Dynamic Funerary Monuments of North-western Europe: Chronological Modelling of a Late Neolithic–Pre-Roman Iron Age Cemetery Complex at Mang de Bargen, Northern Germany

Helene Agerskov Rose, Stefanie Schaefer-Di Maida, J. Kneisel
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Abstract

This study presents the first extensive radiocarbon dating programme of Bronze Age material from northern Germany, and it combines radiocarbon dates, relative typo-chronological date ranges, and stratigraphic data within a Bayesian chronological framework. We estimate the cemetery complex at Mang de Bargen (Bornhöved, distr. Segeberg, Schleswig-Holstein) to be in use for more than two millennia, which is exceptionally long in northern Germany and in a wider European context. The site provides a unique insight into the dynamic nature of burial monuments and associated burial practices, from the Late Neolithic and into the Pre-Roman Iron Age (c. 2500–50 bc). The barrow building tradition lasted around a millennium (c. 2350 –1300 bc), with several barrows in concurrent use. The barrows were persistently re-used as burial ground, both within ‘living memory’ of the primary graves, but also long after. The burial intensity varied over the cemetery’s use-life, with distinct peaks in the Late Neolithic, when the first barrows were erected; in the Older Bronze Age when more barrows were erected; in the Younger Bronze Age, when secondary cremation graves were added to existing barrows; and finally in the Pre-Roman Iron Age, with the addition of an urnfield. The funerary rituals vary considerably over the period: from inhumation to cremation, and from primary and secondary graves in barrows to flat graves. Cremation was introduced in the 14th century bc but inhumation and cremation were used in parallel for around a century before the former ritual was abandoned c. 1300 bc. The study provides absolute chronological distributions of the grave types present at Mang de Bargen and shows them to be comparable to other sites at a regional and over-regional scale, successfully demonstrating how new types were quickly adopted across large parts of north-western Europe.
欧洲西北部的动态殡葬古迹:德国北部 Mang de Bargen 新石器时代晚期至罗马时代前期铁器时代墓地群的年代学建模
这项研究首次对德国北部青铜时代的材料进行了广泛的放射性碳测年,并在贝叶斯年代学框架内将放射性碳测年日期、相对错位年代范围和地层数据结合在一起。我们估计 Mang de Bargen(石勒苏益格-荷尔斯泰因州 Segeberg 地区 Bornhöved)墓地群的使用时间超过两千年,这在德国北部和欧洲范围内都是非常长的。从新石器时代晚期到前罗马铁器时代(约公元前 2500 年至公元前 50 年),该遗址提供了一个独特的视角,让人们了解墓葬纪念碑和相关墓葬习俗的动态性质。建造荒冢的传统持续了大约一千年(约公元前 2350 年至公元前 1300 年),同时有几个荒冢在使用。无论是在 "生活记忆 "中的原始墓穴,还是在很久很久以后,这些荒冢都一直被重新用作墓地。在墓地使用的整个过程中,墓葬的密集程度各不相同,在新石器时代晚期出现了明显的高峰,当时竖立了第一批墓穴;在青铜时代晚期,竖立了更多的墓穴;在青铜时代早期,在现有的墓穴上增建了二级火葬墓;最后在罗马时代以前的铁器时代,增建了一个瓮田。在这一时期,殡葬仪式有很大的不同:从土葬到火葬,从荒冢中的一级墓和二级墓到平坟。火葬始于公元前 14 世纪,但在公元前 1300 年放弃前一种仪式之前的大约一个世纪里,吸入式和火葬并行使用。这项研究提供了 Mang de Bargen 坟墓类型的绝对年代分布情况,并表明这些类型在区域和超区域范围内与其他遗址具有可比性,成功地证明了新类型是如何在欧洲西北部的大片地区被迅速采用的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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