Projects per year
Abstract
In the later prehistoric British Isles, the construction of monumental architecture shifts signicantly, to the ‚domestic’ sphere of dwellings and settlements. Until the Middle Bronze Age, it was mainly ‘ritual’ sites, like stone and timber circles, and ‘communal’ burial sites, that were monumentalised, while settlements and domestic buildings seem to have hardly been elaborated. From the late Bronze Age onwards, settlements – including homesteads – are the focus of monumental enclosure and houses become much more substantial, and probably also much more elaborate. The ‘enclosed homesteads’ of later insular prehistory have a last heyday in the so-called ‘ringforts’ of Early Medieval Ireland. It is from that time and place that we have a rich indigenous tradition, which not only describes these sites and how they were outfitted, but also demonstrates that their architecture and appearance was closely linked to the social status of its inhabitants.
Translated title of the contribution | Show me how you live, then I will tell you who you are |
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Original language | German |
Pages (from-to) | 89-110 |
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft Wien |
Volume | 146 |
Publication status | Published - 19 Dec 2016 |
Keywords
- ARCHAEOLOGY
- Iron Age
- Early Medieval
- Britain
- Ireland
- Settlement
- Dwelling
- Society
- Socio-legal studies
- Europe
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- 6 Finished
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Politics and Power
Collis, J. & Karl, R., 1 Mar 2018, The Oxford Handbook of the European Iron Age. Wells, P. S., Rebay-Salisbury, K. & Haselgrove, C. (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 22 p.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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Essbares Geld: Nahrung als Zahlungsmittel in vormonetären kapitalistischen Wirtschaftssystemen
Karl, R., 13 Dec 2017, In: Mitteilungen der Antropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien. 147, p. 169 185 p.Translated title of the contribution :Edible money: Food as a means for payments in premonetary capitalist economic systems Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile -
In charge since time immemorial? Disused monumental features as markers of inherited social status.
Karl, R., 20 Dec 2017, Interpretierte Eisenzeiten 7. Fallstudien - Methoden - Theorie.: Tagungsbeiträge der 7. Linzer Gespräche zur interpretativen Eisenzeitarchäologie.. Karl, R. & Leskovar, J. (eds.). Linz, Austria: Oberösterreichisches Landesmuseum, Vol. 47. p. 75-90 (Studien zur Kulturgeschichte von Oberösterreich; vol. 47).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › peer-review
Open AccessFile