Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-01T04:46:04.013Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Crowning Glories: Languages of Hair in Later Prehistoric Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2014

Miranda Aldhouse-Green
Affiliation:
School of Humanities, University of Wales, Newport, Caerleon Campus, Newport NP18 3YG

Abstract

In most societies, the presentation of human hair makes statements about projections of self, belonging, and difference. Drawing upon analogies from living traditions where hair makes an important contribution to symbolic grammars of personhood, this paper seeks to explore the evidence for symbolism associated with head and body hair in later European prehistory. This evidence is wide ranging, and includes the (exceptional) survival of hair in the archaeological record, iconography, and the equipment used for the management of hair. Questions are raised as to the manner in which hair may have been employed in visual languages, not only those associated with self-identity, but also in the presentation of ‘others’, whether social outcasts, sacrificial victims, shamed prisoners or special people, such as priests, shamans, or heroes. Issues of relationships between hair and gender are addressed, particularly with reference to iconography. The final part of the paper is concerned with the socio-political connotations associated with personal grooming and, in particular, the significance of adopting new, Roman, ways of managing hair in late Iron Age Britain.

Résumé

Dans la plupart des sociétés, la présentation des cheveux humains constitue une affirmation sur la projection de soi, l'appartenance, et la différence. Faisant appel à des analogies avec des traditions vivantes dans lesquelles la chevelure apporte une importante contribution aux grammaires symboliques de la personnalité, cette étude cherche à explorer les témoignages d'un symbolisme associé à la chevelure et aux poils à la fin de la préhistoire européenne. Ces témoignages sont vastes, et comprennent des vestiges (exceptionnels) de cheveux dans les archives archéologiques, l'iconographie et l'équipement utilisé pour les soins aux cheveux. On soulève certaines questions quant à la manière dont il se pourrait que les cheveux aient été employés dans les langages visuels, non seulement ceux associés à sa propre identité, mais également dans la présentation des ‘autres’ que ce soient des exclus de la société, des victimes de sacrifices, des prisonniers humiliés, ou des personnes spéciales, telles que des prêtres, des shamans ou des héros. On examine la question des relations entre cheveux et sexe, particulièrement en se référant à l'iconographie. La dernière partie de l'étude se concentre autour des connotations socio-politiques associées aux soins à la personne et en particulier la signification de l'adoption de nouvelles façons, romaines, de se coiffer à la fin de l'âge du fer en Grande-Bretagne

Zusammenfassung

In den meisten Gesellschaften sagt die Darstellung menschlichen Haars viel über die Projektionen von Selbstverständnis, Eigentum und Verschiedenheit aus. In Analogie zu noch lebendigem Brauchtum, in dem das Haar einen wichtigen Beitrag zur symbolischen Grammatik des Menschseins bildet, untersucht dieser Artikel Nachweise für einen Symbolismus, der mit dem Kopf und dem Körperhaar in der späteren europäischen Vorgeschichte assoziiert ist. Die Nachweise sind umfassend und schließen die (außergewöhnliche) Erhaltung von Haaren im archäologischen Befund, die Ikonographie sowie Utensilien zur Haarpflege mit ein. Es wird untersucht, wie die Haare in visuellen Sprachen benutzt worden sind; dabei geht es nicht nur um die Darstellung der eigenen Identität sondern auch um die Präsentation des, Anderen', ob es sich hierbei um sozial Ausgestoßene, Opfer, Gefangene oder besondere Personen, wie z.B. Priester, Schamanen oder Helden handelt. Es werden auch Fragen zum Verhältnis von Haar und Geschlecht betrachtet, besonders in Bezug zur Ikonographie. Der abschließende Teil des Beitrags beschäftigt sichmit den sozio-politischen Konnotationen, die mit persönlicher Pflege assoziiert sind, und besonders auch mit der Bedeutung neuer, römischer Haartrachten in der späten Eisenzeit Großbritanniens.

Résumen

En la mayoría de las sociedades, la presentación del cabello humano hace una declaración sobre proyecciones de uno mismo, pertenencia, y diferencia. Basándose en analogías procedentes de tradiciones vivas donde el cabello contribuye de modo importante a las gramáticas simbólicas de la personalidad, este estudio explora la evidencia de simbolismo asociado con el pelo de la cabeza y del cuerpo en la prehistoria tardía de Europa. La evidencia es extensa e incluye la conservación (excepcional) de pelo en el registro arqueológico, en la iconografía y equipo utilizado para manejar el cabello. El trabajo despierta preguntas acerca del modo en el que el pelo pudo ser empleado en lenguages visuales, no solamente aquellos asociados con la identidad personal sino también en la presentación de “otros”, ya fueran marginados sociales, víctimas sacrificiales, prisioneros deshonrados o gente especial como sacerdotes, shamanes, o héroes. El trabajo trata el tema de la relación entre pelo y género, particularmente con referencia a la iconografía. La parte final del trabajo se ocupa de las connotaciones socio-políticas asociadas con el arreglo personal y, en particular, la importancia de la adopción de nuevos modos, romanos, de arreglarse el pelo en la tarda Edad del Hierro en Britania.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 2004

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

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2001a. Dying for the Gods. Human Sacrifice in Iron Age and Roman Europe. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2001b. Cosmovision and Metaphor: Monsters and Shamans in Gallo-British Cult-Expression. European Journal of Archaeology 4(2), 203–32Google Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2001c. Gender bending images: permeating boundaries in Ancient European iconography. In Wallis, R.J. & Lymer, K. (eds), A Permeability of Boundaries? New Approaches to the Archaeology of Art, Religion and Folklore. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S936, 1929Google Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2003. Poles apart? Perceptions of gender in Gallo-British cult-iconography. In Scott, S. & Webster, J. (eds), Roman Imperialism and Provincial Art, 95118. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2004a. An Archaeology of Images. Iconology and Cosmology in Iron Age and Roman Europe. London: RoutledgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, M.J. 2004b Semiologies of subjugation: the ritualisation of war-prisoners in later European Antiquity. In Vandkilde, H. (ed.), Warfare and Society from an Archaeological and Social Anthropological Perspective, in press. Århus: UniversityGoogle Scholar
Aldhouse-Green, M.J. & Aldhouse-Green, S.H.R. 2004. The Quest for the Shaman in European Antiquity. London: Thames & HudsonGoogle Scholar
Allen, D. F. 1978. An Introduction to Celtic Coins. London: British Museum PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Anati, E. 1961. Camonica Valley. London: Jonathan CapeGoogle Scholar
Arnold, B. 1991. The deposed princess of Vix: the need for an engendered European prehistory. In Walde, D. & Willows, N.D. (eds), The archaeology of gender, 366–74. Calgary: University of Calgary Archaeological AssociationGoogle Scholar
Arnold, K. & Olsen, D. (eds). 2003. Medicine Man: the forgotten museum of Henry Wellcome (1853–1936). London: British MuseumGoogle Scholar
Arnoldi, M.J. 1995a. Crowning Glories: the head and hair. In Arnoldi, & Kreamer, (eds) 1995 5367Google Scholar
Arnoldi, M.J. 1995b. Introduction. In Arnoldi, & Kreamer, (eds) 1995, 925Google Scholar
Arnoldi, M.J. & Kreamer, C. M. (eds). 1995. Crowning Achievements. African Arts of Dressing the Head. Los Angeles: Fowler Museum of Cultural HistoryGoogle Scholar
Banks, I. 2000. Hair Matters. Beauty, Power, and Black Women's Consciousness. New York/London: New York University PressGoogle Scholar
Bartman, E. 2001. Hair and the artifice of Roman Female Adornment. American Journal of Archaeology 105, 125CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-Amos, P. 1983. In Honor of Queen Mothers. In Ben-Amos, P. & Rubin, A. (eds), The Art of Power. The Power of Art. Studies in Benin Iconography, 7983. Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History, UCLAGoogle Scholar
Bennike, P. 1999. The Early Neolithic Danish bog-finds: a strange group of people! In Coles et al. (eds) 1999, 2732Google Scholar
Bennike, P. & Ebbesen, K. 1986. The bog find from Sigersdal. Human sacrifice in the Early Neolithic. Journal of Danish Archaeology 5, 85115Google Scholar
Bergen, C., Nickus, M.J.L.Th. & van Vilsteren, V.T.(eds). 2002. The Mysterious Bog People. Zwolle: Waanders Uitgevers (NL)Google Scholar
Beuker, J.R. 2002a. The greatest sacrifice: a human life. In Bergen, et al. (eds), 120–9Google Scholar
Beuker, J.R. 2002b. The Girl and the devil. In Bergen, et al. (eds), 107–9Google Scholar
Biel, J., Hundt, H.-J., Körber-Grohnr, U., Gauer, W. & Hartmann, A. 1985. Das Grab des Keltenfürsten. Ein Tresor voll archäologischer Überraschungen. In Landesdenkmalamt Baden-Württemberg. Der Keltenfürst von Hochdorf, 78161. Stuttgart: Landesdenkmalamt Baden-WürttembergGoogle Scholar
Blackmore, J. 1996. Outlining a ‘new’ region: the rock art of the Omburo Ost, Namibia. Paper delivered at the Theoretical Archaeology Group (TAG) Conference. Liverpool: University of Liverpool, December 1996Google Scholar
Boardman, J. 1973. Greek Art. London: Thames & Hudson (revised edn)Google Scholar
Bonenfant, P.-B. & Guillaumet, J.-P. 1998. La Statuaire Anthropomorphe du Premier Age du Fer. Besançon: Annales Litteraires de l'Université de Franche-Comte 667Google Scholar
Boon, G.C. 1991. Tonsur Humanus. Razor and toilet knife kits in Antiquity. Britannia 22, 2132Google Scholar
Brookes, A. 2004. The Visible Dead: a new approach to the study of Iron Age mortuary practice in south-eastern Britain. Unpublished PhD. Dissertation, Newport, University of WalesGoogle Scholar
Brothwell, D. & Bourke, J.B. 1995. The human remains from Lindow Moss 1987–8. In Turner, & Scaife, (eds) 1995, 52–8Google Scholar
Burkert, W. 1985. Greek Religion. Oxford: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Campbell, R. (trans.) 1969. Seneca. Letters from a Stoic. Harmondsworth: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Carr, G. 2001. ‘Romanisation’ and the body. In Davies, G., Gardner, A. & Lockyear, K. (eds), TRAC 2000. Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference London 2000, 112–24. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Chapman, J. 2000. Fragmentation in Archaeology: people, places and broken objects in the prehistory of south eastern Europe. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Clément, M. 1986. Les dieux gaulois. In Cozan, J.Y. (ed.), Au Temps des Celtes Ve – ler Siècle avant J.C., 132–43. Quimper: Association Abbaye de Daoulas. Musée Départemental Breton de QuimperGoogle Scholar
Cole, H.M. 1979. Living art among the Samburu. In Cordwell, J. & Schwartz, R. (eds), The Fabrics of Culture: the anthropology of clothing and adornment, 8792. New York: Mouton PublishersCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coles, B. 1990. Anthropomorphic wooden figures from Britain and Ireland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 56:, 315–33Google Scholar
Coles, B. 1998. Wood species for wooden figures: a glimpse of a pattern. In Gibson, A. & Simpson, D.D.A. (eds), Prehistoric Ritual and Religion, 163–73. Stroud: SuttonGoogle Scholar
Coles, J. 1990. Images of the Past. A guide to the rock carvings and other ancient monuments of Northern Bohuslän. Uddevalla: Risbergs Tryckeri/Hällristningsmuseet VitlyckeGoogle Scholar
Coles, J. 2000. Patterns in a Rocky Land: rock carvings in south-west Uppland, Sweden. Uppsala: Department of Archaeology & Ancient History, University of UppsalaGoogle Scholar
Conkey, M. & Gero, J. 1991. Tensions, pluralities and engendering archaeology. In Gero, J. & Conkey, M. (eds), Engendering Archaeology: Women and Prehistory, 330Oxford: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Coombs, D. 1992. Flag Fen platform and Fengate power station alignment – the metalwork. Antiquity 66, 504–17Google Scholar
Creighton, J. 2000. Coins and Power in Late Iron Age Britain. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Croom, A.T. 2000. Roman Clothing and Fashion. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Csordas, T.J. (ed.) 1994. Embodiment and Experience. The Existential Ground of Culture and Self. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1991. Iron Age Communities in Britain. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Daire, M.-Y. & Languet, L. 1992. Une Sculpture anthropomorphe gauloise dans un enclos à Yvignac (Côte d'Armor). Les Dossiers du Ce. R.R.A. 20, 516Google Scholar
Davies, D.J. 1997. Death, Ritual and Belief. London/New York: ContinuumGoogle Scholar
Dean, C. 1983. The individual and the Ancestral: Ikegobo and Ukurbe. In Ben-Amos, P. & Rubin, A. (eds), The Art of Power. The Power of Art. Studies in Benin Iconography, 3340. Los Angeles: University of CaliforniaGoogle Scholar
Deyts, S. 1992. Images de Dieux de la Gaule. Paris: ErranceGoogle Scholar
Dowson, T. 1992. Rock Engravings of Southern Africa. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University PressGoogle Scholar
Dronfield, J. 1996. Entering alternative realities: cognition, art and architecture in Irish passage-tombs. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6(1), 3792CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Durand, J.-L. 1989. Greek animals: a typology of edible bodies. In Detienne, M. & Vernant, J.-P. (eds), The Cuisine of Sacrifice among the Greeks, 87118. Chicago: University Press.Google Scholar
Duval, P.-M. 1987. Monnaies Gauloises et Mythes Celtiques. Paris: HermannGoogle Scholar
Ebong, I. (ed.). 2001. Black Hair. New York: Universe PublishingGoogle Scholar
Eibner-Persy, A. 1980. Hallstattzeitliche Grabhügel von Sopron (Ödenburg): die Funde der Grabungen 1890–92 in der Prdhistorischen Abteilung des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien und im Burgenländischen Landesmuseum in Eistenstadt. Eisenstadt: Burgenländ; Wissenschaftliche Arbeiten aus dem Burgenland 62Google Scholar
Elderfield, J. 1999. Introduction. In Alexander, M. Darsie, Chan, M., Figura, S., Ganz, S. & Gonzalez, M. Carmen (eds), Body Language, 614. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Harry AbramsGoogle Scholar
Eogan, G. 1994. The Accomplished Art. Gold and Gold-Working in Britain and Ireland during the Bronze Age. Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 42Google Scholar
Erim, K.T. 1982. A new relief showing Claudius and Britannia from Aphrodisias. Britannia 13, 277–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Espérandieu, E. 1911. Recueil Général des Bas-Reliefs de la Gaule Romaine et Pré-Romaine vol. 4. Paris: Ernest LerouxGoogle Scholar
Espérandieu, E. 1938. Recueil Général des Bas-Reliefs de la Gaule Romaine et Pré-Romaine vol. 11. Paris: Ernest LerouxGoogle Scholar
Ferguson, J. 1989. Among the Gods. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Ferris, I. 1994. Insignificant Others; images of barbarians on military art from Roman Britain. In Cottam, S., Dungworth, D., Scott, S. & Taylor, J. (eds), TRAC 94. Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference Durham 1994, 2431. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Ferris, I. 2000. Enemies of Rome. Barbarians Through Roman Eyes. Stroud: SuttonGoogle Scholar
Ferris, I. 2003. The Hanged Men Dance: barbarians in Trajanic art. In Scott, S. & Webster, J. (eds), Roman Imperialism and Provincial Art, 5368. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Filer, J.M. 1997. Ancient Egypt and Nubia as a source of information for violent cranial injuries. In Carman, J. (ed.), Material Harm. Archaeological Studies of War and Violence, 4774. Glasgow: Cruithne PressGoogle Scholar
Fitzpatrick, A.P. 2002. The Amesbury Archer: ‘King of Stonehenge?’, PAST 41, 12Google Scholar
Foster, J. 1977. Bronze Boar-Figurines in Iron Age and Roman Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 39CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foxhall, L. 1994. Pandora unbound: a feminist critique of Foucault's History of Sexuality. In Cornwall, A. & Lindisfarne, N. (eds), Dislocating Masculinity, 133–46. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Frey, O.-H. 1996/1997. Die neuen Keltenfunde vom Glauberg. Nürnberger Blätter zur Archäologie 13, 2538Google Scholar
Frey, O.-H. 1998. The Stone Knight, the Sphinx and the Hare: new aspects of early figural art. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 64, 114Google Scholar
Gantz, J. 1981. trans. The Destruction of Da Derga's Hostel. In Early Irish Myths and Sagas. Harmondsworth: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Gebühr, M. 1979. Das Kindergrab von Windeby. Versuch einer ‘Rehabilitation’. Offa. Berichte und Mitteilungen zur Urgeschichte, Frühgesichte und Mittelalterarchäolog 36, 75107Google Scholar
Gebühr, M. 2002. Moorleichen in Schleswig-Holstein. Schleswig: Archäologisches Landesmuseum der Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen Schloß GottorfGoogle Scholar
Glob, P.V. 1969. Halleristninger i Danmark. Jutland Archaeological Society Publications 7Google Scholar
Green, M.J. 1991. Sun Gods and Symbols of Ancient Europe. London: BatsfordGoogle Scholar
Green, M.J. 1992a. Animals in Celtic Life and Myth. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Green, M.J. 1992b. The iconography of Celtic coins. In Mays, M. (ed.), Celtic Coinage: Britain and Beyond. The Eleventh Oxford Symposium on Coinage and Monetary History, 151–63. Oxford: Tempus Reparatum/British Archaeological Report 222Google Scholar
Green, M.J. 1995. Celtic Goddesses. Warriors, Virgins and Mothers. London: British MuseumGoogle Scholar
Green, M.J. 1996. Celtic Art. Reading the Messages. London: Weidenfeld & NicolsonGoogle Scholar
Green, M.J. 1997. Images in opposition: polarity, ambivalence and liminality in cult representation. Antiquity 71, 898911Google Scholar
Gruel, K. 1989. La Monnaie chez les Gaulois. Paris: Errance/Collection des HesperidesGoogle Scholar
Guillaumet, J.P. 2003. Les personages accroupis: essai de classement. In Büchsenschutz, O., Bulard, A., Chardenoux, M.-B. & Ginoux, N. (eds), Décors, images et signes de l'âge du Per européen. XXVIe Colloque de l'Association Prancaise pour l'Etude de l'Age du Fer, Paris et Saint-Denis 9–12 mai 2002, 171–82. Tours: FERACFGoogle Scholar
Haaland, G. & Haaland, R. 1996. Levels of meaning in symbolic objects. In Hamilton, N., Marcus, J., Bailey, D., Haaland, G., Haaland, R. & Ucko, P.J., Can we interpret figurines?. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6(2), 295300Google Scholar
Hachmann, R. 1990. Gundestrup-Studien. Bericht der Römisch-Germanischen Kommission 71, 565903Google Scholar
Hägg, I. 2001. Sacrificed garments. In Gebühr, M., Nydam and Thorsberg. Iron Age Places of Sacrifice, 28–9. Schleswig: Archäologisches Landesmuseum Schloß GottorfGoogle Scholar
Haselgrove, C. 2003. Society and polity in Late Iron Age Britain. In Todd, M. (ed.), A Companion to Roman Britain, 1229. Oxford: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Henriques, F. 1953. Family and Colour in Jamaica. London: Eyre & SpottiswoodGoogle Scholar
Herity, M. & Eogan, G. 1989. Ireland in Prehistory. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Hill, J.D. 1997. The end of one kind of body and the beginning of another kind of body? Toilet instruments and ‘Romanization’. In Gwilt, A. & Haselgrove, C. (eds), Reconstructing Iron Age Societies, 96107. Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 71Google Scholar
Holden, T.G. 1995. The last meals of the Lindow Bog men. In Turner, & Scaife, (eds) 1995, 7682Google Scholar
Hoppál, M. 1992. Shamanism: an archaic and/or recent system of beliefs. Iin Siikala, A.-L. & Hoppál, M. (eds), Studies in Shamanism, 117131. Budapest: Akademiai KiádoGoogle Scholar
Hughes, D. 1991. Human Sacrifice in Ancient Greece. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Hutton, R. 2001. Shamans. Siberian Spirituality and the Western Imagination. London: Hambledon & LondonGoogle Scholar
Hvass, L. 2001. Oldtiden I Danmark. Jernalderen. Copenhagen: SesamGoogle Scholar
Jackson, R. 1985. Cosmetic sets from late Iron Age and Roman Britain. Britannia 16, 165–92Google Scholar
Jacobsthal, P. 1944. Early Celtic Art. Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Jerem, E. & Lippert, A. (eds). 1996. Die Osthallstattkultur. Akten des Internationalen Symposiums. Sopron 1014Mai 1994, Budapest: ArchaeolinguaGoogle Scholar
Joffroy, R. 1979. Musée des Antiquités Nationales, Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Paris: Editions de la Réunion des Musées NationauxGoogle Scholar
Jundi, S. & Hill, J.D. 1997. Brooches and identities in first century AD Britain: more than meets the eye?. In Forcey, C., Hawthorne, J. & Witcher, R. (eds), TRAC 97. Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference Nottingham 1997, 125137. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Kaul, F. 1991. Gundestrupkedlen. Copenhagen: NationalmuseetGoogle Scholar
Kaul, F. 1995. The Gundestrup Cauldron reconsidered. Acta Archaeologia 66, 138Google Scholar
Keppie, L.J.F. & Arnold, B.J. 1984. Corpus Signorum Imperil Romani. Corpus of Sculpture of the Roman World. Great Britain. Volume I, Fascicule 4. Scotland, Oxford/London: Oxford University Press/British AcademyGoogle Scholar
Kimmig, W. 1987. Eisenzeitliche Grabstelen in Mitteleuropa. Fundberichte aus Baden-Württemberg 12, 251–97Google Scholar
Kipling, R. 1951. Just So Stories. London: MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Klindt-Jensen, O. 1949. Foreign influences in Denmark's Early Iron Age. In Acta Archaeologica XX, 1229Google Scholar
Kratz, C. 1988. Okiek ornaments of transition and transformation. Kenya Past and Present 20, 21–6Google Scholar
Leach, E. 1958. Magical hair. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 88, 147–64Google Scholar
Le Bohec, Y. 1994. The Imperial Roman Army. London: Routledge (trans. Raphael Bate)Google Scholar
Lejars, T. & Perrin, F. 2000. Des tombes de druids? In Guichard, V. & Perrin, F. (eds), Les Druides. Paris: L'Archéologie Hors Série 12, 3740Google Scholar
Lewis-Williams, D. 2002. The Mind in the Cave. London: Thames & HudsonGoogle Scholar
Mattingly, H. 1948 (trans.). Tacitus on Britain and Germany, West Drayton: PenguinGoogle Scholar
McClintock, A. 1995. Imperial Leather. Race, Gender and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Meek, J. 2003. Welcome to Guantanamo. The Guardian G2, 03.12.03Google Scholar
Megaw, J.V.S. 1970. Art of the European Iron Age. New York: Harper & RowGoogle Scholar
Megaw, R. & Megaw, V. 1989. Celtic Art from its Beginnings to the Book of Kells. London: Thames & HudsonGoogle Scholar
Megaw, M.R. & Megaw, J.V.S. 1998. The stone head from Msecke Zehrovice: an essay on the human head in early Celtic art. In Venclová, N., Mšecké Zehrovice in Bohemia. Archaeological Background to a Celtic Hero 3rd–2nd cent. B.C, 281326. Sceaux: Kronos EditionsGoogle Scholar
Meyer, L. 2001. Black Africa. Masks, Sculpture, Jewellery. Paris: Editions Pierre TerrailGoogle Scholar
Montserrat, D. 2000. Reading gender in the Roman world. In Huskinson, J. (ed.), Experiencing Rome. Culture, Identity and Power in the Roman Empire, 153–81. London/Milton Keynes: Routledge/Open University PressGoogle Scholar
Müller, K.E. 2002. Sacrifices in traditional cultures. In Bergen, et al. (eds) 2002, 34–7Google Scholar
Nerzic, C. 1989. La Sculpture en Gaule Romaine. Paris: ErranceGoogle Scholar
Nomberg-Przytyk, 1985. Auschwitz. True Tales from a Grotesque Land (Trans Hirsch, Roslyn. Edited by Pfefferkorn, Eli & Hirsch, David) Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina PressGoogle Scholar
Oertelt, H. A. 2000. An Unbroken Chain. My Journey through the Nazi Holocaust. Minneapolis: Lerner Publications CompanyGoogle Scholar
Olmsted, G.S. 1979. The Gundestrup Cauldron. Brussels: Collection Latomus 162Google Scholar
Parker Pearson, M. 1999. The Archaeology of Death and Burial. Stroud: SuttonGoogle Scholar
Pobé, M. & Roubier, J. 1961. The Art of Roman Gaul. London: Gallery PressGoogle Scholar
Priuli, A. 1996. Arte Rupestre. Le Più Antiche Manifestazioni Spirituali Paleoiconografia Camuna e delle Genti Alpine. Turin: Collana I Grandi LibriGoogle Scholar
Purves, L. 2002. Forget Cuba, what about our hell-holes? The Times 22.1.02Google Scholar
Redknap, M. 1991. The Christian Celts. Cardiff: National Museum of WalesGoogle Scholar
Rolle, R. 1992. Die skythenzeitlichen Mumienfunde von Pazyryk Frostkonserviete Gräber aus dem Altaigebirge. In Höpfel, F., Platzer, W. & Spindler, K. (eds), Der Mann im Eis. Band 1, 334–58. Innsbruck: Berischt über das Internationale SymposiumGoogle Scholar
Rolle, R. & Seemann, H. 1992. Haar und Bart als individuelles Kennzeichen, 110–39. Miinster: Westfälisches Museumsamt. Bilder Früher Menschen Archäologischen RekunstruktionGoogle Scholar
Rolle, R. & Seemann, H. 1999. Haar- und Baartracht. In Beck, H., Geuenich, D., Steuer, H. & Timpe, D. (eds), Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde Band 13, 232–40. Berlin: Walter de GruyterGoogle Scholar
Rudenko, S.I. 1970 (trans. Thompson, M.W.). Frozen Tombs of Siberia. The Pazyryk Burials of Iron Age Horsemen. London: J.M. Dent (originally published in 1953 as Kultura Naseleniya Gornogo Altaya v Skifskoe Vronya, Moscow/Leningrad: Academy of Sciences of the USSR).Google Scholar
Savory, H.N. 1976. Guide Catalogue of the Early Iron Age Collections. Cardiff: National Museum of WalesGoogle Scholar
Scaife, R.G. 1995. Pollen analysis of the Lindow III food residue. In Turner, & Scaife, (eds) 1995, 83–5Google Scholar
Segy, L. 1975. African Sculpture Speaks. New York: Da Capo PressGoogle Scholar
Settis, S., La Regina, A., Agosti, G. & Farinella, V. 1988. La Colonna Traiana, Torino: Guilio Einaudi editoreGoogle Scholar
Shinnie, P.L. 1967. Meroe. A Civilization of the Sudan. London: Thames & HudsonGoogle Scholar
Shinnie, P.L. 1996. Ancient Nubia. London/New York: Kegan Paul InternationalGoogle Scholar
Sieber, R. & Walker, R.A. 1987. African Art in the Cycle of Life. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution/National Museum of African ArtGoogle Scholar
Siegel, R.K. 1984. Hostage hallucinations: visual imagery induced by isolation and life-threatening stress. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 172(5), 264–72Google Scholar
Sieveking, A. 1993. The use of stylistic analysis within the context of West European Upper Palaeolithic Art. In Lorblanchet, M. & Bahn, P.G. (eds), Rock Art Studies: the Post-Stylistic Era or Where do we go from here?, 2736Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 35Google Scholar
Sørensen, M.L. 1991. The construction of gender through appearance. In Walde, D. & Willows, N.D. (eds), The Archaeology of Gender, 121–9. Calgary: Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Chacmool Conference/The Archaeological Association of the University of CalgaryGoogle Scholar
Stead, I.M., Bourke, J.B. & Brothwell, D. 1986. Lindow Man. The Body in the Bog. London: British Museum PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Stead, I.M. 1988. Chalk figurines of the Parisi. The Antiquaries Journal 28, 929Google Scholar
Stead, I. & Rigby, V. 1989. Verulamium. The King Harry Lane Site. London: English Heritage Archaeological Report 12Google Scholar
Stollner, T. 2003. The economy of Dürrnberg bei Hallein: an Iron Age salt-mining centre in the Austrian Alps. Antiquaries Journal 83, 123–94Google Scholar
Taylor, J. 1980. Bronze Age Goldwork of the British Isles. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Taylor, T. 2003. The Buried Soul. How Humans Invented Death. London: Fourth EstateGoogle Scholar
Terzan, B. 1996. Weben und Zeitmessen im Siidostalpinen und Westpannonischen Gebiet. In Jerem, & Lippert, (eds), 507–29Google Scholar
Thompson, F.H. 2003. The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Slavery. London: DuckworthGoogle Scholar
Tierney, J.J. 19591960. The Celtic ethnography of Posidonius. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 60, 189275Google Scholar
Tilley, C. 1999. Metaphor and Material Culture. Oxford: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Tranoy, A. 1988. Du Heros Au Chef. L'image du guerrier dans les sociétés indigènes du nord-ouest de la péninsule ibérique (Iie siècle avant J.-C. - Ier siecle apres J.-C). In Université de Tours Actes du Colloque 16–17 mat 1987. Le Monde des Images en Gaule et dans le provinces voisines, 219–28. Paris: Errance/Caesarodunm Tome 23.Google Scholar
Treherne, P. 1994. Technologies of the body and the self personal ‘toilet articles’ in the Nordic Early Bronze Age. Unpublished M.Phil, dissertation, University of CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Treherne, P. 1995. The warrior's beauty: the masculine body and self-identity in Bronze Age Europe. European Journal of Archaeology 3(1), 105144Google Scholar
Turner, R.C. 1995. Discoveries and excavations at Lindow Moss 1983–8. In Turner, & Scaife, (eds) 1995, 1018Google Scholar
Turner, R.C. & Scaife, R.G. (eds). 1995. Bog Bodies. New Discoveries and New Perspectives. London: British Museum PressGoogle Scholar
Ucko, P.J. 1996. ‘Mother, are you there?’ In Hamilton, N., Marcus, J., Bailey, D., Haaland, G., Haaland, R. & Ucko, P.J., Can we interpret figurines?. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 6(2), 300–4Google Scholar
van der Sanden, W. 1994. Het meisje van Yde. Assen: Drents MuseumGoogle Scholar
van der Sanden, W.A.B. 1995. Bog bodies on the Continent: developments since 1965, with special reference to the Netherlands. In Turner, R.C. & Scaife, R.G. (eds) 1995, 146–65Google Scholar
van der Sanden, W. 1996. Through Nature to Eternity. The bog-bodies of northwest Europe. Amsterdam: Batavian Lion InternationalGoogle Scholar
van der Sanden, W. 1999. Wetland archaeology in the province of Drenthe, the Netherlands. In Coles, B., Coles, J. & Jørgensen, M. Schou (eds), Bog Bodies, Sacred Sites and Wetland Archaeology, 217–25. Exeter: WARP (Wetland Archaeology Research Project) Occasional Paper 12, Department of Archaeology, University of ExeterGoogle Scholar
van der Sanden, W. & Capelle, T. 2001. Mosens Guder. Antropomorfe traefurer fra Nord-og Nordvesteuropas fortid/ Immortal Images. Ancient Anthropomorphic Wood Carvings from Northern and Northwest Europe. Silkeborg: Silkeborg MuseumGoogle Scholar
Venclová, N. 2002. The Venerable Bede, druidic tonsure and archaeology. Antiquity 76, 458–71Google Scholar
Vitebsky, P. 1995. The Shaman. Voyages of the Soul. Trance, Ecstasy and Healing from Siberia to the Amazon. London: MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Wedlake, W.J. 1982. The Excavation of the Shrine of Apollo at Nettleton, Wiltshire, 1956–1971. London: Society of Antiquaries of London/Thames & HudsonGoogle Scholar
Wellesley, K. 1964. trans. Tacitus. The Histories. Harmondsworth: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Welsby, D.A. 1996. The Kingdom of Kush. The Napatan and Meroitic Empires. London: British Museum PressGoogle Scholar
Williams, H. (ed.). 2003. Archaeologies of Remembrance. Death and Memory in Past Societies. New York, Boston, Dordrecht, London, Moscow: Kluwer Academic/Plenum PublishersGoogle Scholar
Williams, M. 2003. Tales from the dead. In Williams, H. (ed.), 2003, 89112Google Scholar
Wylie, A. 1996. The interplay of evidential constraints and political interests: recent archaeological research on gender. In Preucel, R. & Hodder, I. (eds), Contemporary Archaeology in Theory. A Reader, 431–59. Oxford: Basil BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Yates, T. 1993. Frameworks for an archaeology of the body. In Tilley, C. (ed.), Interpretative Archaeology, 3172. Oxford: BergGoogle Scholar
Zanker, P. 1988. The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan PressGoogle Scholar