovered from Iron Age ...
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studi...
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studi...
For several centuries, peat harvesters in Northern Europe have been finding the mummified remains of...
Is it relevant to treat bog bodies as its own category within the archaeological research? This pape...
Bog bodies are among the best-known archaeological finds worldwide. Much of the work on these often ...
Lindow Man, the British Bog Body discovered in 1984, and the Danish examples Tollund and Grauballe M...
The ‘bog bodies’ of north-western Europe have captured the imagination of poets as much as archaeolo...
The authors set a relatively small and little-known corpus of human remains recovered from Iron Age ...
This paper is inspired by new materialist gender theory and the way it reconfigures the analysis of ...
Bog body studies have focused on rich individual biographies, largely neglecting broader spatial and...
By Jacqui Mulville How did ancient people alter the basic human form? Without written records we re...
This paper draws attention to records of a number of historical discoveries of human remains from Sc...
Past studies of archaeological bog finds, such as bog bodies, wooden trackways and a wide variety of...
Roman authors such as Strabo, Lucan and Tacitus who describe the religious practices of the tribal p...
The authors set a relatively small and little-known corpus of human remains recovered from Iron Age ...
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studi...
Archaeology often struggles in envisioning real people behind the world of material objects it studi...
For several centuries, peat harvesters in Northern Europe have been finding the mummified remains of...