Results 221 to 230 of about 16,169 (251)
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Craniology and the Funerary Rite of the Population of Scythian Neapolis

Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia, 2017
Abstract This article describes an attempt of the comparison between data assembled by archaeologists and physical anthropologists relating to group burials in earth catacombs of the Eastern Necropolis at Scythian Neapolis. A coincidence was identified between variability trends in craniometric and some archaeological features.
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Funerary Rites and the Undercurrents of Authoritarianism: The Cases of Zhu and Song

Chinese Sociology & Anthropology, 2000
Practically every unit of every trade and profession in Beijing organized street demonstrations to support the students' hunger-strike petition in mid-May 1989. I was marching and shouting slogans along Chang'an Boulevard one day with a group from the Central Ministry of Radio and Television when a number of trucks filled with supporters drove up ...
Zhu Xiaoyang, Anita Chan
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Ritual and Funerary Rites in Later Prehistoric Scotland

2019
A report of research undertaken as part of a research grant from the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.
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Funerary Rites and Practices, Greco-Roman

2015
A description of the typical Egyptian treatment of the body from death to interment during Ptolemaic and Roman times will not differ in its main elements from a similar account of earlier periods: The dead were mourned at home and then transported to the embalming place, normally situated on the west bank of the Nile River, where the mummification of ...
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Bronze Age ‘Barrows’ and Funerary Rites and Rituals of Cremation

Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1997
This paper discusses the evidence for pyre sites, debris, and technology associated with the disposal of cremated human remains in Bronze Age ‘barrows’. The use of the terms such as ‘cremation’, ‘cremation burial’, and ‘cremation-related feature’ are examined.
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Small Bowls and Saltcellars in Funerary Rite of Volna 1 Necropolis

Stratum plus. Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology
The article analyzes a complex of miniature bowls and saltcellars from the end of the 6th to the middle of the 3rd cen­tury BC, found in 172 burials from the necropolis of the Volna 1 settlement. Different in form (14 variants), they are equally found accompanying male and female burials. Among the black-glazed vessels, a saltcellar of Southern Italian
Tatyana Egorova   +2 more
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Funerary Rites and Christianization Issues of the Indigenous Population in the Taz Arctic

Stratum plus. Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology
The article addresses the burial complex Num-hibya-siheri VIa, located on the territory of the Taz district, Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug (Russia), studied in 2016—2018. The novelty and originality of the study lies in the comprehensive approach to the analysis of Christian burials of Selkup children in the Arctic region of Western Siberia with ...
Alexander Tkachev   +4 more
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