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Industrial Religion

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This study focuses on the "saucer pyres," a series of 70 deposits excavated in the residential and industrial areas bordering the Athenian Agora. Each consisted of a shallow pit, its floor sometime...
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  • 01 November 2013
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This study focuses on the "saucer pyres," a series of 70 deposits excavated in the residential and industrial areas bordering the Athenian Agora. Each consisted of a shallow pit, its floor sometimes marked by heavy burning, with a votive deposit of pottery and fragments of burnt bone, ash, and charcoal. Most of the pots were miniatures (including the eponymous saucers) but a few larger vessels were found, along with offerings associated with funerary cult. The deposits represent a largely Athenian phenomenon, with few parallels elsewhere. When first found in the 1930s, the deposits were interpreted as baby burials. Recent zooarchaeological analysis of the bones, however, reveals that they are the remains of sheep and goats, and that the deposits were sacrificial rather than funerary. The present study investigates the nature of those sacrifices, taking into account the contents of the pyres, their spatial distribution, and their relationship to buildings around the Agora and elsewhere. In light of a strong correlation between pyres and industrial activity, the author argues that the pyres document workplace rituals designed to protect artisans and their enterprises.
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Price: £60.00
Pages: 200
Publisher: American School of Classical Studies at Athens
Imprint: American School of Classical Studies at Athens
Series: Hesperia Supplement
Publication Date: 01 November 2013
ISBN: 9780876615478
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology, History of art, HISTORY / Ancient / Greece, History of architecture, Ancient history, European history

REVIEWS Icon
This masterly study sets an exceptionally high standard for archaeological monographs.
Anne Mackay, Mouseion 13.2 (2016), pp. 460-463.

"This bold and brilliant analysis of the curious phenomenon of saucer pyres will be of interest to all Greek archaeologists and scholars of ancient Greek religion."
Sarah A. James, AJA 120.4 (2016).