An Investigation of Iron Age to Classical Animal Bone Deposits in Northern Greece (Macedonia) : Argilos, Karabournaki and Kastri Thassos
Type de ressource
Thèse
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Gkotsinas, Angelos (Auteur)
- Perreault, Jacques Y. (Collaborateur)
- Gardeisen, Armelle (Collaborateur)
Titre
An Investigation of Iron Age to Classical Animal Bone Deposits in Northern Greece (Macedonia) : Argilos, Karabournaki and Kastri Thassos
Résumé
Over the past decades, the zooarchaeological research in the Macedonian region of Northern Greece, has mostly focused on materials from Neolithic and Bronze Age sites. Thus, the available data render our understanding of animal husbandry in the Early Iron Age, Archaic and Classical periods in this area rather fragmentary. This doctoral research aims to address these gaps, investigating – for the first time as a whole – the issue of animal husbandry, a crucial domain of the primary economy, in the region of Macedonia from the Early Iron Age to the Classical era. The study is based on primary datasets of animal bones remains recovered from three well- excavated settlements, two in the mainland (Argilos, Karabournaki) and one in the island of Thassos (Kastri). The analysed data provide an opportunity to explore the animal exploitation in these three settlements, investigating animal management; cooking techniques; consumption and discard strategies, having first disentangled all potential depositional pathways to the formation of the sample assemblage. Additionally, the data are compared to the available published data from the Macedonian region in order to enlighten the peculiarities of each assemblage in relation to the management of domestic and wild fauna. Moreover, relevant paleoenvironmental and isotopic analyses have triggered a vivid discussion regarding the extent to which the environment affected the animal herding and feeding strategies in this area. The management strategies of the main domestics in the area under study, suggest a rather heterogenous profile between the settlements, most probably due to the economic priorities, the regional environmental conditions, and the geomorphological restrictions. The nutritional and the raw material needs were complemented by the exploitation of the wild fauna, including a variety of both terrestrial and marine species. Similar carcass and discarding practices were observed within all settlements, revealing aspects of intra-communal organization. Moreover, during the Archaic and Classical era, common practices in animal burials suggest the existence of somehow common perceptions among the local societies, however, in terms of ritual sacrifices, seemed to be a distinct differentiation between the population groups. The results are discussed in the frame of the Aegean basin, contributing to the ongoing discussion regarding animal management, the mobility of livestock husbandry, the degree of integration between herding and arable farming, the Olympic sacrifice, and the exploitation of natural resources during the first seven centuries of the first millennium BC.
Type
Thèse de doctorat (Ph.D.)
Université
Université de Montréal
Lieu
Montréal
Date
2022-11-30
Langue
Anglais
Référence
Gkotsinas, Angelos. « An Investigation of Iron Age to Classical Animal Bone Deposits in Northern Greece (Macedonia) : Argilos, Karabournaki and Kastri Thassos ». Thèse de doctorat (Ph.D.), Université de Montréal, 2022. https://hdl.handle.net/1866/27439.
Années
Thèses et mémoires
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