Zeige mir, wie Du wohnst, dann sage ich Dir, wer Du bist
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In: Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft Wien, Vol. 146, 19.12.2016, p. 89-110.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Zeige mir, wie Du wohnst, dann sage ich Dir, wer Du bist
AU - Karl, Raimund
PY - 2016/12/19
Y1 - 2016/12/19
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - ARCHAEOLOGY
KW - Iron Age
KW - Early Medieval
KW - Britain
KW - Ireland
KW - Settlement
KW - Dwelling
KW - Society
KW - Socio-legal studies
KW - Europe
M3 - Erthygl
VL - 146
SP - 89
EP - 110
JO - Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft Wien
JF - Mitteilungen der Anthropologischen Gesellschaft Wien
SN - 0373-5656
ER -