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Iron Age ‘Predatory Landscapes’: A Bioarchaeological and Funerary Exploration of Captivity and Enslavement in Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 April 2020

Rebecca Redfern*
Affiliation:
Museum of London 150 London Wall LondonEC2Y 5HNUK & Newcastle University School of History, Classics and Archaeology Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Newcastle UniversityNewcastleNE1 7RUUK Email: [email protected]

Abstract

This paper proposes a multi-disciplinary approach which can be used to identify captives and the enslaved of Iron Age Britain (seventh century bcad first century). It uses a ‘poetics of violence’ perspective which recognizes that violence and warfare are created and enacted through social relations, and encompasses violence for which there is often no archaeological trace. Roman primary sources, bog-bodies and other archaeological evidence from Iron Age Britain and Europe suggest that people in these states of ‘social death’ were used to acquire material goods, employed in the agricultural economy, and their deaths played an important role in episodes of ritual violence. Drawing on research from North America, a series of funerary, isotope, archaeothantology and osteological variables have been identified for this period, and when integrated into an osteobiography, allows for the re-interpretation of many burials and structured deposits encountered in Iron Age settlements and hillforts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

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