Ageing, Childhood and Social Identity in the Early Neolithic of Central Europe

被引:16
|
作者
Bickle, Penny [1 ]
Fibiger, Linda [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bristol, Dept Archaeol & Anthropol, Bristol BS8 1UU, Avon, England
[2] Univ Edinburgh, Sch Hist Archaeol & Class, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
Childhood; ageing; lifecourse; Neolithic; Linearbandkeramik; health; burial practices; ISOTOPE EVIDENCE; COMMUNITY; AGRICULTURE; ARCHAEOLOGY; PERSONHOOD; FERTILITY; DIVERSITY; CEMETERY; VIOLENCE; KINSHIP;
D O I
10.1179/1461957114Y.0000000052
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
In this paper, osteological and archaeological data are brought together to further our understanding of childhood in the early Neolithic Linearbandkeramik culture (LBK; c. 5500-5000 cal BC). In many characterizations of LBK society, fixed representations of sex or identities based on subsistence strategies pervade, with children rarely considered and then only as a specialized and separate topic of study. As a challenge to this view, a summary of the current models of childhood in the LBK culture is presented and debated with reference to the burial rites of children. A period of 'middle' childhood is proposed for the LBK culture. The osteological evidence suggests that childhood could be a time of dietary stress, perhaps with sex-based differences from childhood, and examples of the diseases and traumas suffered are discussed. Finally, the possibility that the children were actively contributing to acts of personal violence is raised. While the recognition of identity making as a continuous process remains a powerful exploratory route to investigating prehistoric societies, we argue that this should not discourage us from seeing identity as formed over the entire lifecourse.
引用
收藏
页码:208 / 228
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Neolithic Settlements in Central Europe: Data from the Project 'Lifestyle as an Unintentional Identity in the Neolithic'
    Pajdla, Petr
    Trampota, Frantisek
    [J]. JOURNAL OF OPEN ARCHAEOLOGY DATA, 2021, 9 : 1 - 6
  • [2] ANIMAL EXPLOITATION IN THE EARLY NEOLITHIC OF THE BALKANS AND CENTRAL EUROPE
    Manning, Katie
    Stopp, Barbara
    Colledge, Sue
    Downey, Sean
    Conolly, James
    Dobney, Keith
    Shennan, Stephen
    [J]. ORIGINS AND SPREAD OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS IN SOUTHWEST ASIA AND EUROPE, 2013, 59 : 237 - 252
  • [3] Patterns of Collective Violence in the Early Neolithic of Central Europe
    Meyer, Christian
    Kuerbis, Olaf
    Dresely, Veit
    Alt, Kurt W.
    [J]. PREHISTORIC WARFARE AND VIOLENCE: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE APPROACHES, 2018, : 21 - 38
  • [4] THE FORMATION OF SOCIAL RANK IN THE EARLY NEOLITHIC OF NORTHERN EUROPE
    Nielsen, Poul Otto
    Sorensen, Lasse
    [J]. ACTA ARCHAEOLOGICA, 2018, 89 (01) : 15 - 29
  • [5] SOCIAL-CHANGE IN THE LATER NEOLITHIC OF CENTRAL-EUROPE
    STARLING, NJ
    [J]. ANTIQUITY, 1985, 59 (225) : 30 - 38
  • [6] Moving on: the contribution of isotope studies to the early Neolithic of Central Europe
    Bickle, Penny
    Hofmann, Daniela
    [J]. ANTIQUITY, 2007, 81 (314) : 1029 - 1041
  • [7] The spread of the Neolithic to Central Europe
    Hummler, Madeleine
    [J]. ANTIQUITY, 2011, 85 (329) : 1106 - 1107
  • [8] What Have Genetics Ever Done for Us? The Implications of aDNA Data for Interpreting Identity in Early Neolithic Central Europe
    Hofmann, Daniela
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 2015, 18 (03) : 454 - 476
  • [9] SOCIAL IDENTITY ELABORATION IN THE EARLY-CHILDHOOD
    KOCSKI, M
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1992, 27 (3-4) : 294 - 294
  • [10] NEOLITHIC ECONOMY IN CENTRAL-EUROPE
    MILISAUSKAS, S
    KRUK, J
    [J]. JOURNAL OF WORLD PREHISTORY, 1989, 3 (04) : 403 - 446