In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associated with the English expression ‘to be disposed of like rubbish’ are discussed. These disposal methods (átaphon rhíptesthai) include the exposure of corpses to carrion animals, to the elements, as well as the disposal of corpses into the sea, pits or natural fissures without burial rites. They also include cases in which graves were dug up in order to throw their contents out. Here, the Greek expressions for the English phrase ‘to be thrown away like rubbish’ are explored, as well as its relation to Morris’ (1987) influential concept of the ‘non-formal burial’. The analysis of the symbolism of various disposal methods has been based on both lit...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Every now and then, archaeologists come across periods or regions that seem to lack graves. Instead ...
In this paper, I pursue to study the Greek version of the bilingual (Greek and Demotic) mummy labels...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associ-at...
In current environmental discourse, disposal does not remove and destroy waste but rather transforms...
This article asks whether the recent UK‐based practice of removing ashes from crematoria has led to ...
This doctoral thesis has two purposes. First, it develops a universally applicable model for the an...
<em>Funerary practices, the hereafter and pollution in ancient Greece</em><br /> F...
The purpose of this article is to show that the current incineration techniques of corpses are direc...
The human remains identified at FN Phaistos have so far received little attention, perhaps because t...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
This paper examines the containment and covering of people and objects in burials throughout later p...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Every now and then, archaeologists come across periods or regions that seem to lack graves. Instead ...
In this paper, I pursue to study the Greek version of the bilingual (Greek and Demotic) mummy labels...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associ-at...
In current environmental discourse, disposal does not remove and destroy waste but rather transforms...
This article asks whether the recent UK‐based practice of removing ashes from crematoria has led to ...
This doctoral thesis has two purposes. First, it develops a universally applicable model for the an...
<em>Funerary practices, the hereafter and pollution in ancient Greece</em><br /> F...
The purpose of this article is to show that the current incineration techniques of corpses are direc...
The human remains identified at FN Phaistos have so far received little attention, perhaps because t...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
This paper examines the containment and covering of people and objects in burials throughout later p...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Every now and then, archaeologists come across periods or regions that seem to lack graves. Instead ...
In this paper, I pursue to study the Greek version of the bilingual (Greek and Demotic) mummy labels...