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Dynamic Funerary Monuments of North-western Europe: Chronological Modelling of a Late Neolithic–Pre-Roman Iron Age Cemetery Complex at Mang de Bargen, Northern Germany

This study presents the first extensive radiocarbon dating programme of Bronze Age material from northern Germany, and it combines radiocarbon dates, relative typo-chronological date ranges, and stratigraphic data within a Bayesian chronological framework. We estimate the cemetery complex at Mang de...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 2024, p.1-21
Main Authors: AGERSKOV ROSE, HELENE, SCHAEFER-DI MAIDA, STEFANIE, KNEISEL, JUTTA
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This study presents the first extensive radiocarbon dating programme of Bronze Age material from northern Germany, and it combines radiocarbon dates, relative typo-chronological date ranges, and stratigraphic data within a Bayesian chronological framework. We estimate the cemetery complex at Mang de Bargen (Bornhöved, distr. Segeberg, Schleswig-Holstein) to be in use for more than two millennia, which is exceptionally long in northern Germany and in a wider European context. The site provides a unique insight into the dynamic nature of burial monuments and associated burial practices, from the Late Neolithic and into the Pre-Roman Iron Age ( c . 2500–50 bc ). The barrow building tradition lasted around a millennium ( c . 2350 – 1300 bc ), with several barrows in concurrent use. The barrows were persistently re-used as burial ground, both within ‘living memory’ of the primary graves, but also long after. The burial intensity varied over the cemetery’s use-life, with distinct peaks in the Late Neolithic, when the first barrows were erected; in the Older Bronze Age when more barrows were erected; in the Younger Bronze Age, when secondary cremation graves were added to existing barrows; and finally in the Pre-Roman Iron Age, with the addition of an urnfield. The funerary rituals vary considerably over the period: from inhumation to cremation, and from primary and secondary graves in barrows to flat graves. Cremation was introduced in the 14th century bc but inhumation and cremation were used in parallel for around a century before the former ritual was abandoned c . 1300 bc . The study provides absolute chronological distributions of the grave types present at Mang de Bargen and shows them to be comparable to other sites at a regional and over-regional scale, successfully demonstrating how new types were quickly adopted across large parts of north-western Europe. Monuments Funéraires Dynamiques du Nord-Ouest de l’Europe : Modélisation Chronologique d’un Complexe Funéraire Néolithique Final-Age du Fer Romain à Mang de Bargen, Nord de l’Allemagne , par Helene Agerskov Rose, Stefanie Schaefer-Di Maida, et Jutta Kneisel. Cette étude présente le premier programme exhaustif de datation radiocarbone de matériels de l’âge du Bronze du nord de l’Allemagne. Elle associe dates radiocarbones, attributions typo-chronologiques relatives, et données stratigraphiques avec un cadre chronologique Bayésian. La durée d’utilisation du complexe funéraire de Mang de Bargen (Bornhöve
ISSN:0079-497X
2050-2729
2050-2729
DOI:10.1017/ppr.2024.3