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Practices of Wealth Depositing in the 1st-9th Century AD Eastern Baltic (Paperback)
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Practices of Wealth Depositing in the 1st-9th Century AD Eastern Baltic (Paperback)
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This PhD thesis discusses the practices of wealth depositing in the
1st-9th century AD eastern Baltic (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania).
Wealth deposits are one or more valued object/s that is/are hidden
deliberately as an intended separate deposition in a selected place
in a specific, distinguishable manner. Wealth depositing is
regarded as an important cultural practice which relates to and
derives from various past social phenomena and changes respectively
in spatial and temporal terms. It is emphasised that wealth
deposits should be analysed as a cohesive corpus of material,
regardless of specific artefact types, functional groups,
production material, environment of concealment, and most
importantly without any predetermined interpretation
categorisations. The dissertation presents different patterned
practices of concealing valuables in the 1st-9th century AD eastern
Baltic through a detailed contextual analysis of their main
material characteristics: artefacts, their assemblages and
appearance, environment of concealment, chronology and location in
the cultural landscape. The study demonstrates how depositional
practices change in time and space, and analyses relations between
specific depositional practices and developments on a wider social
scale. A comparative analysis of wealth deposits and important
social changes in contemporary society based on overall
archaeological material is presented. The key regional and
cross-regional practices of wealth depositing in the 1st-9th
century AD eastern Baltic are identified. Additionally, further
comparisons are drawn between depositional practices in the eastern
Baltic and other parts of the Baltic Sea region, especially
Scandinavia. This thesis contributes to the discussions of concepts
of value and depositional practices in a long-term and
cross-regional perspective. A further aim is to look beyond the
problematic 'why?'-questions posed in the studies of wealth
deposits, and move instead to more comprehensible questions of
'how?': how do depositional practices change in time and space, and
how are these processes related to developments in a broader social
context? The book contains a catalogue of all the 1st-9th century
AD Eastern Baltic deposits analysed in the dissertation with
descriptions of objects, environments of concealment, find
circumstances, illustrations/photos and further references.
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