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Publié par
Date de parution
09 mai 2016
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781438459967
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
1 Mo
Publié par
Date de parution
09 mai 2016
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781438459967
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
1 Mo
Diversity of Sacrifice
THE INSTITUTE FOR EUROPEAN AND MEDITERRANEAN ARCHAEOLOGY DISTINGUISHED MONOGRAPH SERIES
Peter F. Biehl, Sarunas Milisauskas, and Stephen L. Dyson, editors
The Magdalenian Household: Unraveling Domesticity
Ezra Zubrow, Françoise Audouze, and James G. Enloe, editors
Eventful Archaeologies: New Approaches to Social Transformation in the Archaeological Record
Douglas J. Bolender, editor
The Archaeology of Violence: Interdisciplinary Approaches
Sarah Ralph, editor
Approaching Monumentality in Archaeology
James. F. Osborne, editor
The Archaeology of Childhood: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on an Archaeological Enigma
Güner Coşkunsu, editor
Diversity of Sacrifice: Form and Function of Sacrificial Practices in the Ancient World and Beyond
Carrie Ann Murray, editor
Logo and cover/interior art: A vessel with wagon motifs from Bronocice, Poland, 3400 B.C. Courtesy of Sarunas Milisauskas and Janusz Kruk, 1982, Die Wagendarstellung auf einem Trichterbecher au Bronocice, Polen, Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt 12: 141–144
Published by
State University of New York Press, Albany
© 2016 State University of New York
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in writing of the publisher.
For information, contact
State University of New York Press, Albany, NY
www.sunypress.edu
Production, Eileen Nizer
Marketing, Michael Campochiaro
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Diversity of sacrifice : form and function of sacrificial practices in the ancient world and beyond / edited by Carrie Ann Murray.
pages cm. — (SUNY series, The Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology distinguished monograph series)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4384-5995-0 (hardcover : alkaline paper)
ISBN 978-1-4384-5996-7 (e-book) 1. Sacrifice—Europe—History—To 1500—Congresses. 2. Sacrifice—Meditarranean Region—History—To 1500—Congresses. 3. Social archaeology—Europe—Congresses. 4. Social archaeology—Meditarranean Region—Congresses. 5. Archaeology and religion—Europe—Congresses. 6. Archaeology and religion—Meditarranean Region—Congresses. 7. Material culture—Europe—History—To 1500—Congresses. 8. Material culture—Meditarranean Region—History—To 1500—Congresses. 9. Social interaction—Europe—History—To 1500—Congresses. 10. Social interaction—Meditarranean Region—History—To 1500—Congresses. I. Murray, Carrie Ann, 1976– II. University of Buffalo. Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology. BL570.D58 2016 203'.40936—dc23 2015013508
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For my grandfather, Detective Louis Linton Miller, who died while protecting the people of New York City
Contents
I NTRODUCTION The Value and Power of Sacrifice
Carrie Ann Murray
P ART I D EFINING AND R EDEFINING THE B OUNDARIES OF S ACRIFICE
C HAPTER O NE Anthropology and Sacrifice
Phillips Stevens Jr.
C HAPTER T WO A View from a Fen: On the Concept of Sacrifice and the Possibility of Understanding Neolithic Wetland Depositions
Åsa Berggren
C HAPTER T HREE Gifts from the Gods: A New Look at Some Weapons and Vessels from the Metal Ages
Christoph Huth
C HAPTER F OUR Post-Domestic Sacrifice: Exploring the Present and Future of Gifts for the Gods
Samantha Hurn
P ART II S ACRIFICE A CROSS THE M EDITERRANEAN W ORLD
C HAPTER F IVE Every Good and Pure Thing: Sacrifice in the Ancient Egyptian Context
Mary-Ann Pouls Wegner
C HAPTER S IX The Mythology of Carthaginian Child Sacrifice: A Physical Anthropological Perspective
Jeffrey H. Schwartz
C HAPTER S EVEN The Art of Ancient Greek Sacrifice: Spectacle, Gaze, Performance
Tyler Jo Smith
C HAPTER E IGHT Etruscan Human Sacrifice: The Case of Tarquinia
Nancy T. de Grummond
P ART III E XPLORING E XCEPTIONAL C ASES OF S ACRIFICE
C HAPTER N INE Human Sacrifice as “Crisis Management”? The Case of the Early Neolithic Site of Herxheim, Palatinate, Germany
Andrea Zeeb-Lanz, Rose-Marie Arbogast, Silja Bauer, Bruno Boulestin, Anne-Sophie Coupey, Anthony Denaire, Fabian Haack, Christian Jeunesse, Dirk Schimmelpfennig, Rouven Turck
C HAPTER T EN Dog Sacrifice at the Protohistoric Site of Mas Castellar (Pontós, Spain)
Enriqueta Pons, Lídia Colominas, Maria Saña
C HAPTER E LEVEN Understanding the Death and Burial of Northern European Bog Bodies
Guinevere Granite
P ART IV F ORMULARIZING AND R EGULARIZING S ACRIFICE
C HAPTER T WELVE Sacrificing the Sign: The Alphabet as an Offering in Ancient Israel, or A Classicist’s Read on the Ritual Law of the Sotah
Roger D. Woodard
C HAPTER T HIRTEEN Ancient Greek Laws on Sacrifice
Michael Gagarin
C HAPTER F OURTEEN In What Way Is Christ’s Death a Sacrifice? Theories of Sacrifice and Theologies of the Cross
S. Mark Heim
C ONTRIBUTORS
I NDEX
Illustrations Figure 2.1 A person is walking through the vegetation edge of the fen during the Early Neolithic. Illustration: Hans Ekerow. Figure 2.2 A group of people are cooking and eating a meal near the fen during the Late Neolithic or Early Bronze Age. Illustration: Hans Ekerow. Figure 3.1 Rapier, axe and dagger blade made of gold, from Perşinari (ROM, after Primas 1991: 177 fig. 8). Figure 3.2 Golden axes from Tufalău (ROM) and Dieskau (GER, after Primas 1991: 178 fig. 9). Figure 3.3 Daggers adorned with tiny gold pins from Plouvorn (FRA, after Briard 1984: 91 fig. 56). Figure 3.4 Daggers from the hoard of Ripatransone (ITA, after Bianco Peroni 1994: pl. 25). Figure 3.5 Statue menhir of Lagundo (ITA), Height = 267 cm (after Dondio 1995: 209 fig. F96). Figure 3.6 Bronze dirk from Jutphaas (NED, after Butler, Sarfatij 1972: fig. 3). Figure 3.7 Gold cups from (1) Fritzdorf and (2) Hochdorf (both GER, after Jacob 1995: pl. 77 no. 406, pl. 79 no. 418). Figure 3.8 Ceremonial cart from Strettweg (AUT, after Egg 1996: 27 fig. 17). Figure 5.1 Seti I presenting offerings to the deity Osiris, temple of Seti I, Abydos ca. 1294–1279 B.C.E. (author’s photo). Figure 5.2 Seti I offering an image of Ma’at to the deity Osiris, temple of Seti I, Abydos ca. 1294–1279 B.C.E. (Calverley 1938: Pl. IV). Figure 5.3 Seti I and Ramesses II offering before the names of preceding kings of Egypt, temple of Seti I, Abydos ca. 1294–1279 B.C.E. (author’s photo). Figure 5.4 Tabular offering list, temple of Seti I, Abydos ca. 1294–1279 B.C.E. (Calverley 1935: Pl. 32). Figure 5.5 Excavated examples of weskhet -vessels from the Abydos Votive Zone site, New Kingdom/Late Bronze Age ca. 1550–1069 B.C.E. (drawings by author). Figure 5.6 Stele from Abydos with weskhet -vessels in lunette, Middle Kingdom ca. 2055–1650 B.C.E. (adapted from Simpson 1974: ANOC 44.4, Pl. 63). Figure 5.7 The Votive Zone Area in North Abydos (survey and graphics by author). Figure 6.1 Examples of stelae with an urn (left), image of Ba’al Hammon above image of Tanit (middle top), image of Tanit (middle bottom), and image of Ba’al Hammon above an urn (right). Not to scale. Copyright © Jeffrey H. Schwartz. Figure 6.2 The Bardo stela depicting adult carrying small individual (right: tracing of image). Not to scale. Copyright © Jeffrey H. Schwartz. Figure 6.3 Top: A yellowish clay urn representative of the later Tophet phases with unfired clay adherent to the rim with partial rim; the stopper had fallen into the urn. Bottom: Fragmentary red clay stopper and fragment of poorly fired red clay lid retrieved with the lamb or kid bones from within the urn; note the depressions in the clay. Not to scale. Copyright © Jeffrey H. Schwartz. Figure 6.4 Left: Isolated petrosal bones, two on the left and four on the right; MNI would lead to the erroneous conclusion that four individuals had been placed in the same urn. Right: Similarly developed crowns of upper and lower first permanent molars of child (left and middle) and a developing crown of a deciduous upper canine of a perinate (far right). Not to scale. Copyright © Jeffrey H. Schwartz. Figure 6.5 Reassembled pieces of the same bone showing disparate degrees of burning. Left: parts of crania; middle: a right humerus; left: a right femur. Not to scale. Copyright © Jeffrey H. Schwartz. Figure 6.6 Bones in anatomical position with minimal burning. Top left: human cervical vertebrae, note charring primarily on the spines (posteriorly). Bottom left: human cervical vertebrae with basiocciput (BO) from base of skull. Top right: human ribs. Bottom right: bones from the foot of a lamb. Not to scale. Copyright © Jeffrey H. Schwartz. Figure 6.7 Age distribution of the Carthage Tophet sample [from Schwartz et al. (Schwartz et al. 2010)]. Figure 7.1 Detail of Athenian black-figure band-cup. c. 550 B.C.E. Niarchos Collection A 031. Drawing by D. Weiss, after Laxander 2000: pl. 1. Figure 7.2 Athenian red-figure pelike, Pan Painter. c. 460 B.C.E. Berlin, Staatliche Museen 1962.62.© Antikensammlung—Staaliche Museen zu Berlin. Figure 7.3 Athenian red-figure cup interior, Epidromos Painter. c. 500 B.C.E. Paris, Louvre G. 112.4.© Musée du Louvre. Image Source: Erich Lessing, Art Resource, New York. Figure 7.4 Athenian red-figure krater, Pothos Painter. c. 420 B.C.E. Paris, Louvre G 496. © RMN (Musée du Louvre) / Les frères Chuzeville. Figure 7.5 Boeotian black-figure kantharos, Kabirion Group. 5 th c. B.C.E. Cassel, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen. Drawing by D. Weiss, after van Straten 1995: pl. 26. Figure 7.6 Athenian red-figure amphora, Nausicaa Painter. c. 440–430 B.C.E. London, British Museum E 284. © Trustees of the British Museum. Figure 7.7 Athenian red-figure cup interior, Epidromos Painter. c. 500 B.C.E. Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum IV 3691. © Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien. Figure 8.1 Diagram of the ten burials at