The multi-faith society of medieval Iberia, where Muslims, Christians and Jews co-existed under changing religious political rule, provides a novel setting for the study of diet. This thesis employs carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotope analysis to explore variability in diet and resource exploitation between faiths, localities and through time under Muslim and later Christian rule and places the isotopic data in the context of other historical and archaeological evidence. Isotope analysis was performed on bone collagen from 126 animals and 210 humans representing Muslims and Christians, sampled from sites in Jaca, Zaragoza, Albarracín, Valencia, Gandía and Benipeixcar (c.11th -16th centuries AD) that follow a geographical transect from...
The Kingdom of Portugal was established with the help of military-monastic orders, which provided im...
Stable isotope and dental-microwear analysis are methods commonly used to reconstruct dietary habits...
A total of 93 individuals, of which 34 were infants, from San Juan de Momoitio graveyard (9th to 12t...
This article investigates the diets of neighboring Christians and Muslims in late medieval Spain (he...
The Iberian Peninsula was at the forefront of the religious, economic, and political changes that sw...
This paper presents the results of palaeodietary reconstruction based on stable carbon and nitrogen ...
Medieval Portugal, tucked between a Christian north and an Islamic south, and at a crossroad betwee...
This paper explores the impact of changing religious political rule on subsistence within a single c...
This paper explores the impact of changing religious political rule on subsistence within a single c...
<div><p>The Islamic necropolis discovered in Tauste (Zaragoza, Spain) is the only evidence that a la...
The diet of the population interred at the Islamic necropolis of Can Fonoll, Ibiza, Spain, which was...
The Iberian medieval period is unique in European history due to the wide spread socio-cultural chan...
The Islamic necropolis discovered in Tauste (Zaragoza, Spain) is the only evidence that a large Musl...
The Balearic Islands occupy a central space in the western Mediterranean, at the maritime crossroads...
291 p. (eng.) 287 p. (eusk.)Stable isotopes (13C, 15N, 18O) and a radiogenic isotope (87Sr/86Sr) in...
The Kingdom of Portugal was established with the help of military-monastic orders, which provided im...
Stable isotope and dental-microwear analysis are methods commonly used to reconstruct dietary habits...
A total of 93 individuals, of which 34 were infants, from San Juan de Momoitio graveyard (9th to 12t...
This article investigates the diets of neighboring Christians and Muslims in late medieval Spain (he...
The Iberian Peninsula was at the forefront of the religious, economic, and political changes that sw...
This paper presents the results of palaeodietary reconstruction based on stable carbon and nitrogen ...
Medieval Portugal, tucked between a Christian north and an Islamic south, and at a crossroad betwee...
This paper explores the impact of changing religious political rule on subsistence within a single c...
This paper explores the impact of changing religious political rule on subsistence within a single c...
<div><p>The Islamic necropolis discovered in Tauste (Zaragoza, Spain) is the only evidence that a la...
The diet of the population interred at the Islamic necropolis of Can Fonoll, Ibiza, Spain, which was...
The Iberian medieval period is unique in European history due to the wide spread socio-cultural chan...
The Islamic necropolis discovered in Tauste (Zaragoza, Spain) is the only evidence that a large Musl...
The Balearic Islands occupy a central space in the western Mediterranean, at the maritime crossroads...
291 p. (eng.) 287 p. (eusk.)Stable isotopes (13C, 15N, 18O) and a radiogenic isotope (87Sr/86Sr) in...
The Kingdom of Portugal was established with the help of military-monastic orders, which provided im...
Stable isotope and dental-microwear analysis are methods commonly used to reconstruct dietary habits...
A total of 93 individuals, of which 34 were infants, from San Juan de Momoitio graveyard (9th to 12t...