This chapter examines the relationship between Iron Age gender and society, viewed from the mortuary evidence. It distinguishes an early Iron Age masculine west, an increasingly female-authored salt trade, and a generation of mobility (620–580 BC) ushering in new social forms. Discussing recent work on gender identities, the relationship between daggers and swords is examined. Linked, gendered lineages are identified—increasingly male-authored, and opulent, with Greek connections, in south-west Germany; alongside female authority in eastern France. Beginning in Germany, male-authored violence is attested (550–450 BC, aligning with Livy), followed by radical social change (400–350 BC), as disproportionate deposition signifies the ritual end ...
In archaeological study of burial, the gendering of a grave forms the basis for any meaningful analy...
International audienceThis chapter examines the evolution of Iron Age societies in north-west Europe...
The Roman colonial project was critically intertwined with gender. Not only did men and women experi...
International audienceThis book explores male-female relationships in the societies of the North Alp...
The aim of this thesis is to understand the ways that gender is continually constructed, perceived a...
Abstract: Burials constitute the main evidence for existence of Athenian society during the Early ...
It is notable how little gender archaeology has been written for the European Neolithic, in contrast...
The scope of my research is to examine the gender roles of women and men in parts of continental Eur...
This article approaches gender in the Viking Age as a fluid social category, to be understoodthrough...
In the field of archaeology, male bias has been prevalent in both theory and practice. Female Celtic...
The arrival of farming changed and diverged the lifeways of men and women when it spread across Cent...
The Corded Ware culture (c. 2900-2200 BC; hereafter ‘CWC’ for the phenomenon itself or ‘CW’ as the a...
Despite more than three decades of feminist critique, archaeological scholarship remains predominant...
Research on Viking Age society is a recurrent subject within the scientific literature, and todays m...
This dissertation analyzes the grave good assemblages in 222 burial contexts from HallstattD (c. 600...
In archaeological study of burial, the gendering of a grave forms the basis for any meaningful analy...
International audienceThis chapter examines the evolution of Iron Age societies in north-west Europe...
The Roman colonial project was critically intertwined with gender. Not only did men and women experi...
International audienceThis book explores male-female relationships in the societies of the North Alp...
The aim of this thesis is to understand the ways that gender is continually constructed, perceived a...
Abstract: Burials constitute the main evidence for existence of Athenian society during the Early ...
It is notable how little gender archaeology has been written for the European Neolithic, in contrast...
The scope of my research is to examine the gender roles of women and men in parts of continental Eur...
This article approaches gender in the Viking Age as a fluid social category, to be understoodthrough...
In the field of archaeology, male bias has been prevalent in both theory and practice. Female Celtic...
The arrival of farming changed and diverged the lifeways of men and women when it spread across Cent...
The Corded Ware culture (c. 2900-2200 BC; hereafter ‘CWC’ for the phenomenon itself or ‘CW’ as the a...
Despite more than three decades of feminist critique, archaeological scholarship remains predominant...
Research on Viking Age society is a recurrent subject within the scientific literature, and todays m...
This dissertation analyzes the grave good assemblages in 222 burial contexts from HallstattD (c. 600...
In archaeological study of burial, the gendering of a grave forms the basis for any meaningful analy...
International audienceThis chapter examines the evolution of Iron Age societies in north-west Europe...
The Roman colonial project was critically intertwined with gender. Not only did men and women experi...