A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits

This article is devoted to a clay tub burial from Athens, laid out in the early fifth century B.C.E., where vessels have been found in unusual types, number, and quality. Even more, central parts of the skeleton were missing. Since the objects were arranged in a very special way, the impression aris...

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Main Author: Ernst-Andreas Neumann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ACoSt - Association for Coroplastic Studies 2024-06-01
Series:Les Carnets de l’ACoSt
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/acost/3963
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author Ernst-Andreas Neumann
author_facet Ernst-Andreas Neumann
author_sort Ernst-Andreas Neumann
collection DOAJ
description This article is devoted to a clay tub burial from Athens, laid out in the early fifth century B.C.E., where vessels have been found in unusual types, number, and quality. Even more, central parts of the skeleton were missing. Since the objects were arranged in a very special way, the impression arises that the bones have been replaced by vessels and terracotta figurines. Discussing the reasons for such a practice, a reburial evolves as the most likely option. By a glimpse on ancient ghost stories and images, it is pointed out that the reburial might have been triggered by a certain belief: the possibility that the dead could come back to earth. It is argued that in this mindset the replacement of the corpse seemed necessary to prevent the spirit of the deceased, disturbed in his rest by the destruction of the original burial, of leaving Hades and haunting the place of the original grave.
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spelling doaj-art-3c9dff67f4584617bf553a44bcad2b162025-08-20T02:47:17ZengACoSt - Association for Coroplastic StudiesLes Carnets de l’ACoSt2431-85742024-06-012410.4000/11rv0A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy SpiritsErnst-Andreas NeumannThis article is devoted to a clay tub burial from Athens, laid out in the early fifth century B.C.E., where vessels have been found in unusual types, number, and quality. Even more, central parts of the skeleton were missing. Since the objects were arranged in a very special way, the impression arises that the bones have been replaced by vessels and terracotta figurines. Discussing the reasons for such a practice, a reburial evolves as the most likely option. By a glimpse on ancient ghost stories and images, it is pointed out that the reburial might have been triggered by a certain belief: the possibility that the dead could come back to earth. It is argued that in this mindset the replacement of the corpse seemed necessary to prevent the spirit of the deceased, disturbed in his rest by the destruction of the original burial, of leaving Hades and haunting the place of the original grave.https://journals.openedition.org/acost/3963Graveburial practicereburialbeliefghost
spellingShingle Ernst-Andreas Neumann
A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits
Les Carnets de l’ACoSt
Grave
burial practice
reburial
belief
ghost
title A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits
title_full A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits
title_fullStr A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits
title_full_unstemmed A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits
title_short A Ghost’s Burial? How the Extraordinary Use of Terracottas in a Late Archaic Tomb Might Have Served to Prevent Encounters with Unhappy Spirits
title_sort ghost s burial how the extraordinary use of terracottas in a late archaic tomb might have served to prevent encounters with unhappy spirits
topic Grave
burial practice
reburial
belief
ghost
url https://journals.openedition.org/acost/3963
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