The archaeology of infancy and infanticide

Session Organiser: Eleanor Scott
(King Alfred's College, Winchester)

The idea of the session is to stimulate and challenge the way in which we are thinking archaeologically about infants (or indeed not thinking about them). Infancy is surrounded and defined by social and historical constructions, but little significance has been attached to the processes which determined how infants lived, died and were perceived. This session therefore examines the ways in which patterns of infant care were (and are) metaphors for complex social beliefs and tensions. Further, in some contexts the infant is clearly transformed into a powerful symbol. The session looks in particular at infant death, including practices of infanticide and child sacrifice in different cultural contexts and the ways in which different societies bury and commemorate their infant dead. Critical questions such as whether or not preferential female infanticide was routinely practised in prehistory and antiquity - and the potential implications of this - will be raised and discussed, as will whether or not infants are "missing" from cemeteries because of differential preservation. The session speakers will also present new data, including an evaluation of recent research on the DNA sexing of infant skeletal material in Israel and the UK, as well as excavation of and research on recently excavated capacocha sacrifices in Peru. In conclusion, it is mooted that the infant and infancy are crucial components in the cultural maps of human societies, and infants can no longer be regarded as merely small humans of culturally inactive status. Infants may not be active agents but infancy has active agency.
 



Eleanor Scott
(Department of Archaeology, King Alfred's University College, Winchester SO22 4NR)

Introduction. Metaphors, tensions and routes to posterity: the archaeology of infancy and infanticide



Steve Bourget
(Department of Archaeology, King Alfred's University College, Winchester SO22 4NR)

Too young to die and too old to care: children and ancestors at Huaca de la Luna



K Alexandra Lee
(University of Cambridge, Cambridge)

Infant sacrifice at Carthage and the social ideal of the child



John Pearce
(Department of Archaeology, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE)

Constructions of infancy - aspects of the mortuary rituals for infants and children in late Iron Age and Roman Britain (and neighbouring provinces)



Simon Mays
(English Heritage, 23 Savile Row, London W1X 1AB)

New directions in the scientific study of infant skeletons from archaeological sites



Marina Faerman
(Dept of Anatomy, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, POB 12272, Jerusalem, 1120, Israel)

Determining the sex of infanticide victims from the Late Roman era through ancient DNA analysis