Abstract Four coffins dating from the period between the mid-18th and mid-19th centuries from Keminmaa in northern Ostrobothnian Finland were examined using computed-tomography (CT) scanning, a methodology with research applications for exploring human remains, coffins, and funerary textiles. The age and, in two cases, sex of the remains were estimated, and both historical sources and archaeological material suggest that socialization through gender was apparent in this collection. This article explores both the material testimony of care, dedication, and innocence of newborn and infant burials, as well as the socialization process and role of women adolescents in providing children’s funerary materials
The taphonomy of human remains and associated funerary textiles are inevitably linked. The interplay...
Understanding ‘counter archaeologies’ as taking a counterpoint and challenging normative perspective...
Abstract The taphonomy of human remains and associated funerary textiles are inevitably linked. The...
Studies of children have been scarce in archaeology up until the 1990’s in Finland and elsewhere. Th...
Abstract Examination of northern Finnish postmedieval funerary attire and coffins reveals culturall...
The 17th-19th-century burial materials from northern Ostrobothnia are studied in order to consider t...
Late Iron Age burials in Courland have primarily been used as signifiers of ethnical identity for la...
During the Viking Age, the burials on Gotland consisted of both cremations and inhumations. However,...
The aim of this thesis is to examine female Viking burials during the Iron Age. Issues such as what ...
The purpose of this thesis is to perform a gender study focusing on Viking Age weapon graves. A fema...
Burials are places where archaeologists reasonably expect gendered ideologies and practices to play ...
The study consists of two parts. The first part comprises analysis and social interpretation of arch...
Abstract Two ongoing projects at the University of Oulu, Finland, are studying burials situated bel...
The evolution and development of mortuary behaviors is of enormous cultural significance. Here we re...
Understanding ‘counter archaeologies’ as taking a counterpoint and challenging normative perspective...
The taphonomy of human remains and associated funerary textiles are inevitably linked. The interplay...
Understanding ‘counter archaeologies’ as taking a counterpoint and challenging normative perspective...
Abstract The taphonomy of human remains and associated funerary textiles are inevitably linked. The...
Studies of children have been scarce in archaeology up until the 1990’s in Finland and elsewhere. Th...
Abstract Examination of northern Finnish postmedieval funerary attire and coffins reveals culturall...
The 17th-19th-century burial materials from northern Ostrobothnia are studied in order to consider t...
Late Iron Age burials in Courland have primarily been used as signifiers of ethnical identity for la...
During the Viking Age, the burials on Gotland consisted of both cremations and inhumations. However,...
The aim of this thesis is to examine female Viking burials during the Iron Age. Issues such as what ...
The purpose of this thesis is to perform a gender study focusing on Viking Age weapon graves. A fema...
Burials are places where archaeologists reasonably expect gendered ideologies and practices to play ...
The study consists of two parts. The first part comprises analysis and social interpretation of arch...
Abstract Two ongoing projects at the University of Oulu, Finland, are studying burials situated bel...
The evolution and development of mortuary behaviors is of enormous cultural significance. Here we re...
Understanding ‘counter archaeologies’ as taking a counterpoint and challenging normative perspective...
The taphonomy of human remains and associated funerary textiles are inevitably linked. The interplay...
Understanding ‘counter archaeologies’ as taking a counterpoint and challenging normative perspective...
Abstract The taphonomy of human remains and associated funerary textiles are inevitably linked. The...