Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora

In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves and their families, they began a process that impacted their lives dramatically. Research on modern population movements has demonstrated that migration-induced stresses change the lives of immigrants...

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Main Author: McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://theses.gla.ac.uk/1736/
https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/record=b2750722
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spelling ftunivglasthes:oai:theses.gla.ac.uk:1736 2023-05-15T16:51:49+02:00 Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad 2010 http://theses.gla.ac.uk/1736/ https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/record=b2750722 unknown McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad (2010) Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow. CC Archaeology JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2010 ftunivglasthes 2021-09-12T17:21:12Z In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves and their families, they began a process that impacted their lives dramatically. Research on modern population movements has demonstrated that migration-induced stresses change the lives of immigrants, and shape how they adapt to their new homes. Migration affects societies and people in a number of ways: it changes family and household organisation; gender relations and roles shift; and general social and cultural structures are altered through the integration of different practices and beliefs. While the identification of the societal changes caused by migration has been the focus of research in a number of fields, it has yet to be directly addressed in archaeology. This thesis seeks to examine the ways in which various social identities were displayed through funerary rituals and the associated material culture in the Norse North Atlantic, and to identify how these changed through the course of migration. The analysis is conducted by comparing burial data collected from two regions of Norway, representing the homeland of the migrants, and Scotland and Iceland, representing two critical destination points. Approximately 500 graves are catalogued and assessed using multivariate statistics. Six case studies, selected from the study areas, are used for comparative purposes. The analysis of the overall data-set and the case study sites indicates that there are key differences between the homeland and the communities of the Viking diaspora. Moreover, the results indicate that the circumstances of migration, such as location, resource availability, and the presence of a local population, results in society changing in different, yet significant, ways: gendered burial practices are altered; new manifestations of traditional rites appear; and migrant identities emerge. Thesis Iceland North Atlantic University of Glasgow: Glasgow Theses Service Norway
institution Open Polar
collection University of Glasgow: Glasgow Theses Service
op_collection_id ftunivglasthes
language unknown
topic CC Archaeology
JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration
spellingShingle CC Archaeology
JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration
McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad
Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora
topic_facet CC Archaeology
JV Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration
description In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves and their families, they began a process that impacted their lives dramatically. Research on modern population movements has demonstrated that migration-induced stresses change the lives of immigrants, and shape how they adapt to their new homes. Migration affects societies and people in a number of ways: it changes family and household organisation; gender relations and roles shift; and general social and cultural structures are altered through the integration of different practices and beliefs. While the identification of the societal changes caused by migration has been the focus of research in a number of fields, it has yet to be directly addressed in archaeology. This thesis seeks to examine the ways in which various social identities were displayed through funerary rituals and the associated material culture in the Norse North Atlantic, and to identify how these changed through the course of migration. The analysis is conducted by comparing burial data collected from two regions of Norway, representing the homeland of the migrants, and Scotland and Iceland, representing two critical destination points. Approximately 500 graves are catalogued and assessed using multivariate statistics. Six case studies, selected from the study areas, are used for comparative purposes. The analysis of the overall data-set and the case study sites indicates that there are key differences between the homeland and the communities of the Viking diaspora. Moreover, the results indicate that the circumstances of migration, such as location, resource availability, and the presence of a local population, results in society changing in different, yet significant, ways: gendered burial practices are altered; new manifestations of traditional rites appear; and migrant identities emerge.
format Thesis
author McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad
author_facet McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad
author_sort McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad
title Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora
title_short Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora
title_full Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora
title_fullStr Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora
title_full_unstemmed Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora
title_sort manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from viking-age graves in the north atlantic diaspora
publishDate 2010
url http://theses.gla.ac.uk/1736/
https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/record=b2750722
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
op_relation McGuire, Erin-Lee Halstad (2010) Manifestations of identity in burial: evidence from Viking-Age graves in the North Atlantic diaspora. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow.
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