UN@ est une plateforme d'édition de livres numériques pour les presses universitaires de Nouvelle-Aquitaine

Auteur : Stéphane Rottier

UMR 5199 PACEA
Université de Bordeaux
stephane.rottier@u-bordeaux.fr
0000-0002-1520-6648

Stéphane Rottier est Maitre de Conférences à l’Université de Bordeaux, spécialiste des pratiques funéraires du Néolithique à l’âge du Bronze.

 

Bibliographie sélective

  • Rivollat M, Rohrlach AB, Ringbauer H, Childebayeva A, Mendisco F, Barquera R, Szolek A, Le Roy M, Colleran H, Tuke J, Aron F, Pemonge MH, Späth E, Télouk P, Rey L, Goude G, Balter V, Krause J, Rottier S., Deguilloux MF & Haak W 2023. Extensive pedigrees reveal the social organization of a Neolithic community, Nature, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06350-8
  • Arzelier, A., Partiot, C., Fischer, C.-E., Lefort, A., Le Roy, M., Rottier, S. 2023  Burying children in iron age normandy: The unusual case of the necropolis of urville-nacqueville, second century BC, in Normative, Atypical or Deviant? Interpreting Prehistoric and Protohistoric Child Burial Practices : 164-181. EID: 2-s2.0-85172797199
  • Le Roy M, Rottier S. 2022. Chapter 11 : Neolithic burials of infants and children, in Knüsel C, Schotsmans E (ed.) Routledge handbook of Archaeothanatology,
  •  Rottier S. 2022. Chapter 13 : Different burial types but common practice: The case of the funerary complex at Barbuise and La Saulsotte (France) at the beginning of the Late Bronze Age, in Knüsel C, Schotsmans E (ed.) Routledge handbook of Archaeothanatology.
  • Rottier S. 2016. The Seated Dead: Evidence of Funerary Complexity from the Early Late Bronze Age, 14th-12th centuries BC in France. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, Special Issue Funerary Taphonomy. DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2016.04.016
  • Rottier S. 2015. The social skin and the hypothesis of an uxorilocal system in the Early late Bronze Age (14th-12th BC) in the Southeast of the Paris Basin, in Suchowska-Ducke P, Reiter S, Vandkilde H Forging Identities. The Mobility of Culture in Bronze Age Europe: Volume 1, Proceedings of the Congress, 2-6 june 2012, Aarhus, Denmark: 131-139.

 

Mots clés
archaeothanatology, Neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Biological anthropology

The protohistoric period in Europe is the theater of very diverse funeral treatments, from simple burial as it is most often envisaged, to cremation, including specific positioning, remodeling of tombs, recovery of bones, etc.
Retour en haut
Aller au contenu principal