“燃烧的毛皮”——铁器时代和中世纪早期(公元1-1300年)芬诺斯坎迪亚东南部墓葬中的棕熊皮

Pub Date : 2017-05-01 DOI:10.3176/ARCH.2017.1.01
Tuija Kirkinen
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Firstly, the role of the bear was studied by analysing bear skin remains, specifically the 3rd phalanges and bear hairs, which have been found in burials, and secondly finds and their find contexts were analysed in terms of references made to them in Finno-Karelian Kalevala-metric poetry. The results stress the role of bear skins in constructing the identity of the deceased as a warrior and as an ancestor. The concept of a warrior as a predator is widely known among Eurasian populations. In south-eastern Fennoscandia the distribution and find contexts indicate that this ritual was adopted mainly from the Germanic cultural sphere. Introduction The practice of using animal skins in funeral rites as coverings or shrouds was a worldwide phenomenon that lasted for millennia in Eurasia (e.g., Douny & Harris 2014; Harris 2014; Koryakova & Epimakhov 2007, 100). In Finland, this ritual could have been part of some Neolithic inhumation burials, where the shape of some grave pits suggests the use of skins as stretchers or wrappings (Ayrapaa 1931; Torvinen 1979). The best preserved archaeological evidence was deposited in the Late Iron Age inhumation burials, where cow, bear, and especially cervid skins were commonly used to wrap the body (Kirkinen 2015). In the Iron Age cremation burials, the remains of predator claws have been interpreted to indicate the cremating of skins along with the bodies (e.g., Mantyla-Asplund & Stora 2010, 62; Petre 1980; Schonfelder 1994). In this paper, the Iron Age tradition of cremating brown bear (Ursus arctos) skins has been analysed by combining archaeological data with folklore evidence and ethnographical sources. The aim is to identify the origins and meaning of the phenomenon. The studied zooarchaeological evidence, i.e. the 3rd phalanges and hairs of a bear, comes from the major Iron Age cemetery areas in south-eastern Fennoscandia: southern, eastern, and western Finland, and the Karelian Isthmus. In this area, the practice of wrapping bodies in bear skins extended over a 1,000-year period, starting in the Roman Iron Age in south-western Finland (Kivikoski 1965) and ending with the Medieval Age inhumation burials in the east (Kirkinen 2015). The present archaeological material stresses the use of bear skins in Europe that originated in Scandinavia and in Central Europe, specifically in Germany and the Czech Republic in the east to the British Isles in the west, and which practice hypothetically spread first to the western parts of Finland from Scandinavia (Mohl 1978; Petre 1980; Schonfelder 1994; Gustavsson et al. 2014; for the Estonian material, see Jonuks 2009, 281). The wrapping of bodies in bear skins was, however, a wider phenomenon, as skin remains have been discovered, for instance, from North American shamanic burials (Russell 2012, 140, and cited literature) and from historical Sami cemeteries (Holmberg 1915, 16; Korhonen 1982b, 109). The burning of skins, in any case, represented a new practice in an area in which the roots of the human-bear relationship were located in circumpolar bear ceremonialism. In this ancient tradition, the bear was considered to be the King of the Forest, a holy animal, and a kind of human being, the killing of which was strictly ritualized (Krohn 1915/2008, 146 ff.; Hallowell 1926; Pentikainen 2007; Sarmela 2009, 80 ff.; Siikala 2012, 380 f. …","PeriodicalId":0,"journal":{"name":"","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2017-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"\\\"Burning Pelts\\\"-Brown Bear Skins in the Iron Age and Early Medieval (1-1300 AD) Burials in South-Eastern Fennoscandia\",\"authors\":\"Tuija Kirkinen\",\"doi\":\"10.3176/ARCH.2017.1.01\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This paper deals with the use of brown bear (Ursus arctos) skins in the Iron Age and Early Medieval death rituals in south-eastern Fennoscandia. 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The present archaeological material stresses the use of bear skins in Europe that originated in Scandinavia and in Central Europe, specifically in Germany and the Czech Republic in the east to the British Isles in the west, and which practice hypothetically spread first to the western parts of Finland from Scandinavia (Mohl 1978; Petre 1980; Schonfelder 1994; Gustavsson et al. 2014; for the Estonian material, see Jonuks 2009, 281). The wrapping of bodies in bear skins was, however, a wider phenomenon, as skin remains have been discovered, for instance, from North American shamanic burials (Russell 2012, 140, and cited literature) and from historical Sami cemeteries (Holmberg 1915, 16; Korhonen 1982b, 109). The burning of skins, in any case, represented a new practice in an area in which the roots of the human-bear relationship were located in circumpolar bear ceremonialism. 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引用次数: 6

摘要

本文研究了芬诺斯坎迪亚东南部铁器时代和中世纪早期死亡仪式中棕熊(Ursus arctos)皮的使用。在这个地区,用熊皮包裹尸体的习俗已经持续了1000多年,从芬兰西南部的罗马铁器时代开始,到中世纪卡累利阿地峡的人葬结束。在墓地中发现的第三指骨(即爪子)的数量,特别是在平地下的火葬墓地中(公元400/600-1000年),假设了用捕食者的皮肤包裹尸体。首先,通过分析在埋葬中发现的熊皮遗骸,特别是第三指骨和熊毛,研究了熊的作用。其次,根据芬兰-卡累利阿卡勒瓦拉韵律诗歌中对它们的引用,分析了这些发现及其背景。研究结果强调了熊皮在构建死者作为战士和祖先的身份方面的作用。战士作为掠食者的概念在欧亚种群中广为人知。在芬诺斯坎迪亚东南部的分布和发现背景表明,这种仪式主要来自日耳曼文化领域。在葬礼仪式中使用动物皮作为覆盖物或裹尸布的做法是一种全球现象,在欧亚大陆持续了数千年(例如,Douny & Harris 2014;哈里斯2014;Koryakova & Epimakhov 2007, 100)。在芬兰,这种仪式可能是新石器时代一些土葬的一部分,其中一些墓穴的形状表明使用皮肤作为支架或包裹物(Ayrapaa 1931;Torvinen 1979)。保存最完好的考古证据是在铁器时代晚期的人葬中沉积的,在那里,牛、熊,尤其是鹿皮通常被用来包裹身体(Kirkinen 2015)。在铁器时代的火葬中,捕食者的爪子遗迹被解释为表明皮肤与身体一起火化(例如,Mantyla-Asplund & Stora 2010, 62;那1980;联系1994)。本文结合考古资料、民间传说证据和民族志资料,分析了铁器时代火化棕熊(Ursus arctos)皮的传统。目的是确定这种现象的起源和意义。研究的动物考古证据,即第三指骨和熊的毛发,来自芬诺斯坎迪亚东南部的主要铁器时代墓地:芬兰的南部、东部和西部,以及卡累利阿地峡。在这一地区,用熊皮包裹尸体的做法延续了1000多年,始于芬兰西南部的罗马铁器时代(Kivikoski 1965),结束于东部的中世纪土葬(Kirkinen 2015)。目前的考古资料强调,熊皮在欧洲的使用起源于斯堪的纳维亚半岛和中欧,特别是东部的德国和捷克共和国到西部的不列颠群岛,这种做法假设首先从斯堪的纳维亚传播到芬兰西部(Mohl 1978;那1980;联系1994;Gustavsson et al. 2014;关于爱沙尼亚的资料,见Jonuks 2009, 281)。然而,用熊皮包裹尸体是一种更广泛的现象,例如,在北美萨满葬礼(Russell 2012, 140,并引用文献)和萨米历史墓地(Holmberg 1915, 16;Korhonen 1982b, 109)。无论如何,在一个人类与熊的关系根源于环极地熊仪式的地区,焚烧兽皮代表了一种新的做法。在这个古老的传统中,熊被认为是森林之王,是一种神圣的动物,也是一种人类,杀死熊是严格仪式化的(Krohn 1915/2008, 146 ff.;哈洛韦尔1926;Pentikainen 2007;Sarmela 2009, 80 ff.;Siikala 2012, 380 f. ...
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"Burning Pelts"-Brown Bear Skins in the Iron Age and Early Medieval (1-1300 AD) Burials in South-Eastern Fennoscandia
This paper deals with the use of brown bear (Ursus arctos) skins in the Iron Age and Early Medieval death rituals in south-eastern Fennoscandia. In this area, the practice of wrapping bodies in bear skins endured for over 1,000 years, starting in the Roman Iron Age in south-western Finland and ending with the Medieval Age inhumation burials in the Karelian Isthmus. The wrapping of bodies in predator skins is hypothesized by the numbers of 3rd phalanges (i.e. claws) which have been found in burials, especially in cremation cemeteries under level ground (400/600-1000 AD). Firstly, the role of the bear was studied by analysing bear skin remains, specifically the 3rd phalanges and bear hairs, which have been found in burials, and secondly finds and their find contexts were analysed in terms of references made to them in Finno-Karelian Kalevala-metric poetry. The results stress the role of bear skins in constructing the identity of the deceased as a warrior and as an ancestor. The concept of a warrior as a predator is widely known among Eurasian populations. In south-eastern Fennoscandia the distribution and find contexts indicate that this ritual was adopted mainly from the Germanic cultural sphere. Introduction The practice of using animal skins in funeral rites as coverings or shrouds was a worldwide phenomenon that lasted for millennia in Eurasia (e.g., Douny & Harris 2014; Harris 2014; Koryakova & Epimakhov 2007, 100). In Finland, this ritual could have been part of some Neolithic inhumation burials, where the shape of some grave pits suggests the use of skins as stretchers or wrappings (Ayrapaa 1931; Torvinen 1979). The best preserved archaeological evidence was deposited in the Late Iron Age inhumation burials, where cow, bear, and especially cervid skins were commonly used to wrap the body (Kirkinen 2015). In the Iron Age cremation burials, the remains of predator claws have been interpreted to indicate the cremating of skins along with the bodies (e.g., Mantyla-Asplund & Stora 2010, 62; Petre 1980; Schonfelder 1994). In this paper, the Iron Age tradition of cremating brown bear (Ursus arctos) skins has been analysed by combining archaeological data with folklore evidence and ethnographical sources. The aim is to identify the origins and meaning of the phenomenon. The studied zooarchaeological evidence, i.e. the 3rd phalanges and hairs of a bear, comes from the major Iron Age cemetery areas in south-eastern Fennoscandia: southern, eastern, and western Finland, and the Karelian Isthmus. In this area, the practice of wrapping bodies in bear skins extended over a 1,000-year period, starting in the Roman Iron Age in south-western Finland (Kivikoski 1965) and ending with the Medieval Age inhumation burials in the east (Kirkinen 2015). The present archaeological material stresses the use of bear skins in Europe that originated in Scandinavia and in Central Europe, specifically in Germany and the Czech Republic in the east to the British Isles in the west, and which practice hypothetically spread first to the western parts of Finland from Scandinavia (Mohl 1978; Petre 1980; Schonfelder 1994; Gustavsson et al. 2014; for the Estonian material, see Jonuks 2009, 281). The wrapping of bodies in bear skins was, however, a wider phenomenon, as skin remains have been discovered, for instance, from North American shamanic burials (Russell 2012, 140, and cited literature) and from historical Sami cemeteries (Holmberg 1915, 16; Korhonen 1982b, 109). The burning of skins, in any case, represented a new practice in an area in which the roots of the human-bear relationship were located in circumpolar bear ceremonialism. In this ancient tradition, the bear was considered to be the King of the Forest, a holy animal, and a kind of human being, the killing of which was strictly ritualized (Krohn 1915/2008, 146 ff.; Hallowell 1926; Pentikainen 2007; Sarmela 2009, 80 ff.; Siikala 2012, 380 f. …
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