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Full Description
The horse has a strong presence in archaeology. Its relationship with past human beings has great diversity, which can be analysed through economic, social, artistic and mythological aspects. This book, the outcome of a session at the European Association of Archaeologists' Annual Meeting in Rome in 2024, focuses on a variety of different aspects about the archaeology of the horse, such as its presence in prehistoric rock art and sculpture, antiquity and medieval art, the domestication process, the use of the horse for riding and traction, its use in funerary rituals, symbolism and presence in myths in diverse societies, among other themes.
In the Palaeolithic, this animal was not only a source of meat for nourishment, but it appears in the origins of artistic representations through paintings and carvings on cave walls and on open air outcrops. The domestication process included the use of mare's milk, which is rich in proteins and carbohydrates, being low in fat, and having a high content in vitamin C, making it better than cow's milk. When horses started to be ridden people could travel faster, developing trade and communication, disclosing cultural issues. With the emergence of complex societies, the horse was used in hunting, as a 'war machine' and as a symbol of social status. Iconography available in a variety of archaeologically visible media such as rock art, sculptures, numismatics, mosaics, and frescoes, among other artistic manifestations, enables us to understand better the importance of the horse in the development of civilisation.
The book seeks to go beyond previous publications about the horse, which usually do not encompass prehistoric cultures, are often geographically limited, or focus on physical characteristics of the horse in battle or on descriptions of horse equipment with a lack of scientific archaeological context. The chapters presented here engage with the human-horse relationship on a variety of levels and at different time periods, with an emphasis on the social and cultural significance of the horse, zooarchaeological evidence, the role of horses in combat and ritual contexts and the relationship between horse and rider in iconography, art and burial rites.
Contents
Foreword
Alberto Albarella
1. The Horse in Palaeolithic Art
Ingmar Braun
2. Contributing to the History of Equids: The Portuguese Archaeozoological Record From the Palaeolithic to the Bronze Age
Catarina Guinot and Nelson J. Almeida
3. On Technology Transfer, Iconography, and Horses in the Cucuteni-Tripolye and Steppic Traditions
Dragoş Gheorghiu
4. The Horse in the Art of the Koban Culture
Sergey Makhortykh and Nadia Kotova
5. Horses During the European Bronze Age and Iron Age
Fernando Augusto Coimbra
6. Reflection of the Horse in Material Culture in Moravia (Czech Republic) in the Urnfields and Hallstatt Period
Zuzana Golec Mírová
7. Hold Your Horses! New Insights into the Early Iron Age Equid Burials in Slovenia
Brina Škvor Jernejcic, Borut Toškan and Peter Turk
8. Horses and Horse Equipment in the Late Hallstatt South-Eastern Pannonia
Marko Dizdar
9. Horse Sacrifices in the Royal Hellenistic Necropolis of 'Dausdava - Helis': The Getic Capital in the Sboryanovo National Reserve (North-East Bulgaria)
Diana Spasova Gergova
10. About Heroes and Horses: The Common Iconography of Horseman Depictions in the Context of Sumptuous Tombs (4th-3rd centuries BC)
Clesiu Sorin
11. The Art of Horsemanship Riding in Geometric Greece: The Relationship Between Horse and Rider in Iconography and Bioarchaeology
Camila Diogo De Souza
12. The Role of the Horse in Mongolian Shamanism
Rufus Malim
Conclusion
David Anthony