Excavation of the small animal cemetery at the Roman Red Sea harbor of Berenike in 2018 and 2019
2019, 28, No. 2
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Abstract
The paper discusses funeral practices with regard to animals in ancient Berenike, investigated in two seasons of exploration, 2018 and 2019 (trenches BE18/19-107, BE01/19-48 and BE19/132). Three groups of animals are represented almost exclusively in the burials. These are cats, dogs and monkeys, buried mainly around the top and on what was the eastern slope of a sand dune. In the mid 1st century AD, an enclosure wall roughly 0.50 m thick was built enclosing a space of about 20 m2 with no apparent floor surface inside it. Outside the wall, a clay pavement surrounded the enclosure on at least three sides. Animal burials accumulated around this enclosure for the next century or so, achieving the greatest density close to the feature. By the 2nd century AD urban rubbish had encroached heavily upon the area taken up by the burials. Most likely in the beginning of the 3rd century AD, the wall was dismantled, perhaps together with the features that had been inside the enclosure (statue, column, tree?). Interestingly, two goats were buried by the two excavated corners (northeastern and northwestern ones) in this period. One of these represented a variant of the species not typical of Northeastern Africa.
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Bibliography
Osypińska, M. and Osypiński, P. (2017). New evidence for the emergence of the human-pet relation in early Roman Berenike (first–second century AD). In I. Zych (ed.), Research on the Red Sea (=PAM 26/2) (pp. 167–192). Warsaw: University of Warsaw Press
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-017-0139
Sidebotham, S.E. (2011). Berenike and the ancient maritime Spice Route. Berkeley: University of California Press
Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds). (2007). Berenike 1999/2000: Report on the excavations at Berenike, including excavations in Wadi Kalalat and Siket, and the survey of the Mons Smaragdus Region. Los Angeles, CA: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles
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