Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.

The crematory funerary rites practiced by those living in parts of mainland Britain during the first millennium AD included burning complete or parts of animals on the pyre. This thesis highlights the potential for archaeozoological analysis of faunal pyre goods using assemblages from the first m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Worley, Fay L.
Other Authors: Bond, Julie M.
Language:en
Published: University of Bradford 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4282
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-42822019-09-24T03:02:01Z Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain. Worley, Fay L. Bond, Julie M. Anglo-Saxon Britain Animal bones Archaeology Cremation Grave goods Iron Age Britain Roman Taphonomy Crematory funerary rites Faunal pyre Archaeozoological analysis Romano-British funerary practice The crematory funerary rites practiced by those living in parts of mainland Britain during the first millennium AD included burning complete or parts of animals on the pyre. This thesis highlights the potential for archaeozoological analysis of faunal pyre goods using assemblages from the first millennium AD as a dataset. Experimental study and the integration of current research from a number of disciplines is used to suggest that although pyrolysis and cremation practices fragment and distort burnt bone assemblages, careful analysis can reveal a wealth of data leading to the interpretation of various forms of pyre good. The results of the author¿s analysis of material from the sites of Brougham, Cumbria, St. Stephen¿s, Hertfordshire, Castleford, West Yorkshire and Heath Wood, Derbyshire are combined with data from other published cemeteries to suggest a series of chronological and regional continuities in the use of animals but with a distinct change at the start of the Early Medieval period. The results from Brougham are particularly significant as they alter preconceived views on the utilisation of animals in Romano-British funerary practice. Cremation burials in first millennium AD Britain are shown to include the burnt remains of predominantly domestic taxa with occasional wild species. The pyre goods are interpreted as representing food offerings, companions, amulets, gaming items and sacrifices. This thesis demonstrates that cremated animal bone should not be disregarded but rather valued as source of archaeozoological data, and a significant functional tool for interpreting past funerary behaviour and animal utilisation. 2010-04-01T15:43:24Z 2010-04-01T15:43:24Z 2010-04-01T15:43:24Z 2008 Thesis doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4282 en <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"><img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width:0" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/3.0/88x31.png" /></a><br />The University of Bradford theses are licenced under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Licence</a>. University of Bradford Department of Archaeological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Anglo-Saxon Britain
Animal bones
Archaeology
Cremation
Grave goods
Iron Age Britain
Roman
Taphonomy
Crematory funerary rites
Faunal pyre
Archaeozoological analysis
Romano-British funerary practice
spellingShingle Anglo-Saxon Britain
Animal bones
Archaeology
Cremation
Grave goods
Iron Age Britain
Roman
Taphonomy
Crematory funerary rites
Faunal pyre
Archaeozoological analysis
Romano-British funerary practice
Worley, Fay L.
Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.
description The crematory funerary rites practiced by those living in parts of mainland Britain during the first millennium AD included burning complete or parts of animals on the pyre. This thesis highlights the potential for archaeozoological analysis of faunal pyre goods using assemblages from the first millennium AD as a dataset. Experimental study and the integration of current research from a number of disciplines is used to suggest that although pyrolysis and cremation practices fragment and distort burnt bone assemblages, careful analysis can reveal a wealth of data leading to the interpretation of various forms of pyre good. The results of the author¿s analysis of material from the sites of Brougham, Cumbria, St. Stephen¿s, Hertfordshire, Castleford, West Yorkshire and Heath Wood, Derbyshire are combined with data from other published cemeteries to suggest a series of chronological and regional continuities in the use of animals but with a distinct change at the start of the Early Medieval period. The results from Brougham are particularly significant as they alter preconceived views on the utilisation of animals in Romano-British funerary practice. Cremation burials in first millennium AD Britain are shown to include the burnt remains of predominantly domestic taxa with occasional wild species. The pyre goods are interpreted as representing food offerings, companions, amulets, gaming items and sacrifices. This thesis demonstrates that cremated animal bone should not be disregarded but rather valued as source of archaeozoological data, and a significant functional tool for interpreting past funerary behaviour and animal utilisation.
author2 Bond, Julie M.
author_facet Bond, Julie M.
Worley, Fay L.
author Worley, Fay L.
author_sort Worley, Fay L.
title Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.
title_short Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.
title_full Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.
title_fullStr Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.
title_full_unstemmed Taken to the grave. An archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium AD Britain.
title_sort taken to the grave. an archaeozoological approach assessing the role of animals as crematory offerings in first millennium ad britain.
publisher University of Bradford
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4282
work_keys_str_mv AT worleyfayl takentothegraveanarchaeozoologicalapproachassessingtheroleofanimalsascrematoryofferingsinfirstmillenniumadbritain
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