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The Development of Neolithic House Societies in Orkney (Paperback)
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The Development of Neolithic House Societies in Orkney (Paperback)
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Considering that Orkney is a group of relatively small islands
lying off the northeast coast of the Scottish mainland, its wealth
of Neolithic archaeology is truly extraordinary. An assortment of
houses, chambered cairns, stone circles, standing stones and
passage graves provides an unusually comprehensive range of
archaeological and architectural contexts. Yet, in the early 1990s,
there was a noticeable imbalance between 4th and 3rd millennium cal
BC evidence, with house structures, and 'villages' being well
represented in the latter but minimally in the former. As elsewhere
in the British Isles, the archaeological visibility of the 4th
millennium cal BC in Orkney tends to be dominated by the monumental
presence of chambered cairns or tombs. In the 1970s Claude
Levi-Strauss conceived of a form of social organisation based upon
the'house' - societes a maisons - in order to provide a
classification for social groups that appeared not to conform to
established anthropological kinship structures. In this approach,
the anchor point is the 'house', understood as a conceptual
resource that is a consequence of a strategy of constructing and
legitimising identities under ever shifting social conditions.
Drawing on the results of an extensive programme of fieldwork in
the Bay of Firth, Mainland Orkney, the text explores the idea that
the physical appearance of the house is a potent resource for
materialising the dichotomous alliance and descent principles
apparent in the archaeological evidence for the early and later
Neolithic of Orkney. It argues that some of the insights made by
Levi-Strauss in his basic formulation of societesa maisons are
extremely relevant to interpreting the archaeological evidence and
providing the parameters for a 'social' narrative of the material
changes occurring in Orkney between the 4th and 2nd millennia cal
BC. The major excavations undertaken during the Cuween-Wideford
Landscape Project provided an unprecedented depth and variety of
evidence for Neolithic occupation, bridging the gap between
domestic and ceremonial architecture and form, exploring the
transition from wood to stone and relationships between the living
and the dead and the role of material culture. The results are
described and discussed in detail here, enabling tracing of the
development and fragmentation of societes a maisons over a 1500
year period of Northern Isles prehistory.
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