2004
DOI: 10.3406/galia.2004.3062
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Variabilité des pratiques funéraires protohistoriques dans le sud de la France : défunts incinérés, défunts non brûlés

Abstract: premier âge du Fer, second âge du Fer, religion, pratiques funéraires, sépultures, incinération, inhumation. Résumé. Défunt brûlé ou non, la connaissance de cette pratique de traitement du cadavre nous est accessible pour quelque 400 nécropoles ou tombes protohistoriques réparties dans les vingt-cinq départements du tiers méridional de la France. Il en ressort une évolution cohérente : au Bronze final Illb existe une bipartition, incinération à l'ouest, inhumation à l'est d'une zone longeant la bordure sud-oue… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The IA dataset is unbalanced in terms of the chronological distribution of the individuals, with 11 individuals dated to the Early Iron Age and 54 dated to the Late Iron Age period ( Figure 1 B). This can be partly explained by the funerary treatment and the use of cremation (see, for example, Dedet, 2004 for southern France). The few human remains (from southern or north-western France) available for genomic analyses represent deceased who escaped cremation and benefited from non-ordinary funerary practices.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The IA dataset is unbalanced in terms of the chronological distribution of the individuals, with 11 individuals dated to the Early Iron Age and 54 dated to the Late Iron Age period ( Figure 1 B). This can be partly explained by the funerary treatment and the use of cremation (see, for example, Dedet, 2004 for southern France). The few human remains (from southern or north-western France) available for genomic analyses represent deceased who escaped cremation and benefited from non-ordinary funerary practices.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, two exceptions can be pointed out for outlier BES1248 and PECH3. The individual BES1248, from the Bessan site, was found in a single burial, whereas cremation was the predominant funerary practice in southern France during this period ( Dedet, 2004 ). However, the other only adult buried in Bessan (BES1249) does not appear as a genetic outlier and, therefore, impedes drawing any conclusion about the link between outlier status and special funerary features in this case.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whereas burials are predominant in the north of Atlantic Gaul and appear to develop in the south of England, 2 conversely cremation appears to prevail in the west, particularly in the Armorican Massif. This latter aspect may not be unrelated to the extension of cremation in southern Gaul throughout the Early Iron Age (Dedet 2004), by means of specific practices denoting an adaptation to distinct cultural contexts. As for the contacts established beyond the Channel, it is interesting to note that burials with non-dismantled twowheeled chariots from the 5th century BC are now known in Yorkshire and the southeast of Scotland (Boyle 2004;Carter et al 2010), which could provide evidence of affinities with Champagne.…”
Section: Fig 75 Atlantic Objects Of the Early Iron Age With Braided Decoration Of Syro-cypriot Style (1-2) And Ornamentation With Prophylmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These incinerations correspond to isolated graves or small funerary sites with a maximum of five individuals. The large cremation necropolises developed in southern France only at the very end of the LBA (ninth century BC), in western Languedoc and Roussillon (Dedet 2004).…”
Section: Burialsmentioning
confidence: 99%