A monumental burial ground from the Funnel Beaker Period at Oosterdalfsen (the Netherlands)

In 2015 a rescue excavation took place at Oosterdalfsen (municipality of Dalfsen, Overijssel, the Netherlands) yielded traces of a burial ground, an earthen monument and a house plan, all dating from the Funnel beaker period. In total c. 137 graves were found. In several burial pits a corps silhouette was still visible indicating that these deceased were positioned in Hocker position. In total 123 pots were found in the graves. The decorated pots can be dated in Brindley horizon 4–7 (c. 3200 – 2700 BC). One large structure consisted of a ditch with a proximal length of 30 m and width of 4 m. B... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van der Velde, Henk M.
Bouma, Niels
Raemaekers, Daan C. M.
Dokumenttyp: bookPart
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Verlag/Hrsg.: Habelt
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27600859
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/66e99a12-5b8e-4fcd-b164-5458bf74d769

In 2015 a rescue excavation took place at Oosterdalfsen (municipality of Dalfsen, Overijssel, the Netherlands) yielded traces of a burial ground, an earthen monument and a house plan, all dating from the Funnel beaker period. In total c. 137 graves were found. In several burial pits a corps silhouette was still visible indicating that these deceased were positioned in Hocker position. In total 123 pots were found in the graves. The decorated pots can be dated in Brindley horizon 4–7 (c. 3200 – 2700 BC). One large structure consisted of a ditch with a proximal length of 30 m and width of 4 m. Because the presence of a central grave is not ascertained we do not interpret this ditch system as the remnants of a monumental grave, but rather as an ditch-delimited arena for burial rituals. The house was two-aisled in construction, similar to the ones found at Flögeln 1 and Penningbüttel. The Oosterdalfsen community seems to have created a monumental expression in earth – the ditched feature. The large number of burials allows defining both norm and variation in burial rites in a meaningful way. The analysis of the pots, in combination with spatial analysis, will perhaps allow us to better understand the social built-up of the community that used the site for their burial rites.