No longer the
Bridesmaid? Cremation in Archaeology
Session Organiser: Duncan Robertson
(University of Sheffield)
The study of cremation burials in archaeology
has, in many respects, performed a supporting role to the more tangible
record of inhumation burials. Cremation cemetery reports have concentrated
largely on describing pottery typologies, grave and pyre goods, consequently
producing very few meaningful interpretations of the important funeral
rites and transformations associated with the disposal of the body. This
need no longer be the case as recently the examination of the most fundamental
aspect of the cremation, i.e. the human remains, has improved, resulting
in the addition of an extra dimension to the study of this burial practice.
Comment is now possible on a range of issues beyond demographic considerations,
involving technology and the results of ritual actions. Significantly,
this advance has enabled the potential for multidisciplinary interpretations
of the material, combining osteology, anthropology, landscape and
historical studies, to be more widely explored. It is the purpose of this
session to illustrate, through a wide range of contributions, the diversity
of approaches applicable to the interpretation of this complex form of
burial archaeology. These will include Prehistoric, Roman, and Saxon studies
to highlight the contribution that this form of burial archaeology, a form
often ignored by archaeologists, yet so widely used through time and space,
has to offer. Gaps in the archaeological burial record often coincide with
periods of cremation, this session aims to demonstrate that this need no
longer be the case.
Jacqueline I McKinley
(Wessex Archaeology, Salisbury)
From Spong Mincer to Cremulator -
What use is a Heap of Ashes?
In 1746 Tom Martin dismissed the Anglo-Saxon
urns excavated from Spong Hill in Norfolk as containing "nothing but bones
and gravel"- an oft repeated sentiment throughout the following centuries
of awakening interest in archaeology with frustrating consequences for
the osteologist. Following Lt-Col Hawley's 1920s excavations, all but one
of the 52 cremation burials from the Aubrey Holes at Stonehenge were reburied
without examination of the bone. Such discarding of cremated remains from
excavation in the firm belief that nothing could be gained from their analysis
was a common practice through to the 1950s. Even if kept, the bone was
frequently not subject to examination- an on-going, if thankfully rare,
occurrence even now.
Thanks to the activities of contributors
(Wells and Spence) in Britain in the 1960s archaeologists became less dismissive.
The full potential of such analyses, however, was and is not always appreciated.
Cremated bone is the product of a deliberate act surrounded by rites and
rituals- analysis may illustrate not only information pertaining to the
individual but to the technology, rites and rituals of cremation. The assumption
that 'cremation' is synonymous with 'cremation burial' and the emphasis
on just this one type of cremation-related feature means that a large proportion
of the rites and rituals of cremation are being overlooked. The imbalance
needs to be redressed...
Duncan Robertson
(ARCUS, University of Sheffield)
Death, Cremation and Sex
Traditional archaeological thought
has attempted to interpret the phenomenon of visible collective burial
areas of the middle Bronze Age in terms of ancestor cults, or the legitimation
of claims to territory. However, it can be argued that an often ignored
factor in the interpretation of these funerary rituals is embodied in fertility,
the act of reproduction, which is manifest in the bones and the location
of the burial areas within the developing agricultural landscape.
Recent osteological examination of
cremated skeletal remains recovered from the cairnfield at Stanton Moor
(Derbyshire Peak district), earlier this century revealed the different
treatment of males and females on the pyre prior to burning, collection
and deposition. Examination of ethnographic parallels suggests that death
and the regeneration of life is a recurrent theme in particular cremating
societies. The spheres of life and death are inextricably linked, particularly
for this period of prehistory. It will be argued that the cremation of
human remains represents a form of sacrifice which produces a physical
metaphor for a purified essence of fertility, the deposition of which ensures
the continuing success of the emergent subsistence base.
Jane Downes
(ARCUS, University of Sheffield)
The Work of Cremation
As anthropological accounts of cremation
can be said to have focused unduly on the burning of the body, so archaeological
investigations of the rite have almost exclusively been concerned with
the burial- a residue of what is increasingly recognised as a complex series
of events of which the burning of the body and the disposal of the remains
are only a small part. Certain of these events are recoverable archaeologically,
but only if the scope of investigation is extended beyond the burial.
Analysis of material from a middle
Bronze Age barrow cemetery in Orkney has provided detailed evidence of
a great variety of cremation rites and funerary architecture. The forms
of analysis undertaken at this site allow an appreciation of the cemetery
as a place of ritual labour, where the activities undertaken evoke the
scarred landscape of work rather than the sacred landscape of grassy knolls.
Jan Turek
(Research School of Archaeology,
University of Sheffield)
The Significance of Cremations in
the Prehistory of Central Europe
Social differentiation or different
ethnic identity may be one explanation for the choice of cremation/inhumation
methods in some periods of Later Prehistory.
I believe that neither of these interpretations
can be applied to the Eneolithic period. Exceptional evidence of a communal
cremation burial of the Late Eneolithic Corded Ware was recently recovered
in Central Bohemia. A deposit of at least four cremated human bodies was
accompanied by another three inhumations (buried in male position - orientated
with their heads to the west). Within the area of the cremation deposit
some spatial clustering was indicated suggesting a deliberate bias towards
the collection and burial of cranial bones (female position - orientated
to the east). This aspect is very interesting in the context of funerary
practices used within Corded Ware cemeteries (which exclusively consist
of inhumations), where great attention was paid to the symbolic expression
of the male and female phenomena. Even using this different method of burial,
the essential symbolic rule of the Corded Ware burial rite was respected.
In this paper I will argue that cremation
as a method of disposing of the dead is similar in form in all periods;
However its social symbolic meaning may vary in different prehistoric periods.
David Petts
(University of Reading)
Aspects of Roman Cremations
The normative view of Roman burial
practices in Britain is that cremation was the main form of burial until
the 3rd century, when inhumation became the dominant rite. However, in
paces cremations are found into the late 4th century and even beyond. Such
late cremations are usually explained in one of two ways. They are either
interpreted in ethnic terms as representing the burials of people of German
origin. Alternatively cremation is seen as an archaic rite practised by
people in an isolated location, cut of from contemporary burial fashions.
I hope to explore the phenomenon of late Roman cremation by viewing burial
practice not as a passive reflection of religious belief or fashion, but
as an active aspect of material culture, which was deployed in specific
situations for social and symbolic reasons. This will be done by looking
at the practice of cremation in two areas of Roman Britain: Hadrians Wall
and Wessex
John Pearce
(University of Durham)
From Death to Deposition: Cremation and the
construction of identity in mortuary practices of the Early Roman north-western
provinces
The act of cremation is often considered
to reduce the information available to us for the mortuary rituals of the
past, especially the data that can be obtained from human remains. However,
in the cremated bone and in the hitherto neglected pyre sites and deposits
of burnt debris, cremation also preserves evidence for the rites which
precede, accompany and follow the deposition of the cremated bone and grave
goods. This paper offers a method of interpretation of burial practice
which utilises this fuller range of source material. Consideration of this
broader body of evidence allows us to reconstruct past behaviour with a
greater degree of detail. During the course of funerary ritual the identity
of the dead can be argued not to be static but to represent a changing
construct through manipulation by the living. The evidence from cremation
cemeteries allows us to explore this structure of mortuary ritual. Although
the examples will be drawn from early Roman Britain and neighbouring parts
of Europe, the approach is still applicable to other cremating periods.
Howard Williams
(University of Reading)
"Burnt Germans in the Age of Iron"? Cremation
Practices in Context
For J.M. Kemble, writing in 1855,
early Anglo-Saxon cremation practices represented pagans of Germanic origin;
"The Burnt Germans of the age of Iron". Despite shifting theoretical perspectives,
new excavations, archaeological and osteological studies, Kemble's interpretation
remains influential. Even when cremation practices are not regarded in
these simplistic terms they are studied in isolation from contemporary
inhumation rites. Otherwise cremation and inhumation are treated as arbitrary
variations within similar ritual sequences.
This paper questions these approaches
by examining the relationships between inhumation and cremation rites at
the inter-regional, regional and cemetery levels in southern and eastern
England between the 5th and 7th centuries. With support from historical
and anthropological sources, it is argued that the choice between the two
rites involved divergent mortuary display, symbolism and treatment of the
body. These symbolic distinctions served in the negotiation and reproduction
of social identities within and between early medieval communities.
Malin Holst
(University of Bradford)
Comparisons between Inhumation and Cremation
Burial Rites in Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries
The question as to why some individuals
in the past were inhumed whilst others were cremated has been an issue
of contention for a number of decades. When studying Anglo-Saxon cemeteries-
where both rites occur frequently simultaneously- and comparing the inhumation
and cremation burials a number of similarities and distinctions can be
revealed. The latter are marked by the fact that cremation burials generally
contain fewer grave or pyre goods compared to inhumations. There is also
much greater distinction in objects relating to age and gender in inhumations
than in cremation burials. However, it has been suggested that these characteristics
might be expressed differently in cremations, possibly through the size
and decoration of the urn. Further work comparing these two rites and considering
ethnographic and documentary evidence might reveal the reasons for the
choice of burial ritual.
Nikola Theodossiev
(Sofia University, Bulgaria)
Religious Aspects of Cremation Burials in Ancient
Thrace
Numerous tumuli and flat graves with
cremation burials of the 1st millennium BC have been excavated in the lands
of the ancient Thracian tribes. Religious interpretation of this mortuary
practice is very difficult as the Thracians were non-literate people and
all the information on their religion is indirect, given by Greek and Roman
authors. The evidence is scarce and very often - partial. It is possible
to suppose however, that the cremation rites had been used to purify the
deceased, which is a common Indo-European belief. Simultaneously, there
are clear written sources which testify to the strong solar cult among
the Thracian tribes, who had believed in the solar male deity and the chthonic
Mother Goddess. Therefore, cremation rituals, when used in the aristocratic
burials, possibly had been connected with deification of the dead nobles
and their symbolic rebirth from the underworld, similar to the Sun god.