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Burials and Society in Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Ireland (Paperback)
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Burials and Society in Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Ireland (Paperback)
Series: Queen's University Belfast Irish Archaeological Monograph
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Burials and Society in Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age
Ireland describes and analyses the increasing complexity of later
Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age burial in Ireland, using burial
complexity as a proxy for increasing social complexity, and as a
tool for examining social structure. The book commences with a
discussion of theoretical approaches to the study of burials in
both anthropology and archaeology and continues with a summary of
the archaeological and environmental background to the Irish
Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age. Then a set of criteria for
identifying different types of social organisation is proposed,
before an in-depth examination of the radiocarbon chronology of
Irish Single Burials, which leads to a multifaceted statistical
analysis of the Single Burial Tradition burial utilising
descriptive and multivariate statistical approaches. A
chronological model of the Irish Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age
is then presented which provides the basis for a discussion of
increasing burial and social complexity in Ireland over this
period, proposing an evolution from an egalitarian society in the
later Chalcolithic Period through to a prestige goods chiefdom
emerging around 1900 BC. It is suggested that the decline of copper
production at Ross Island, Co. Cork after 2000 BC may have led to a
'copper crisis' which would have been a profoundly disrupting
event, destroying the influence of copper miners and shifting power
to copper workers, and those who controlled them. This would have
provided a stimulus towards the centralisation of power and the
emergence of a ranked social hierarchy. The effects of this 'copper
crisis' would have been felt in Britain also, where much Ross
Island copper was consumed and may have led to similar
developments, with the emergence of the Wessex Culture a similar
response in Britain to the same stimulus.
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