Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-8mjnm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-28T17:46:26.168Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Death and the regeneration of life: a new interpretation of house urns in Northern Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Richard Bradley*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, PO Box 218, Reading RG6 6AA, England

Extract

Ceramic models of buildings are found at later prehistoric sites in Northern Europe. Their most likely prototype is the granary. They are associated with cremation burials and the vessels may have taken this form to emphasize the relationship between death and the continuity of human life.

Type
News & Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barker, G. & Rasmussen, T.. 1998. The Etruscans. Oxford: Blackwell Google Scholar
Barrett, J. 1989. Food, gender and metal: questions of social reproduction, in Søarensen, M.L.S. & Thomas, R. (ed.), The end of the Bronze Age in Europe: 304–20. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. International series S483.Google Scholar
Bartoloni, G., Beijer, A. & De Santis, A.. 1985. Hats in the central Tyrrhenian area of Ilaly during the protohistoric age, in Malone, C. & Stoddart, S. (ed.), Papers in Italian Archaeology IV Part III: Patterns in Protohistory: 175202. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. International series S245.Google Scholar
Bartoloni, G., Bursanelli, F., D’Atri, V. & De SANTIS, A.. 1987. Le urne a capanna rinvenute in Italia. Rome: Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Behn, F., 1924. Hausurnen. Berlin: De Gruyter.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergmann, J. 1973. Jungbronzezeitlicher Totenkult und die Entstehung und Bedeutung der europäischer Hausurnensitte, Germania 51: 5472.Google Scholar
Bergmann, J. 1982. Ein Gräberfeld der jüngeren Bronze- und älteren Eisenzeit bei Vollmarshausen, Kr. Kassel. Marburg: Klwert Verlag.Google Scholar
Bloch, M. & Parry, J.. 1982. Introduction: death and the regeneration of life, in Bloch, M. & Parry, J. (ed.), Death and the regeneration of life: 144. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Google Scholar
Buck, D.-W. & Gramsch, B.. fed.) 1986. Widelung, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft während der jüngeren Bronze- und Hallstattzeit in Mitteleuropa, Veröffentlichungen des Museums für Ur- und Frühgeschichte Potsdam 20.Google Scholar
Bukowski, Z. 1990. Zum Stand der demographischen und siedlungsgeschichtlichen Forschung zur Lausitzer Kultur in Stromgebiet von Oder und Weichsel, Acta Praehistorica et Archaeologica 22: 85119 Google Scholar
Bukowski, Z. 1999. Lusatian Culture cult- and sacrifice-places in the middle Elbe, Oder and Vistula basins, in Orrling, C. (ed.), Communication in Bronze Age Europe: 4356. Stockholm: Statens historiska museum.Google Scholar
Capelle, T. 1987. Eisenzeitliche Bauopfer, Frühmitteltliche Studien 21: 182205.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1992. Pits, preconceptions and propitiation in the British Iron Age, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 11: 6983 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delattre, V., Bulard, A., Gouge, P. & Pihuit, P.. 2000. De la relégation sociale à l’hypothèse des dépôts des offrandes: l’example des dépôts en silos protohistoriques au confluent Seine—Yonne, Revue Archéologique du Centre de la France 39: 530 Google Scholar
Fokkens, H. 1998. The Ussen Project: the first decade of excavations at Oss, Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia 30.Google Scholar
Gebers, W. 1985. Jungbronzezeitliche und eisenzeitliche Gertreidevorralshaltung in Rullstorf, in Wilhelmi, K. (ed.), Ausgrabungen in Niedersachsen. Archäologische Denkmalpflege 1979–1984: 146–50. Stuttgart: Berichte zu Denkmalpflege in Niedersachsen, Beiheft 1.Google Scholar
Guttmann, E. & Last, J.. 2000. A Late Bronze Age landscape at South Hornchurch, Essex, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 66: 319–59.Google Scholar
Horst, F. 1985. Zedau. Eine jungbronze- und eisenzeitliche Siedlung in der Altmark. Berlin: Akademie Verlag Google Scholar
Jeunesse, C. & Ehretsmann, M.. 1988. La jeune femme, le cheval and le silo, Cahiers Alsaciens d’Archéologie et d’Art et d’Histoire 31: 4354 Google Scholar
Kaliff, A. 1998. Grave structures and altars: archaeological traces of Bronze Age eschatological conceptions, European Journal of Archaeology 1.2: 177–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kossack, G. 1954. Studien zur Symbolgut der Urnenfelder und Hallstattzeit Mitteleuropas. Berlin: de Gruyter. Römisch-Germanische Forschungen 20.Google Scholar
Kristiansen, K. 1998. Europe before history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lucas, A.T. 1958. An Fhóir: a straw rope granary, Gwerin 1.1: 220 Google Scholar
Montelius, O. 1897. Hausurnen und Gesichtsurnen, Korrespondenzblatt der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und Vorgeschichte 28: 1625.Google Scholar
Müller, R. 1999. Hausurnen, in Müller, R. (ed.). Reallexikon der Germanischen Alterstumskunde 14: 85–9. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Oelmann, F. 1959. Pfahlhausurnen, Germania 37: 205–23.Google Scholar
Olaussen, D. 1986. Piledal and Svarte. A comparison between two Late Bronze Age cremation cemeteries in Scania, Acta Archaeologica 57: 121–52.Google Scholar
Rassmussen, M. & Andersen, C.. 1993. Bronze Age settlement, in Storgaard, B. (ed.), Digging into the past: 25 years of Danish archaeology: 136–44. Aarhus: Jutland Archaeological Society.Google Scholar
Rittershofer, K.-F. (ed.). 1997. Sonderbestattungen in der Bronzezeit in ästlichen Mitteleuropa. Espelkamp: Verlag Marie Leidorf.Google Scholar
Roymans, N. 1999. Urnfield symbolism: ancestors and the land in the lower Rhine region, in Theuws, F. & Roymans, N. (ed.), Land and ancestors: 1161. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.Google Scholar
Stiernqvist, B. 1961. Simris II. Bronze Age problems in the light of the Simris excavations. Lund: Gleerup Forlag.Google Scholar
Tesch, S. 1998. Tradition and change during the Bronze and Iron Ages. Houses as archaeological sources for the study of changes in the cultural landscape, in Berglund, R. (ed.), The cultural landscape during 6000 years in southern Sweden: 326–36. Copenhagen: Munksgaard. Ecological Bulletin 41.Google Scholar
Villes, A. 1981. Les bâtiments domestiques Hallstattiennes de la Chausée-sur-Marne and la problème de la maison de l’Age du Fer en France septentrionale, in Kruta, V. (ed.), L’Age du Fer en France septentrionale: 4997. Reims. Mémoires de la Société archéologique champenoise 2.Google Scholar
Whimster, R. 1981. Burial practices in Iron Age Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. British series 90.Google Scholar