4.5 Article

Grave gifts manifest the ritual status of cattle in Neolithic societies of northern Germany

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 117, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2020.105122

Keywords

Organic residue analysis; Paleodiet; Isotopes; Fatty acids; Sea buckthorn; Megalith; Lipids

Funding

  1. Collaborative Research Centre 1266 Scales of Transformation -Human -environmental interaction in prehistoric and archaic societies of the German Research foundation (DFG, German Research Foundation) [2901391021 -SFB 1266]

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The Neolithic period in NW-Europe marks a time of major transformation in human lifestyle including sedentism, farming, agmpastoralism with early animal husbandry and the use of ornamented pottery by Funnelbeaker societies. Domestic animals, in particular cattle, served for traction, plowing, and manuring to support agricultural production but also supplied a variety of dietary products including meat, fat, and milk as well as wool. The impact of animal husbandry on improved living conditions in Neolithic societies and in a religious context has been inferred throughout NW-Europe and even earlier in African and Arabian regions by ritual cattle deposits. However, a potential spiritual/religious role of cattle in Neolithic societies is difficult to assess further due to the lack of interpretable Neolithic illustrations. Here, we demonstrate the ritual role of cattle in Neolithic societies from burial gifts preserved in Megalith tombs (3640-2900 BC) of Wangels, NW-Germany, where storage vessels for afterlife alimentary provision of the deceased contained cattle meat and milk products identified by their characteristic lipids but no common aquatic food sources or cereals. Pottery from the latest burial phase only yielded fatty acids which may derive from essential plant oils of Sea Buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides) that may have served as precious burial gift for medical or for alimentary purposes. The status of cattle as an object of veneration in Neolithic societies is represented by its dominating contribution to grave gifts underlining the esteem cattle received not only in agroeconomical but even further in ritual and religious respect.

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