Studies of children have been scarce in archaeology up until the 1990’s in Finland and elsewhere. This was due to the preconception about children as invisible in the archaeological record and thus being non-researchable. This thesis approaches the study of children in the Finnish archaeological record by analysing the graves of children on three Iron Age cemeteries: Luistari in Eura, Kirkkomäki in Turku and Ristimäki at Ravattula in Kaarina. The burial customs of each cemetery are studied and compared to those of adults’ in order to make conclusions about the burial customs concerning children and infants. The samples of children are sorted into hypothetical age groups according to evaluated height measurements and their possible correlati...
Abstract Examination of northern Finnish postmedieval funerary attire and coffins reveals culturall...
International audienceExamining the earliest grand mortuary monuments of the Neolithic, the authors ...
This article investigates the burial customs of the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in the territory...
During the Viking Age, the burials on Gotland consisted of both cremations and inhumations. However,...
Abstract Four coffins dating from the period between the mid-18th and mid-19th centuries from Kemin...
This thesis discusses the evidence for funerary practices afforded to children in the Earlier Bronz...
The ´child´ is in archaeological contexts normally treated as an undifferentiated group. This thesis...
The present article attemps to confront the data from anthropological and archaeological sources fr...
This thesis presents an investigation into children in medieval England through burial, the most arc...
Late Iron Age burials in Courland have primarily been used as signifiers of ethnical identity for la...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
Late Iron Age burials in Courland have primarily been used as signifiers of ethnical identity for la...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
This thesis discusses the evidence for funerary practices afforded to children in the Earlier Bronz...
This thesis discusses the evidence for funerary practices afforded to children in the Earlier Bronz...
Abstract Examination of northern Finnish postmedieval funerary attire and coffins reveals culturall...
International audienceExamining the earliest grand mortuary monuments of the Neolithic, the authors ...
This article investigates the burial customs of the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in the territory...
During the Viking Age, the burials on Gotland consisted of both cremations and inhumations. However,...
Abstract Four coffins dating from the period between the mid-18th and mid-19th centuries from Kemin...
This thesis discusses the evidence for funerary practices afforded to children in the Earlier Bronz...
The ´child´ is in archaeological contexts normally treated as an undifferentiated group. This thesis...
The present article attemps to confront the data from anthropological and archaeological sources fr...
This thesis presents an investigation into children in medieval England through burial, the most arc...
Late Iron Age burials in Courland have primarily been used as signifiers of ethnical identity for la...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
Late Iron Age burials in Courland have primarily been used as signifiers of ethnical identity for la...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
This thesis discusses the evidence for funerary practices afforded to children in the Earlier Bronz...
This thesis discusses the evidence for funerary practices afforded to children in the Earlier Bronz...
Abstract Examination of northern Finnish postmedieval funerary attire and coffins reveals culturall...
International audienceExamining the earliest grand mortuary monuments of the Neolithic, the authors ...
This article investigates the burial customs of the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages in the territory...