This chapter shows how archaeological investigations of early Anglo-Saxon cremation practices can be enhanced and extended by anthropological theory and ethnographic analogies. While the interactions between fire, material culture, architecture, space and the human body have been increasingly theorised for early Anglo-Saxon death rituals, this chapter illustrates how refined interpretations can be arrived at using two themes: (i) the significances of vessels and containers as pyre-goods and (ii) building timber-post structures associated with single and multiple cremation burials
This edited volume explores crematory practices as both an archaeological phenomenon and social prac...
The crematory funerary rites practiced by those living in parts of mainland Britain during the first...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
How can we begin to understand and explain the changing significance of cremation in past societies?...
Our understanding of the cremation rite in early Anglo-Saxon England (5th-mid 6th century A.D.) has ...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...
Early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are well-known because of their rich grave goods, but this wealth can o...
The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon...
Studies of early Anglo-Saxon social identity have been largely based on information obtained from th...
This book chapter is made available with kind permission of University of Arizona Press
Seeking to challenge simplistic narratives of cremation in the past and present, the studies in this...
This paper presents four different examples of how studies of contemporary cremation practices are a...
Cremation was one of the primary funerary rites employed in early Anglo-Saxon England (fifth to seve...
National audienceEthnological data’s are largely used to restitute the way a cadaver is burnt on a p...
This edited volume explores crematory practices as both an archaeological phenomenon and social prac...
The crematory funerary rites practiced by those living in parts of mainland Britain during the first...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
How can we begin to understand and explain the changing significance of cremation in past societies?...
Our understanding of the cremation rite in early Anglo-Saxon England (5th-mid 6th century A.D.) has ...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...
Early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are well-known because of their rich grave goods, but this wealth can o...
The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon...
Studies of early Anglo-Saxon social identity have been largely based on information obtained from th...
This book chapter is made available with kind permission of University of Arizona Press
Seeking to challenge simplistic narratives of cremation in the past and present, the studies in this...
This paper presents four different examples of how studies of contemporary cremation practices are a...
Cremation was one of the primary funerary rites employed in early Anglo-Saxon England (fifth to seve...
National audienceEthnological data’s are largely used to restitute the way a cadaver is burnt on a p...
This edited volume explores crematory practices as both an archaeological phenomenon and social prac...
The crematory funerary rites practiced by those living in parts of mainland Britain during the first...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...