Book Cover

Burial, Society and Context in the Roman World

Contributor(s): Pearce, John (Author), Millett, Martin (Author), Struck, Manuela (Author)

ISBN: 9781842170342

Publisher: Oxbow Books Limited

Binding Types:

$59.99
$72.94 (Final Price)
$71.74 (100+ copies: $70.99)
List/retail price:
$59.99
- +
Buy

Pub Date: November 11, 2015

Dewey: 393.10937

LCCN: 2001409923

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Illustrated

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.69" H x 11.86" L x 8.26" W ( 2.16 lbs) 256 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Although a large number of cemeteries have been explored in Roman Britain they have never been seen as central to the study of the province.

Brief description: John Pearce is Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at King's College, London. His research interests lie in Roman archaeology, especially Italy and the provinces of north-western Europe with particular emphasis on funerary evidence as a source for understanding Roman society, including commemorative memorials, burial rituals and the remains of the dead themselves.

Review Quotes: As one of the editors of the collection stresses, Roman modes of burial have had relatively scant attention, unless linked to particular historical issues, such as the spread of Christianity. The theoretical possibilities of the so-called archaeology of death have been tried frequently enough upon Greek and Etruscan material: but Rome is no less rich in data. There are several studies included here of mortuary practices in Rome and Italy in later antiquity, but principal consideration is given to the north-west provinces. How funerary rituals can be reconstructed; what burials tell us about social status; how landscapes of commemoration were shaped, and to what extent localized traditions might be Romanized - these are the subdivisions of a volume which ... carries all the signs of current archaeological investigation. Beyond the black-dotted plans and diagrams, what emerges is not so much a prospect of redefining the generalities of some supposedly Roman way of death, but rather the impertinence of such a category. Thanks to the microscopic techniques of examining carbonised plant remains (archaeobotany) and bodily traces (palaeopathology), every excavated grave is redeemed by its own story. To paraphrase Rupert Brooke - we shall not hear their trentals, nor eat their arval bread. But to ponder the number of newly-born infants buried in jars at a Gallo-Roman cemetery in the forest of Fontainebleau, and the assortment of grave goods left with the adults there - old shoes, coarse potshards, handfuls of nails - is insight hinged with the pathos of human fellowship.'--Nigel Spivey "Greece and Rome, 49, 2002"

Product successfully added to cart!