Cardinal and lunisolar alignments as alignments of gender and of power
Volume 10 (2008): Astronomy and Cosmology in Folk Traditions and Cultural Heritage, pp. 241–245
Pub. online: 20 December 2008
Type: Article
Open Access
Received
2 November 2007
2 November 2007
Revised
31 October 2008
31 October 2008
Published
20 December 2008
20 December 2008
Abstract
Gender terms have been used to interpret some aspects of the archaeology of Neolithic and Early Bronze Age monuments. Frequently male and female inhumations are aligned cardinally and standing stones may be ‘male’ pillar and ‘female’ lozenges. However, the astronomical alignments at monuments are frequently on lunar standstills and solstices which bisect the cardinal alignments. The anthropology of gender suggests that the concept of a ‘gender of power’ is useful in explaining how ritual power is realised through the scrambling of sexual identities. Proficiency in aligning monuments on lunar-solar cycles may well have been a device to appropriate ritual power.