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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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Archaeology of Death - APA555050
Title: Archaeology of Death
Guaranteed by: Institute of Archaeology (21-UPRAV)
Faculty: Faculty of Arts
Actual: from 2022
Semester: summer
Points: 0
E-Credits: 5
Examination process: summer s.:oral
Hours per week, examination: summer s.:2/0, Ex [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (unknown)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: not taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Level:  
Explanation: V LS 2019/2020 proběhne zkouška distanční formou
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
can be fulfilled in the future
Guarantor: Jan Turek
Schedule   Noticeboard   
Annotation - Czech
Last update: Ing. Renata Šmidtová (14.01.2020)
The lecture provides a basic overview of the theory and methodology of the study of funerary areas, burial contexts
and social and symbolic perception of death in prehistoric societies. Through the archaeological evidence of
funerary rituals will be presented not only prehistoric people's attitudes toward death and the afterlife but also their
culture, social organization, symbolic systems and cosmology. The focus on archaeology of personhood will be
targeted mainly on the analysis of age and gender categories. Introductory topics summarize the methodology of
field and laboratory research of funerary data in archaeology including application of scientific methods, spatial
analysis of burial data and palaeodemography. In the interpretation section of the course an attention is also paid
to the social and ritual significance of death and the transformation of human understanding of mortality. We are
going to focus on case studies from different periods and locations throughout the world from Palaeolithic to the
rise of historical societies. Case studies will further shed light on the social interpretation of burial data and their
use in reconstructing social relationships, and will present significant discoveries. The end of the course is devoted
to the ethics of the archaeological research of funerary and the political and ethical controversies surrounding
human remains. This lecture is designed for audience among archaeologists, anthropologists, historians, and
others who have a professional interest in funerary evidence, or general curiosity about past death and burial.

1. Introduction to burial archeology.

Forms of burial in prehistory, hierarchy of burial sites and monuments.

2. Human understanding of death and the beginnings of funerary practices.

Death and perception of time, regeneration, reincarnation, immortality. The earliest evidence of funerary
behaviour. The question of cannibalism.

3. Basics of field methodology of burial contexts and funerary areas.

Survey and excavation methods. Taphonomy, geochemical and geophysical methods.

4. Scientific methods of analysis - Burial contexts and human remains.

Paleoanthropology, Palaeopathology and Paleoparasitology.

5. Population mobility

Population processes. Palaeodemography and methods of molecular biology

6. Isotope studies and stress and diet reconstruction

Methods used for reconstruction of individual mobility, health and diet.

7. Spatial analysis of funerary areas

8. Shamanism and burials in the Palaeolithic period.

9. Burial rites as a source of reconstruction of prehistoric society.

Status and power, development of social differentiation. Feasting with ancestors.

10. Age and Gender reconstruction

Gender categories, children in pre-industrial societies.

11. Stages and variability of funerary rituals

Pre-burial tratment and ceremonies, methods of burial, postfuneral practices, exhumation, reburial. Primary and
secondary burials. Alternative ways of burial.

12. Death and monumentality in the landscape - World of dead and living

Burial sites, burial monuments and settlement structure, What is a ritual landscape?

Death in the living space. Houses of dead – genesis of barrows. Human sacrifices and ancestral worship.

13. Mummies and conditions for their preservation

Eternity, mumification tratment and natural environment.

14. Ethics of funerary archeology

Political and ethical issues of surrounding human remains and their analysis. Scientific sampling, exhibiting
human remains, repatriation and reburial.

Doporučená literatura:

BAHN, P. 2008: Vepsáno do kostí, Jak lidské ostatky odhalují tajemství mrtvých. Mladá fronta, Praha

BRADLEY, R. 1998: The significance of monuments. On the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze
Age Europe, Routledge London – New York.

ČERNÝ, V. 1995: Význam tafonomických procesů při studiu pohřebního ritu, Archeologické rozhledy 46, 301- 313.

ČERNÝ, V. – SIEGLOVÁ, Z. – BRDIČKA, R. 1997: „Molekulární archeologie“ – aplikace molekulárně biologických
metod v archeologii a jejich využití pži studiu pravěkých populací, Archeologické rozhledy 49, 526 – 543.

EDMONDS, M. 1999: Ancestral Geographies of the Neolithic. Landscapes, Monuments and Memory. Routledge,
London – New York.

GIBSON, A. –SIMPSON, D. (Eds.) 1998: Prehistoric Ritual and Religion, Sutton Publishing.

HOLÝ, L. 1956: Pohřby na sídlištích v Africe, Archeologické rozhledy 8, 236-249.

KANDERT, J. 1982: Poznámky k využití etnografických údajů v případě výkladu knovízských “hrobů”,
Archeologické rozhledy 34, 190 – 200.

KRIŠTUF, P. – TUREK, J. 2019: Arény předků. Posvátno a rituály na počátku eneolitu. – Ancestral Arenas. Cult and
Ritual at the beginning of Eneolithic. ZČU – Plzeň.

METCALF, P. – HUNTINGTON, R. 1991: Celebrations of Death. The Anthropology of Mortuary ritual, Second
edition, Cambridge UP.

MOORE, J. & SCOTT, E. 1997: Invisible People and Processes. Writhing Gender and Childhood into European
Archaeology. Leicester University Press, London

NEUSTUPNÝ, E. 1967: Počátky patriarchátu ve střední Evropě. Praha.

NEUSTUPNÝ, E. 1983b: Demografie pravěkých pohřebišť, Praha.

NEUSTUPNÝ, E., 1995, The significance of facts, Journal of European Archaeology 3 (1), 189-212.

PARKER-PEARSON, M. 1999: The archaeology of death and burial, Sutton Publishing.
 
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