La ofrenda animal durante el Bronce Inicial en Can Roqueta II (Sabadell, Vallès Occidental)arqueozoología del ritual funerario

  1. Albizuri Canadell, Silvia
Supervised by:
  1. Jordi Nadal Lorenzo Director
  2. Juliá Maroto Genover Director

Defence university: Universitat de Girona

Fecha de defensa: 27 May 2011

Committee:
  1. Josep Maria Fullola Pericot Chair
  2. Narcís Soler Masferrer Secretary
  3. Manuel Pérez Ripoll Committee member
  4. Arturo Morales Muñiz Committee member
  5. Javier López Cachero Committee member

Type: Thesis

Teseo: 331111 DIALNET lock_openTDX editor

Abstract

The research focuses on the use of animals in ritual deposits. It is based in the analysis of the faunal remains recovered from the internal funerary and ritual structures carved in the clay, in the site of the Early Bronze Age of Can Roqueta II (Sabadell, Barcelona). The results show that children, women and men were buried together in a very similar ceremony and accompanied by animals. Sheep and goats, cows, pigs and dogs are the best-represented, although carnivores and birds are also documented. While many of these animals were offered as a meal to accompany the deceased on his journey, the dogs, which were not consumed, were probably sacrificed as guides of the soul. The research aims to show that animal sacrifice is a universal response to death, with slight differences that probably reflect cultural and social adjustments.