Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

40
Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status

Transcript of Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Page 1: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Approaches to History: Archaeology

Burials: Identity and Status

Page 2: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

What can burials tell us about status and power in early medieval Europe?

• What determined social status? Gender, age-grades, descent, etc. – not profession or ‘class’

• Early medieval social structure: written sources

• The importance of gift-giving and portable wealth in a non-monetised society

Page 3: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Earliest Frankish laws: the Lex Salica

Page 4: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Conspicuous consumption of surplus through gift-giving:

The Staffordshire Hoard: c 7th century

Page 5: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Conspicuous consumption of surplus: the Kingston brooch

Page 6: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.
Page 7: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Case Study I: The burial of Childeric I(Merovingian ‘king’, d. 481-2)

Page 8: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Stilicho, leader of the western Roman army: nb crossbow brooch

Page 9: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Childeric’s signet ring: ‘Childerici regis’, a ‘long-haired king’

Page 10: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Childeric: Romanitas

Page 11: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

5th-century horse sacrifices near Childeric’s grave

(St Brice, Tournai)

Page 12: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.
Page 13: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.
Page 14: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Early Anglo-Saxon ‘kingdoms’

Page 15: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Case Study II: Sutton Hoo, SE Suffolk (R. Deben)

Page 16: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Plan of the Sutton Hoo cemetery: 16 burial mounds (barrows)

Page 17: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The Sutton Hoo ship burial (Mound 1) under excavation, 1939

Page 18: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.
Page 19: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

3 symbolic categories of finds hold the key to ‘reading’ the status of ‘Mound 1

Man’ (Maybe Redwald d. 624-5?):

• Feasting and drinking equipment: symbolic of the provision of hospitality/gifts

• Roman/Byzantine objects & imitations: symbolic of ‘Romanitas’

• Objects symbolizing international connections

Page 20: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Byzantine silver bowls: for washing?

Page 21: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Preparing the feast: the cauldron

Page 22: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The drinking horns

Page 23: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Sutton Hoo: the drinking set

Page 24: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The drinking set: The burr wood cups

Page 25: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Sutton Hoo: the ‘tub’

Page 26: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Sutton Hoo: reconstruction of the lyre

Page 27: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Gifts of gold: the great gold buckle

Page 28: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

‘Romanitas’: The ‘Coptic’ bowl from the Eastern mediterranean

Page 29: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The ‘Anastasius’ dish

Page 30: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The Sutton Hoo Helmet

Page 31: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Late Roman helmets

Page 32: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Mound 1 Man

Page 33: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

8th-century genealogy of the East Anglian kings

Page 34: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

International connections: the purse-lid, coins and blanks

Page 35: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The Sutton Hoo ship: links to the Svea region of Sweden (a link to the Wylfings?)

Page 36: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

The Sutton Hoo ship: half-size replica

Page 37: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Case Study III: Late Saxon execution burials

Page 38: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Late Saxon Execution Burials placed near prehistoric/pagan Saxon burial

mounds

Page 39: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.

Execution burials near boundaries

Page 40: Approaches to History: Archaeology Burials: Identity and Status.