Description
Neolithic Britain is characterised by its wide diversity in funerary and mortuary rites. However, a shift c.3500BC led to a rise in cremation burials associated with circular monuments and by c.3000BC, cremation was the dominant funerary rite. This book provides a comprehensive re-analysis of 628 cremation deposits from 84 sites across mainland Britain, including those from Stonehenge. It offers new insights and interpretations relating to a shift in social organisation and belief structures, and uses up-to-date methodology to discuss osteological, archaeological and chronological data. Together, this research suggests that cremation was specifically selected for certain members of society, and it also raises new questions about mobility and the role women played within the prehistoric landscape.
Author: Christina Willis
Publisher: British Archaeological Reports (Oxford) Ltd
Published: 12/31/2021
Pages: 376
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 2.67lbs
Size: 11.69h x 8.27w x 1.02d
ISBN13: 9781407358345
ISBN10: 1407358340
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Archaeology
This title is not returnable

