La terre crue en contexte funéraire

Although raw-earth constructions during late prehistoric periods have been known and recognised in Near Eastern contexts for a long time, the scientific community became fully aware of the potential in Europe and more particularly in Southern France only at the beginning of the 2000s with the discov...

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प्रकाशित: Presses universitaires de Provence 2026
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ऑनलाइन पहुंच:https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/172707
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_version_ 1869523272753741824
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description Although raw-earth constructions during late prehistoric periods have been known and recognised in Near Eastern contexts for a long time, the scientific community became fully aware of the potential in Europe and more particularly in Southern France only at the beginning of the 2000s with the discovery of Neolithic earthen buildings in Languedoc and Provence. Today and notably thanks to the achievements made by micromorphological studies, this material is a special area of study, being both a main component of builder cultures and an indicator of social and economic systems. The central theme of this round table, i.e. the use of raw earth in burial contexts was one chapter of this still poorly investigated field that crucially needs to be documented and to be better understood with regard to recent archaeological discoveries. To date this issue has in fact only been tackled in a very fragmented or anecdotal way as part of wider or related themes. The aim of this round table was to approach raw earth in burial contexts on a large scale, taking into account the complementarity of the various works and studies that should now be correlated. The discussions focused on several themes: the role and the different forms of raw earth in the burial space, its technical specificities as an architectural element or system, its status in funerary symbolism. This volume groups together seventeen contributions covering a large time span from the Neolithic to the Middle Bronze Age and touching on geographic areas in Europe (Italy, Spain, France, Crete, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta), the Levant (Syria) and the Caucasus (Azerbaijan).
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publishDate 2026
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publisher Presses universitaires de Provence
publisherStr Presses universitaires de Provence
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-1727072026-02-25T19:51:07Z La terre crue en contexte funéraire Leal, Émilie Peinetti, Alessandro Perello, Bérengère Tchérémissinoff, Yaramila Wattez, Julia Raw earth Funerary architecture Funerary device Building system Grave Burial Burial mound Tumulus Hypogeum Neolithic Bronze Age Europe Levant Caucasus thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHD European history thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NK Archaeology Although raw-earth constructions during late prehistoric periods have been known and recognised in Near Eastern contexts for a long time, the scientific community became fully aware of the potential in Europe and more particularly in Southern France only at the beginning of the 2000s with the discovery of Neolithic earthen buildings in Languedoc and Provence. Today and notably thanks to the achievements made by micromorphological studies, this material is a special area of study, being both a main component of builder cultures and an indicator of social and economic systems. The central theme of this round table, i.e. the use of raw earth in burial contexts was one chapter of this still poorly investigated field that crucially needs to be documented and to be better understood with regard to recent archaeological discoveries. To date this issue has in fact only been tackled in a very fragmented or anecdotal way as part of wider or related themes. The aim of this round table was to approach raw earth in burial contexts on a large scale, taking into account the complementarity of the various works and studies that should now be correlated. The discussions focused on several themes: the role and the different forms of raw earth in the burial space, its technical specificities as an architectural element or system, its status in funerary symbolism. This volume groups together seventeen contributions covering a large time span from the Neolithic to the Middle Bronze Age and touching on geographic areas in Europe (Italy, Spain, France, Crete, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta), the Levant (Syria) and the Caucasus (Azerbaijan). 2026-02-25T19:51:06Z 2026-02-25T19:51:06Z 2025 book 9791032005989 9791032005750 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/172707 fre Préhistoires de la Méditerranée image/jpeg n/a https://www.7switch.com/fr/ebook/9791032004425/from/openedition https://books.openedition.org/pup/80028 Presses universitaires de Provence 10.4000/156u9 Although raw-earth constructions during late prehistoric periods have been known and recognised in Near Eastern contexts for a long time, the scientific community became fully aware of the potential in Europe and more particularly in Southern France only at the beginning of the 2000s with the discovery of Neolithic earthen buildings in Languedoc and Provence. Today and notably thanks to the achievements made by micromorphological studies, this material is a special area of study, being both a main component of builder cultures and an indicator of social and economic systems. The central theme of this round table, i.e. the use of raw earth in burial contexts was one chapter of this still poorly investigated field that crucially needs to be documented and to be better understood with regard to recent archaeological discoveries. To date this issue has in fact only been tackled in a very fragmented or anecdotal way as part of wider or related themes. The aim of this round table was to approach raw earth in burial contexts on a large scale, taking into account the complementarity of the various works and studies that should now be correlated. The discussions focused on several themes: the role and the different forms of raw earth in the burial space, its technical specificities as an architectural element or system, its status in funerary symbolism. This volume groups together seventeen contributions covering a large time span from the Neolithic to the Middle Bronze Age and touching on geographic areas in Europe (Italy, Spain, France, Crete, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta), the Levant (Syria) and the Caucasus (Azerbaijan). 10.4000/156u9 c376f772-e871-4af3-b645-e7516a5649b5 9791032005989 9791032005750 428 Aix-en-Provence open access
spellingShingle Raw earth
Funerary architecture
Funerary device
Building system
Grave
Burial
Burial mound
Tumulus
Hypogeum
Neolithic
Bronze Age
Europe
Levant
Caucasus
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHD European history
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NK Archaeology
La terre crue en contexte funéraire
title La terre crue en contexte funéraire
title_full La terre crue en contexte funéraire
title_fullStr La terre crue en contexte funéraire
title_full_unstemmed La terre crue en contexte funéraire
title_short La terre crue en contexte funéraire
title_sort la terre crue en contexte funeraire
topic Raw earth
Funerary architecture
Funerary device
Building system
Grave
Burial
Burial mound
Tumulus
Hypogeum
Neolithic
Bronze Age
Europe
Levant
Caucasus
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHD European history
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NK Archaeology
topic_facet Raw earth
Funerary architecture
Funerary device
Building system
Grave
Burial
Burial mound
Tumulus
Hypogeum
Neolithic
Bronze Age
Europe
Levant
Caucasus
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHD European history
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NK Archaeology
url https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/172707