Magical practices? A non-normative Roman imperial cremation at Sagalassos

Many thousands of burials have been excavated from across the Roman world, documenting a variety of funerary practices and rites. Individual burials, however, sometimes stand out for their atypical characteristics. The authors report the discovery of a cremation burial from ancient Sagalassos that d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Antiquity 2023-02, Vol.97 (391), p.158-175
Hauptverfasser: Claeys, Johan, Van de Vijver, Katrien, Marinova, Elena, Cleymans, Sam, Degryse, Patrick, Poblome, Jeroen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many thousands of burials have been excavated from across the Roman world, documenting a variety of funerary practices and rites. Individual burials, however, sometimes stand out for their atypical characteristics. The authors report the discovery of a cremation burial from ancient Sagalassos that differs from contemporaneous funerary deposits. In this specific context, the cremated human remains were not retrieved but buried in situ, surrounded by a scattering of intentionally bent nails, and carefully sealed beneath a raft of tiles and a layer of lime. For each of these practices, textual and archaeological parallels can be found elsewhere in the ancient Mediterranean world, collectively suggesting that magical beliefs were at work.
ISSN:0003-598X
1745-1744
DOI:10.15184/aqy.2022.171