This study analyses the funerary practices in hypogea (rock-cut tombs) of the Middle Bronze Age in southern Portugal with the aim of deepening our understanding of Bronze Age funerary rituals in southwestern Iberia. A total of 57 hypogea from seven archaeological sites were examined. The study followed an interdisciplinary approach integrating data from biological anthropology and archaeology, articulating chronology, osteological analysis, funerary architecture, and material culture. The hypogea date to the first half of the 2nd millennium BCE, corresponding to the regional Middle Bronze Age. Of the 95 individuals analysed, 82% were adults; females represented 34% and males 21% of the total sample. The hypogea present several architectural typologies, with entrances oriented towards southeast (30%), northeast (23%), southwest (22%), and northwest (22%), possibly related to moments of the solar cycle. Burials were single (54%), double (17%), or multiple (11%), with 68% primary inhumations and 32% secondary inhumations, reflecting the re-use of funerary spaces. Grave goods, present in 57% of the cases, were more frequent and diversified among women, including ceramic vessels (79%) and metal awls (61%). Like male individuals, women were also associated with weapons, suggesting an elevated social status for both sexes.
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Marta Borges
Hugo Aluai Sampaio
Ana M. S. Bettencourt
Quaternary
University of Minho
Direção Geral do Património Cultural
Escola de Negócios e Administração
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Borges et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e320af40886becb653fd3d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/quat9020032