解读卡霍基亚-卡多神话女性石像的背景和年代

Q1 Social Sciences Southeastern Archaeology Pub Date : 2022-09-09 DOI:10.1080/0734578X.2022.2119010
T. Emerson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

虽然早期的研究者偶尔会发现大型的红色石雕和石管,但直到最近才在安全的考古环境中发现它们,这表明它们是12世纪卡霍坎人的作品,在地质上来自圣路易斯附近独特的燧石粘土来源。其中一个子集是与生育和更新主题相关的女性形象。对这些女性形象的研究表明,尽管它们引用了相似的神话人物,但这些人物在当地宗教和社会基础设施中所处的地位却截然不同。在卡霍基亚,它们是正式宗教崇拜的一部分,这是该政体同意的关键,而在大卡霍基亚以外,例如在卡多地区,它们出现在太平间,表明它们是某些人不可剥夺的财产。此外,可以提出,这些外围的数字,转化为管道,可能是医药束的一部分,由参与治疗的女性束管理员维护。考古证据清楚地表明,这些宗教物品不能简单地用它们的标志性同质性或民族历史类比来掩盖,而必须根据它们在当地社会的宗教、社会和政治生活中所扮演的角色来解释。
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Interpreting context and chronology of Cahokia-Caddo mythic female stone figures
ABSTRACT While large red stone figurines and pipes were occasionally discovered by early investigators, only recently were they recovered in secure archaeological context demonstrating them to be twelfth-century Cahokian productions geologically sourced to unique flint clay sources near St. Louis. A subset of these are female figures associated with fertility and renewal motifs. Examination of these female figures demonstrates that while they reference similar mythic beings, the figures hold very different positions in local religious and social infrastructure. At Cahokia they are part of a formalized religious cult that is key to that polity's assent while outside of Greater Cahokia, e.g., in the Caddo region, they appear as mortuary inclusions indicating they were inalienable possessions of certain individuals. Furthermore it can be proposed that these outlying figures, transformed to pipes, might have been part of medicine bundles maintained by female bundle keepers involved in curing. The archaeological evidence makes apparent that such religious objects cannot be simply glossed over in terms of their iconic homogeneity or ethnohistoric analogies but must be interpreted in terms of their roles in which they were embedded within the religious, social, and political life of local societies.
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来源期刊
Southeastern Archaeology
Southeastern Archaeology Social Sciences-Archeology
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Southeastern Archaeology is a refereed journal that publishes works concerning the archaeology and history of southeastern North America and neighboring regions. It covers all time periods, from Paleoindian to recent history and defines the southeast broadly; this could be anything from Florida (south) to Wisconsin (North) and from Oklahoma (west) to Virginia (east). Reports or articles that cover neighboring regions such as the Northeast, Plains, or Caribbean would be considered if they had sufficient relevance.
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