Search for dissertations about: "stockholms arkeologi"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 148 swedish dissertations containing the words stockholms arkeologi.
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1. Bronze Age Identities : Costume, Conflict and Contact in Northern Europe 1600-1300 BC
Abstract : This dissertation deals with male and female social identities during the Middle Bronze Age (1600-1300 BC) in southern Scandinavia and northern Germany. South Scandinavian Bronze Age research has traditionally focused on the male sphere, while women have seldom been seriously considered or analysed in terms of their roles, power or influences on society. READ MORE
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2. Tension and tradition : a study of late Iron Age spearheads around the Baltic Sea
Abstract : This thesis discusses spearheads and individuals in Estonia, Latvia, eastern Sweden, Finland and western Russia during the 11th century. The source material consists of 335 spearheads of type M according to the typology of Petersen from 1919. READ MORE
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3. Practices for the Living and the Dead : Medieval and Post-Reformation Burials in Scandinavia
Abstract : The main themes of the thesis are burial customs and social identities, and how medieval and post-Reformation graves can provide information on such as age structures, phases in life, gender relations and social organization. The study is based on nine groups of Scandinavian material, and it comprises four case studies. READ MORE
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4. Masking Moments : The Transitions of Bodies and Beings in Late Iron Age Scandinavia
Abstract : This thesis explores bodily representations in Late Iron Age Scandinavia (400–1050 AD). Non-human bodies, such as gold foil figures, and human bodies are analysed. The work starts with an examination and deconstruction of the sex/gender categories to the effect that they are considered to be of minor value for the purposes of the thesis. READ MORE
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5. Consuming and communicating identities : Dietary diversity and interaction in Middle Neolithic Sweden
Abstract : Isotope analyses on human and faunal skeletal remains from different Swedish Neolithic archaeological contexts are here applied as a means to reconstruct dietary strategies and mobility patterns. The chronological emphasis is on the Middle Neolithic period, and radiocarbon dating constitutes another central focus. READ MORE