Architecture and Afterlife: Small Portable Shrines and Ritual Activities from Tyre to Ibiza

Adriano Orsingher
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The miniaturization of architecture in past and modern societies is a cross-cultural phenomenon, which has received enormous attention in scholarship, particularly in works relating to the Bronze and Iron Age eastern Mediterranean. This article focuses on some small-scale terracotta buildings known from Phoenicia around the seventh to the sixth centuries BCE, argues for their identification as portable shrines, compares them to similar examples from Cyprus, and includes finds from Carthage, Malta, and Ibiza in the discussion. All of this evidence reflects a time when small chapels were increasingly adopted in Phoenician architecture, reproduced at different scales in multiple media, and used in a variety of contexts. Finally, Tyre al-Bass Tomb 8 and other funerary assemblages yielding portable shrines support the idea that they were the focus of ritual activities at burial sites, and their deposition may have followed their use in practices involving storytelling, the libation of scented liquids, and/or the burning of aromatic substances.
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建筑和来世:从提尔到伊比沙岛的小型便携式神殿和仪式活动
在过去和现代社会中,建筑的小型化是一种跨文化现象,在学术界受到了极大的关注,特别是在与青铜和铁器时代东地中海有关的作品中。这篇文章的重点是在腓尼基大约公元前7世纪到6世纪的一些小型兵马俑建筑,论证了它们作为便携式神龛的身份,将它们与塞浦路斯的类似例子进行了比较,并在讨论中包括了来自迦太基、马耳他和伊比沙岛的发现。所有这些证据都反映了腓尼基建筑越来越多地采用小教堂,在多种媒体中以不同的规模复制,并在各种环境中使用。最后,Tyre al-Bass墓8和其他产生便携式神龛的陪葬组合支持了这样一种观点,即它们是墓地仪式活动的焦点,它们的沉积可能是因为它们在讲故事、用有香味的液体烧酒和/或燃烧芳香物质的实践中被使用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology and Heritage Studies (JEMAHS) is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to traditional, anthropological, social, and applied archaeologies of the Eastern Mediterranean, encompassing both prehistoric and historic periods. The journal’s geographic range spans three continents and brings together, as no academic periodical has done before, the archaeologies of Greece and the Aegean, Anatolia, the Levant, Cyprus, Egypt and North Africa. As the publication will not be identified with any particular archaeological discipline, the editors invite articles from all varieties of professionals who work on the past cultures of the modern countries bordering the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Similarly, a broad range of topics are covered, including, but by no means limited to: Excavation and survey field results; Landscape archaeology and GIS; Underwater archaeology; Archaeological sciences and archaeometry; Material culture studies; Ethnoarchaeology; Social archaeology; Conservation and heritage studies; Cultural heritage management; Sustainable tourism development; and New technologies/virtual reality.
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