Klaipėdos universitetas logo


  • List of journals
  • About Publisher
  • Help
  • Sitemap
Login Register

  1. Home
  2. Journals
  3. AHUK
  4. Issues
  5. Volume 44 (2023): Christianisation in the East Baltic: (Re)interpretations of Artefacts, Views and Accounts = Christianizacija rytiniame Baltijos regione: artefaktų, pažiūrų ir pasakojimų (re)interpretacijos
  6. Cremation and Christianity in the Lower ...

Acta Historica Universitatis Klaipedensis

About Editorial Policies
  • Article info
  • Related articles
  • More
    Article info Related articles

Cremation and Christianity in the Lower Daugava Area in the Tenth to the 13th Century: A Case Study Based on Liv Burials in the Ogresgala Čabas Cemetery
Volume 44 (2023): Christianisation in the East Baltic: (Re)interpretations of Artefacts, Views and Accounts = Christianizacija rytiniame Baltijos regione: artefaktų, pažiūrų ir pasakojimų (re)interpretacijos, pp. 27–79
Rūdolfs Brūzis ORCID icon link to view author Rūdolfs Brūzis details   Roberts Spirģis ORCID icon link to view author Roberts Spirģis details  

Authors

 
Placeholder
https://doi.org/10.15181/ahuk.v44i0.2571
Pub. online: 7 December 2023      Type: Article      Open accessOpen Access

Published
7 December 2023

Abstract

This article returns to the question of whether Christianity in Europe in the High Middle Ages necessarily precluded the cremation of corpses. The question is addressed focusing on the Livs, a West Finno-Ugric society, who lived in the east Baltic region, before they adopted Christianity and during the early period of Christianisation. The authors combine archaeological expertise with interpretations of historical sources to explore the late cremations of the Livs and, in particular, to analyse two female cremations from the cemetery at Ogresgala Čabas, located near the mouth of the River Daugava. Cremations dominated in the initial phase of Daugava Liv culture in the lower reaches of the Daugava in the second half of the tenth century before they were replaced by inhumations by the middle of the 11th century, especially in female graves. The article deals with the late cremations of the Livs from the late 11th to the 13th century, when they became very rare and took on a different form. Taking into account references to the practice of cremation in exceptional cases of deaths in foreign lands in written sources about the Livs, the article agrees with researchers who believe that not all cremated corpses should be immediately and unconditionally associated with paganism.

Related articles PDF XML
Related articles PDF XML

Copyright
No copyright data available.
by-nd logo by-nd logo by-nd logo
Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs License 3.0

Keywords
Livs burial grounds cremation custom Late Iron Age Christianity Christianisation

Metrics
since February 2021
308

Article info
views

0

Full article
views

306

PDF
downloads

24

XML
downloads

Export citation

Copy and paste formatted citation
Placeholder

Download citation in file


Share


RSS

Powered by PubliMill  •  Privacy policy