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Ref ID: 25561
Ref Type: Book Section in a Series
Authors: White, Joyce C.
Eyre, Chureekamol Onsuwan
Title: Residential burial and the metal age of Thailand
Date: 2011
Source: Residential burial: a multiregional exploration
DOI: 10.1111/j.1551-8248.2011.01028.x
Abstract: Mortuary programs have great potential to provide insights into ritually-integrated social systems of house societies. Metal age house societies of prehistoric Thailand, such as the Ban Chiang Cultural Tradition, are argued to have practiced residential burial, with interment of corpses in close physical proximity to spaces occupied by the living in daily life. It is suggested that this mortuary practice contributed to sustaining long-liven socio-settlement systems that were characterized by low levels of inter-community conflict. The mortuary ceramics interred in metal age burials reveal sub-regional stylistic and technological groupings that appear to imply territorial subdivisions in these apparently acephalous and decentralized societies.
Date Created: 6/6/2011
Editors: Adams, Ron L.
King, Stacie M.
Volume: 20
Number: 1
Page Start: 59
Page End: 78
Series Title: Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association