在约旦Khirbet es-Samrā的古代拜占庭定居点的内部埋葬

A. Nabulsi, P. Schönrock-Nabulsi, Jean Humbert, A. Desreumaux, C. Wurst
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引用次数: 0

摘要

94室和79室的教堂墓地以及35塔墓都是在约旦北部Khirbet es Samrā的古代拜占庭定居点内挖掘的。它们最初的年代是公元7世纪至9世纪。该报告提供了对所获得的人类骨骼遗骸进行宏观分析的结果。这些特征包括人口统计学、人体测量、表观遗传学和病理学特征。现有的生物学和考古证据往往表明,埋葬在94室墓中的五名成人和儿童是有亲属关系的男性,可能是一个与邻近的95号教堂有关的当地地位较高的家庭。这六人先后被安葬在95号教堂94室的“私人”墓中,而不是定居点外的“公共”墓地。两名成年人的颈椎上可能出现两例布鲁氏菌病变,这可能表明一个动物繁殖家族,乳制品是当地饮食的一部分。该报告还表明,94号房间的坟墓埋葬与公元7世纪79号教堂的老年女性埋葬之间可能存在关联,此前人们认为这是一场男性教会官员的葬礼。尽管有十字架雕刻的石头和可能致命的箭伤,但现有证据表明,之前确定为公元9世纪的男性塔葬礼实际上是中世纪的葬礼,它既与古代定居点无关,也与古代人口无关。还介绍了一些罕见的生物学特征,例如颈椎C5至C7横孔分裂的“整体”表现。关键词:约旦-拜占庭时期-教堂埋葬-人类学-表观遗传学-古病理学。
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Intramural Burials from the Ancient Byzantine Settlement in Khirbet es-Samrā in Jordan
The church burials of Room-94 and Church-79 as well as the Tower 35-Tomb were excavated within the ancient Byzantine settlement in Khirbet es-Samrā, North Jordan. They were initially dated between the 7th and 9th centuries AD. The report provides the results of macroscopic analyses of the obtained human skeletal remains. These include demographic, anthropometric, epigenetic, and pathologic features. The available biological and archaeological evidence tend to suggest that the five adults and child buried in Room-94 tomb were related males, possibly of one local and highly positioned family that was associated with the adjacent Church 95. The six were successively buried in the “private” tomb in Room-94 of Church-95 and not in the “public” cemetery just outside the settlement. The two probable cases of brucellar lesions on the cervical vertebrae of two adults could be indicative of an animal breeding family and that dairy products were part of the local diet. The report also suggests a possible relatedness between Room-94 tomb burials and the 7th century AD senile female burial in Church-79, which was previously assumed to be a male church-functionary burial. Despite being marked by a cross-engraved stone and a probably lethal arrow injury, the available evidence lead to conclude that the male Tower burial, previously identified as of the 9th century AD, was in fact a medieval burial and that it is neither related to the ancient settlement nor to its ancient population. Also presented are some rarely reported biological features, e.g. the “en bloc” manifestation of the transverse foramen division on the cervical vertebrae C5 to C7. Keywords: Jordan - Byzantine Period - Church Burial – Anthropometry - Epigenetics- Paleopathology.
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