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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
In this paper we present a case of a double burial (T.310/326) from the Phoenician Punic necropolis of Monte Sirai (Carbonia, Sardinia, Italy). This peculiar tomb, which comprises the inhumation of a woman, presents unique constructive features, namely a big stone cover that confers a high visual reference to the necropolis. Furthermore, a cooking pot with two handles was laid on the tibias during the final closure of the tomb which included remains from at least three birds of the Turdidae family. Strikingly, these remains were mixed with those from a perinatal infant who could possibly constitute the progeny of the woman buried in the tomb. The combined XRD/FT-IR analysis showed that the infant remains underwent intense heat treatment, while the adult and bird remains remained unburned. This urned infant burial involving perinatal and animal remains has close analogies with practices of infant depositions in the contemporaneous Phoenician and Punic tophet sanctuaries of the central Mediterranean.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Punic period Funerary rites Combusted infant Turdidae family birds
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Piga, G., Pla Orquín, R., Guirguis, M., Gonçalves, D., Pimenta, C., Tereso, J. P., & Brunetti, A. (2020). Woman and child: The singular testimony of a Punic tomb in the necropolis of Monte Sirai (Carbonia-Sardinia, Italy). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 29 102095. doi: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2019.102095
Editora
Elsevier
