Purified by fire

Cremation burials in the Stone Age hunter-gatherer cemetery at Dudka, Masuria, northeast Poland

Authors

  • Karolina Bugajska University of Warsaw, Faculty of Archaeology, Poland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4312/dp.50.10

Keywords:

Mesolithic, Para-Neolithic, hunter-gatherers, burials, cremation, Poland

Abstract

The cemetery at Dudka was used in the Mesolithic and Para-Neolithic period. It yielded 25 graves with remains of at least 116 individuals, including 52 who were cremated. Cremation was introduced in the Para-Neolithic, c. 4200 cal BC, and was probably a locally developed custom. Most cremations are dated to the classic Zedmar period, when the number of loose human bones also increased significantly, indicating the growing role of multi-step burial rites. Cremation could have been an alternative to temporary burial, i.e. bones were cleaned of soft tissue using fire, instead of waiting for their natural decomposition. Burned remains were selected and divided like bones taken from temporary burial places, then stored for a time before final disposal in the cemetery.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

25.07.2023

How to Cite

Bugajska, K. (2023). Purified by fire: Cremation burials in the Stone Age hunter-gatherer cemetery at Dudka, Masuria, northeast Poland. Documenta Praehistorica, 50, 2–27. https://doi.org/10.4312/dp.50.10

Issue

Section

Articles