Acemhöyük ve Arıbaş Mezarlığı'ndan İnsan İskelet Kalıntılarının Gömü Geleneği Açısından İncelenmesi
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Date
2019Author
Durur, Mine Lütfiye
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Rituals are symbolic activities performed communally during significant thresholds and
events in an individual’s life such as birth, marriage, death. As means of expressing
thoughts, emotions and belief sytems, funerary rites reflect the ideology and mindset of
individuals. Having great potential to help us understand the social, cultural and
ideological notions and constructions of archaeological societies, funerary studies are
important sources of data for reconstructing the dynamics of ancient human populations.
The goal of this study is to analyze the funerary rites of Acemhöyük by examining human
skeletal remains, burial types and burial goods. Data acquired has been evaluated with
other contemporaneous populations to apprehend the similarities and differences between
Anatolian Middle Bronze Age settlements regarding burial practices. The sample of this
study consists 187 individuals dated back to Assyrian Trade Colony Period comprising
45 males, 70 females and 57 subadults whilst age and sex of 15 individuals are unknown.
22,5% of the individuals are unearthed from intramural burials while 77,5% are obtained
from settlement’s extramural burial ground Arıbaş Cemetery. 37 of 42 individuals from
intramural burials are subadults whereas individuals of all age and sex categories above
3 years of age are represented as inhumations or cremations in simple pits, pithoi and urn
burials in the cemetery.
It is determined that there is a discrimination against infants and children in Acemhöyük.
They are excluded from the communal burial ground but rather buried in households or
household related areas. Another remarkable finding in terms burial practices is that both
inhumation and cremation are practiced synchronically regardless of parameters such as
social stratification and gender roles. It is believed that rather being opposites,
inhumation and cremation are subsidiary and whether to be inhumated or cremated are
related to personal choices based on methodological differences such as accelerating the
decomposition process.