A "shaman" Burial From the Ppna Settlement of Cemka Hoyuk, Upper Tigris Basin, Turkiye
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Date
2024
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Elsevier France-editions Scientifiques Medicales Elsevier
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Abstract
Knowledge of the burial customs of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) in the Near East is increasing. Particularly, lately a large number of burials and skeletal remains have been unearthed in the Upper Tigris Basin, thanks to a number of new excavation projects in recent years. The newly revealed findings indicate that PPNA burial customs varied considerably in the region from site to site. However, the 10th millennium BCE burial CH 2019/05 at Cemka Hoyuk shows as well that there are also different burial practices with in settlements. CH 2019/05 belongs to a female individual, accompanied by animal skeletal elements, who appears to may have been a shaman or at least had been buried by someone practicing ways associated with what we understand nowadays as animism or shamanism. Hence, the burial may represent one of the earliest known examples of its kind in an Anatolian Neolithic context. @ 2024 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
Description
KODAS, Ergul/0000-0001-8340-5828; Siddiq, Abu B./0000-0001-5838-2695
Keywords
Pre-Ceramic Neolithic A, Shamanism, Animism, Early Neolithic Burial Custom, Metonymy, Upper Tigris Basin, Southeastern Anatolia, Cemka Hoyuk, Pre-Ceramic Neolithic A, Shamanism, Animism, Animal-Human Relationship, Early Neolithic Burial Custom, Metonymy, Upper Tigris Basin, Southeastern Anatolia
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WoS Q
Q4
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Q2
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Volume
128
Issue
3