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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Introduction: Ritual, Change, and Funerary Practices
Chapter 1: A Proper Burial. Some Thoughts on Changes in Mortuary Ritual and how Archaeology can begin to understand them
Chapter 2: Neolithic and Copper Age Mortuary Practices in the Italian Peninsula. Change of Meaning or Change of Medium?
Chapter 3: Change and Continuity in Early Bronze Age Mortuary Rites: A Case Study from Northumberland
Chapter 4: Causes and Contexts of Long-term Ritual Change: The Iron Age to Early Medieval Cemetery of Klin-Yar (North Caucasus, Russia)
Chapter 5: Passage to the Underworld. Continuity or Change in Etruscan Funerary Ideology and Practices (6th–2nd Centuries BC)?
Chapter 6: “Whether by Decay or Fire consumed …”: Cremation in Hellenistic and Roman Asia Minor
Chapter 7: A ‘Civilised’ Death? The Interpretation of Provincial Roman Grave Good Assemblages
Chapter 8: Friends, Foes and Hybrids: The Transformation of Burial Ritual in Roman Dalmatia
Chapter 9: Commemorating the Dead in North Africa. Continuity and Change from the Second to the Fifth Century CE
Chapter 10: Churches and Graves of the Early Byzantine Period in Scythia Minor and Moesia Secunda: The Development of a Christian Topography at the Periphery of the Roman Empire
Chapter 11: Social Anxiety and the Re-emergence of Furnished Burial in Post Roman Albania
Chapter 12: Changing Rituals and Reinventing Tradition: The burnt Viking Ship at Myklebostad, Western Norway
Chapter 13: Transforming Medieval Beliefs. The Significance of Bodily Resurrection to Medieval Burial Rituals
Chapter 14: Changing Beliefs about the Dead Body in Post-Medieval Britain and Ireland
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