Abstract Mortuary practices evident in the materiality of Central Fennoscandia in Northern Europe are interpreted here rather unconventionally as expressions of morality. This is defined as the culturally approved way to manage death, without scruples. The last seven millennia are set on a flat temporal scale in this paper, revealing contradictions between different ideologies and worldviews over that time. The ubiquitous themes that emerge are agency of place and the bond between fire, life, and death, along with the main criticism, which asserts that the overwhelming fear of the dead reported in the region during 2nd millennium may have been aggravated by Christian dogma. Thus, projecting similar notions of fear to local prehistoric buri...
Focusing on tradition, technology, and authority, this volume challenges classical understandings th...
This theoretical analysis of ritual, religion and processes of holiness and Indo-Europeanisation exa...
In a research project `Symbols of death´ concerning pictorial symbols and epitaphs on gravestones in...
In the discipline of archaeology death has always been a common subject. Graves and dead bodies in d...
To handle death may be a difficult task for the living. The deathof a person creates a turbulent sit...
During the Nordic Bronze Age, houses were not exclusively connected with profane contexts, but did a...
Ättestupa has been a contentious practice ever since the translation of Gautreks saga. This senicide...
One of my research projects examines pictorial symbols and epitaphs on gravestones in Norway and Swe...
For a long time, the human bones that were found outside the classical graves/grave context during t...
This thesis explores the ritual dimensions of the mortuary practices in the late Mesolithic cemeteri...
The Scandinavian death rituals are expressions of agency (war, negotiations, hunting, and personal a...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
Engaging with the Dead adopts a cross-disciplinary, archaeologically focused, approach to explore a ...
On the basis of archeological and literary material from the centuries around the beginning of the C...
This paper presents four different examples of how studies of contemporary cremation practices are a...
Focusing on tradition, technology, and authority, this volume challenges classical understandings th...
This theoretical analysis of ritual, religion and processes of holiness and Indo-Europeanisation exa...
In a research project `Symbols of death´ concerning pictorial symbols and epitaphs on gravestones in...
In the discipline of archaeology death has always been a common subject. Graves and dead bodies in d...
To handle death may be a difficult task for the living. The deathof a person creates a turbulent sit...
During the Nordic Bronze Age, houses were not exclusively connected with profane contexts, but did a...
Ättestupa has been a contentious practice ever since the translation of Gautreks saga. This senicide...
One of my research projects examines pictorial symbols and epitaphs on gravestones in Norway and Swe...
For a long time, the human bones that were found outside the classical graves/grave context during t...
This thesis explores the ritual dimensions of the mortuary practices in the late Mesolithic cemeteri...
The Scandinavian death rituals are expressions of agency (war, negotiations, hunting, and personal a...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
Engaging with the Dead adopts a cross-disciplinary, archaeologically focused, approach to explore a ...
On the basis of archeological and literary material from the centuries around the beginning of the C...
This paper presents four different examples of how studies of contemporary cremation practices are a...
Focusing on tradition, technology, and authority, this volume challenges classical understandings th...
This theoretical analysis of ritual, religion and processes of holiness and Indo-Europeanisation exa...
In a research project `Symbols of death´ concerning pictorial symbols and epitaphs on gravestones in...