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Full Description
The chronological disjuncture, LBK longhouses have widely been considered to provide ancestral influence for both rectangular and trapezoidal long barrows and cairns, but with the discovery and excavation of more houses in recent times is it possible to observe evidence of more contemporary inspiration. What do the features found beneath long mounds tell us about this and to what extent do they represent domestic structures. Indeed, how can we distinguish between domestic houses or halls and those that may have been constructed for ritual purposes or ended up beneath mounds? Do so called 'mortuary enclosures' reflect ritual or domestic architecture and did side ditches always provide material for a mound or for building construction? This collection of papers seeks to explore the interface between structures often considered to be those of the living with those for the dead.
Contents
Foreword by Timothy Darvill and Kenneth Brophy
Preface and acknowledgements by Alistair Barcklay, David Field and Jim Leary
List of contributors
1. Schrödinger's Cat: Houses for the living and the dead. Jim Leary, David Field and Alistair Barclay
2. Hypogea and the clubhouse: Neolithic Malta's houses of the living and houses of the dead. Robert P. Barratt, Caroline Malone, T. Rowan McLaughlin and Eóin W. Parkinson
3. Houses of the living, houses of the dead: A view from the Polish lowlands. Joanna Pyzel
4. 'Cicéron c'est Poincaré'. Dealing with geometry: Neolithic house plans and the earliest monuments. Philippe Chambon
5. The dead and the Linearbandkeramik longhouse. Penny Bickle
6. The long and short of it: Memory and practice in the Early Neolithic of Britain and Ireland. Alasdair Whittle
7. Measuring up: Longhouses, enclosures or mounds? Roy Loveday
8. Houses foundational: Gathering histories at Dorstone Hill, Herefordshire. Keith Ray and Julian Thomas
9. New work on long barrows in Lincolnshire. Denise Drury and Tim Allen
10. A dialogue with the dead? The relationship between an Early Neolithic rectangular timber building and a chambered tomb on Holy Island, Anglesey, north-west Wales. Jane Kenney
11. House of the living, house of the dead: An open and shut case from Ballyglass, Co. Mayo? Jessica Smyth
12. Shaky foundations: Romantic nationalism and the development of the 'Irish model' of Neolithic settlement. Andrew Whitefield
13. Structure, metaphor and funerary practices in Neolithic Scotland. Alison Sheridan
14. The state of play. Frances Healy