The death of infants in Early Iron Age Cyprus

OPUSCULA-ANNUAL OF THE SWEDISH INSTITUTES AT ATHENS AND ROME(2021)

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Abstract
During recent excavations of the French Archaeological Mission at Kition-Bamboula, in modern day Larnaka, Cyprus, an infant jar burial was discovered. It was found under a floor layer in a domestic context, and is dated to the beginning of the Late Cypriot IIIB period (end of the 12th-early 11th century BC). This jar burial is part of a series which seems to be attested, at least in the present state of documentation, only in eastern Cyprus (Enkomi, Salamis and, on a lesser scale, Kition) during a period that spans the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age. The Kition-Bamboula jar burial is notable for its wealth (jewellery, vase offerings, and food deposit). This article proposes a detailed and multidisciplinary study of the burial, as well as a comprehensive consideration of the treatment of infants' dead bodies in Early Iron Age Cyprus.*
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Key words
burial, Cyprus, infant, Iron Age, Phoenician, Kition, Salamis
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