Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T16:13:44.080Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Monumental burials and memorial feasting: an example from the southern Brazilian highlands

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

José Iriarte
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Exeter, Laver Building, North Park Road, Exeter, EX4 4QE, UK (Email: [email protected])
J. Christopher Gillam
Affiliation:
Savannah River Archaeological Research Program, South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1321 Pendleton Street, Columbia, SC 29208, USA
Oscar Marozzi
Affiliation:
SAR, Servicios Arqueológicos, Uruguay

Abstract

What happened at the sites of prehistoric burial mounds after they were erected? In the southern highlands of Brazil and Argentina the pre-Hispanic mounds of the twelfth-thirteenth centuries AD are surrounded by large circular enclosures with avenues leading to their centre. The authors discovered that the banks of the surrounding enclosure were built up over several generations of time, accompanied by a succession of ovens. Ethnohistoric observations of more recent peoples in the same region suggested an explanation: the cremation of a chief was followed by periodic feasts at his mound, where meat was steamed and maize beer prepared at the edge of the gathering.

Type
Research
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Baldus, H. 1937. Ensaios de etnologia brasileira. São Paulo: Companhia Editorial Nacional.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. 1996. The living, the dead and the ancestors: Neolithic and Early Bronze Age mortuary practices, in Preucel, R. & Hodder, I. (ed.) Contemporary archaeology in theory: 394412. London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1998. The significance of monuments on the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Beber, M. V. 2005. O sistema do asentamento dos grupos ceramistas do planalto sul-brasilero: o caso da Tradição Taquara/Itararé, in Arqueologia no Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil (Documentos 10): 5125. São Leopoldo, Brazil: Instituto Anchietano de Pesquisas, UNISINOS.Google Scholar
Beck, L. A. 1995. Regional approaches to mortuary analysis. London: Plenum.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Becker, I. I. 1976. O Índio Kaingang no Rio Grande do Sul. São Leopoldo, Brazil: Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos.Google Scholar
Brochado, J. P. 1984. An ecological model for the spread of pottery and agriculture into Eastern South America. Unpublished dissertation, University of Illinois.Google Scholar
Carr, C. & Case, T.. 2005. Gathering Hopewell: society, ritual and ritual interaction. New York: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chmyz, I. & Sauner, Z. C.. 1971. Nota prévia sobre as pesquisas arqueológicas no vale do rio Piquiri. Dédalo 13: 736.Google Scholar
Chmyz, I., Perota, C., Mueller, H. I. & Fleury Da Rocha, M. L.. 1968. Nota sôbre a arqueologia do vale do Rio Itararé. Revista do Centro de Ensino e Pesquisas Arqueológicas 1: 723.Google Scholar
Chmyz, I., Bora, E., Ceccon, R. Santos, Sganzerla, M. E. & Volcov, J. E.. 2003. A arqueologia da área do aterro Sanitário da região metropolitana de Curitiba, em Mandirituba, Paraná. Arqueologia 2: 1138.Google Scholar
Copé, S. M. 2007. El uso de la arquitectura como artefacto en el estudio de paisajes arqueológicos del altiplano sur brazilieño, Rio Grande do Sul. Revista de Arquelogía 2: 1534Google Scholar
Copé, S. M. & Saldanha, J. D.. 2002. Em busca de um sistema de assentamento para o Planalto Sul-Rio-Grandense: escavações no Sítio RS-AN-03, Bom Jesus, RS. Pesquisas Antropologia 58: 107–20.Google Scholar
Criado, F., Gianotti, C. & Mañana, P.. 2006. Before the barrows: forms of monumentality and forms of complexity in Iberia and Uruguay, in Šmejda, L. (ed.) Archaeology of burial mounds: proceedings of the EAA 9th annual meeting, Saint-Petersburg 2003 (Dryada Archeologica series): 3851. Plze: Department of Archaeology, University of West Bohemia.Google Scholar
De Masi, M. A. N. 2005. Relatório final. projeto de salvamento arqueológico usina hidrelétrica de Campos Novos. Florianópolis, Brazil.Google Scholar
De Masi, M. A. N. (ed.) 2006. Xokleng 2869 a.C. As terras altas do sul do Brasil. Tubarão: Editora Unisul.Google Scholar
De Souza, J. G. 2007. Significados da morte: interpretando as estruturas funerárias de Pinhal da Serra (RS) e Anita Garibaldi (SC). Anais do XIV Congresso da Sociedade de Arqueologia Brasileira(CD-ROM).Google Scholar
Denevan, W. M. 2001. Cultivated landscapes of native Amazonia and the Andes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dietler, M. 2001. Theorizing the feast: rituals of consumption, comensal politics, and power in African contexts, in Dietler, M. & Hayden, B. (ed.) Feasts: archaeological and ethnographic perspectives on food, politics and power: 65114. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Dillehay, T. D. 1995. Mounds of the social death: Araucanian funerary rites and political succession, in Dillehay, T. (ed.) Tombs for the living: Andean mortuary practices: 281313. Washington (DC): Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Dillehay, T. D. 2004. Social landscape and ritual pause: uncertainty and integration in formative Peru. Journal of Social Archaeology 4: 239–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dillehay, T. D. 2007. Monuments, resistance and empires in the Andes: Araucanian ritual narratives and polity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dreyfus, S. 1972. Los Kayapo del norte de Brasil. México: Instituto indigenista Interamericano.Google Scholar
Fleming, A. 1973. Tombs for the living. Man 8: 177–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iriarte, J. 2006. Landscape transformation, mounded villages, and adopted cultigens: the rise of early Formative communities in south-eastern Uruguay. World Archaeology 38: 644–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iriarte, J. 2007. New perspectives on plant domestication and the spread of agriculture in the Americas, in Denham, T., Iriarte, J. & Vrydaghs, L. (ed.) Rethinking agriculture: archaeological and ethnoarchaeological perspectives (One World Archaeology 51): 167–88. Walnut Creek (CA): Left Coast Press.Google Scholar
Iriarte, J. n.d. Phytolith analysis of ceramic sherds' residues from site PM01, ElDorado, Misiones, Argentina. Manuscript on File. Archaeobotany Laboratory, Department of Archaeology, University of Exeter.Google Scholar
Iriarte, J. & Behling, H.. 2007. The expansion of Araucaria forest in the southern Brazilian highlands during the last 4000 years and its implications for the development of the Taquara/Itararé Tradition. Environmental Archaeology 12: 115–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iriarte, J., Marozzi, O. & Gillam, C.. 2007. Rivers of encounters: the cultural and environmental history of the Paraná River. Project report of survey and excavations at the ElDorado enclosure complex, Misiones, Argentina. Submitted to Committee for Research and Exploration, National Geographic Society.Google Scholar
Kertzer, D. I. 1988. Ritual, politics, and power. New Heaven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
López, J. M. 2001. Las estructuras tubulares (cerritos) del litoral Atlantico uruguayo. Latin American Antiquity 12: 231–55.Google Scholar
Mabilde, P. F. 1983. Apontamentos sobre os indígenas selvagens da nação Coroados dos matos da província do Rio Grande do Sul. São Paulo: IBRASA/INL; Brasília: Fundação Nacional Pró-Memória.Google Scholar
Maniser, H. H. 1930. Les Kaingang de São Paulo. Proceedings of the 23rd international Congress of Americanists, New York 17-22 September 1928: 760–91.Google Scholar
Maybury-Lewis, D. 1974. Akwẽ-Shavante society. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Maybury-Lewis, D. 1979. Dialectical societies: the Gê and Bororo of central Brazil. Cambridge (MA): Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menghin, O. F. 1957. El poblamiento prehistórico de Misiones. Anales de Arqueología y Etnologia XII: 1940.Google Scholar
Mètraux, A. 1934. El estado actual de nuestros conocimientos sobre la extensión primitiva de la influencia guarani y arawak en el continente sudamericano. Actas y trabajos científicos del 25° ongreso Internacional de Americanistas (La Plata 1932): 181–90. Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Mètraux, A. 1946. The Caingang, in Steward, J. H. (ed.) Handbook of South American Indians. Volume 1: the marginal tribes: 445–77. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Nimuendajú, C. 1939. The Apinayé (Anthropological series 8). Washington (DC): Catholic University of America Press.Google Scholar
Nimuendajú, C. 1942. The Serente (Publications of the Frederick Webb Hodge Anniversary Publication Fund 4). Los Angeles (CA): Southwest Museum.Google Scholar
Noelli, F. 1998. The Tupi: explaining origin and expansions in terms of archaeology and of historical linguistics. Antiquity 277: 648–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noelli, F. 2000. A ocupação humana na região sul do Brasil: arqueologia, debates e perspectivas. Revista USP (Universidade de São Paulo) 44: 218–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noelli, F. 2005. Rethinking stereotypes and the history of research on Jê populations in South Brazil, in Funari, P., Zarankin, A. & Stovel, E.. (ed.) Global archaeological theory: contextual voices and contemporary thoughts: 166–90. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Nordenskiöld, E. 1930. Ars Americana: l”archéologie du bassin de l'Amazone. Paris: C. van Oest.Google Scholar
Ottonello, M. & Lorandi, A. M.. 1987. Introducción a la arqueología y etnología. Buenos Aires: EUDEBA.Google Scholar
Paula, J. M. 1924. Memória sobre os Botocudos de Paraná e Santa Catarina organizada pelo Serviço de Proteção dos Selvícolas. Anais do 200 Congresso internacional de Americanistas 1: 117–37.Google Scholar
Prous, A. 1992. Arqueologia Brasileira. Brasilia: Editora da Universidade de Brasília.Google Scholar
Prous, A. 1999. Agricultores de Minas Gerais, in Ten, M. C.ório (ed.) Pré-história da Terra Brasilis: 346–58. Rio de Janeiro: Editora da Universidade Federal Rio de Janeiro.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. 1973. Before civilization. London: Jonathan Cape.Google Scholar
Saldanha, J.D.M. 2005. Paisagem, lugares e cultura material. Unpublished MA Dissertation, Pontificia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil.Google Scholar
Saunders, R. 2004. Stratigraphy at the Rollins Shell Ring Site: implications for ring function. The Florida Anthropologist 57(4): 249–70.Google Scholar
Schaden, F. 1958. Xokléng e Kaingang. Revista de Antropologia 6(2): 105–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmitz, P. I. & Becker, I. I.. 1991. Os primitivos engenheiros do planalto es suas estructuras subterrâneas: a Tradição Taquara, in Arqueologia Pré-histórica do Rio Grande do Sul: 251–93. Porto Alegre: Mercado Aberto.Google Scholar
Schmitz, P. I., Rogge, J. H., Rosa, A. O. & Beber, M. V.. 1998. Aterros indígenas no Pantanal do Mato Grosso do Sul (Pesquisas Antropologia 54). São Leopoldo, Brazil: Instituto Anchietano de Pesquisas.Google Scholar
Seeger, A. 1981. Nature and society in central Brazil. The Suya Indians of Mato Grosso. Cambridge (MA): Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wachnitz, G. A. 1984. Prehistoria Altoparanaense Preguarani. Misiones, Argentina: Imprenta Seyfried.Google Scholar
Weninger, B., JöRIS, O. & Danzeglocke, U.. 2004. Calpal– the Cologne radiocarbon CALibration and PALaeoclimate research package. Available at http://www.calpal.de.Google Scholar
Werner, D. 1984. Amazon journey; an anthropologist's year among Brazil's Mekranoti indians. New York: Simon & Schuster.Google Scholar
Wüst, I. & Barreto, C.. 1999. The ring villages of Central Brazil. A challenge for Amazonian archaeology. Latin American Antiquity 10 (1): 323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar