1st Edition

Death and Burial within the Ancient Levant (4500-550 BCE) Challenging the Normative

By Jennie Bradbury Copyright 2025
450 Pages 64 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

450 Pages 64 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

450 Pages 64 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book offers a comprehensive survey of burial practices in the ancient Levant and challenges some of the assumptions behind previous attempts to find a normative burial practice. Exploring the dazzling variety of ways in which the living deal with the dead, this book utilises big data projects and legacy data to highlight the sheer diversity of burial practices in the ancient Levant.... Read more

1. Introduction. Death and Burial within the Ancient Levant; 2. Mortuary and Funerary Archaeology in the Levant and Western Asia; 3. Burials and Society: The Late Chalcolithic to Iron Age Levant;
4. Counting the Numbers: Individual, Collective and Simultaneous Burial; 5. From Inhumation to Cremation; 6. Biology and Society; 7. Burial Positioning in the Archaeological Record; 8. Equipping the Dead; 9. Throwing away the concept of Normative?; 10. Conclusion

Biography

Jennie Bradbury (Ph.D., F.S.A) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology at Bryn Mawr College. Her research interests include burial traditions and mortuary practices; social complexity in ancient Western Asia; the role of ‘non-optimal’ zones; landscape archaeology, GIS and archaeological survey techniques; and cultural heritage.