In the ancient world banquets were often seen on funerary monuments – but did they represent scenes that had once been enjoyed, or feasts yet to come
How can burial furnishings help us to approach the meanings of banqueting imagery in funerary art or...
Written contribution to MOTH's publication An Extra Place at the Table: Food and Funeral Feasting
At the core of this article stands the issue of identifying mortuary/funerary rituals and ideology f...
The presented thesis examines dining practices associated with ancient funerary rites, and represe...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
The banquet is one of the most common themes in funerary art of the Roman period, found over much of...
One of the most frequent images found on ancient Egyptian funerary monuments is the image of the dec...
Spanning a period of over two thousand years, the Bronze Age of the Levant (c.3600–1200 BC) is chara...
Convivial occasions among the living are not well attested from ancient Egypt. Scenes in tomb decora...
In February 2009, a three-year research project entitled "Banquet and Grave" was launched. Located i...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The classic image of the Neolithic chambered tomb is of a stone-built – often megalithic – buria...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Ethnographic descriptions of feasts reveal that consumption of meat is usually prominent. Zooarchaeo...
This is the author's version of a book chapter published in The Oxford handbook of the archaeology o...
How can burial furnishings help us to approach the meanings of banqueting imagery in funerary art or...
Written contribution to MOTH's publication An Extra Place at the Table: Food and Funeral Feasting
At the core of this article stands the issue of identifying mortuary/funerary rituals and ideology f...
The presented thesis examines dining practices associated with ancient funerary rites, and represe...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
The banquet is one of the most common themes in funerary art of the Roman period, found over much of...
One of the most frequent images found on ancient Egyptian funerary monuments is the image of the dec...
Spanning a period of over two thousand years, the Bronze Age of the Levant (c.3600–1200 BC) is chara...
Convivial occasions among the living are not well attested from ancient Egypt. Scenes in tomb decora...
In February 2009, a three-year research project entitled "Banquet and Grave" was launched. Located i...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The classic image of the Neolithic chambered tomb is of a stone-built – often megalithic – buria...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Ethnographic descriptions of feasts reveal that consumption of meat is usually prominent. Zooarchaeo...
This is the author's version of a book chapter published in The Oxford handbook of the archaeology o...
How can burial furnishings help us to approach the meanings of banqueting imagery in funerary art or...
Written contribution to MOTH's publication An Extra Place at the Table: Food and Funeral Feasting
At the core of this article stands the issue of identifying mortuary/funerary rituals and ideology f...