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Constructing identities: Sanctuaries and Assemblies in Late Iron Age Europe – A lecture by Dr. Manuel Fernández-Götz

May 3, 2015 @ 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Free

Description: The construction of collective identities through sanctuaries is a key element for the understanding of Iron Age societies and in particular of their dynamics of aggregation. In this sense, a good example of interrelationship between ethnicity, politics and religion is provided by the Treveri, one of the main Late Iron Age Gallic polities. Recent work on the oppida of this area has offered extensive information about public spaces and sanctuaries within these sites. Starting with the best known case, Titelberg, this paper will analyze the evidences of political and religious activities in the central places of the Middle Rhine-Moselle region. To date, spaces for religious practices and assemblies have been identified in six of the seven Treveran oppida, in five cases at the highest point of the respective oppidum. These huge fortified centres were places for assemblies (→political role), collective rituals (→religious role), fairs and coin minting (→economic role). Expanding the view to other oppida of the European continent, we can affirm that the rituals and celebrations held at sites such as Manching, Bibracte or Corent would have been key elements in the fostering of social cohesion, self-awareness and shared identity. The number of people that might have lived permanently inside the oppida would have been less important than the function of these centres as objects of identification for larger groups, generating collective identities and serving as nuclei of aggregation and points of reference in a world that was basically rural. Moreover, in Temperate Europe there are various examples where it has been proved that a place for cult activities and/or assemblies preceded the concentration of a significant number of people or even the fortification of the area. Interestingly, ancestor worship seems to have been at the centre of numerous public cults, and barrows very often acted as foci for political and religious assemblies. Taken together, these aspects lead us to consider a renewed approach to the genesis of oppida.

Dr. Manuel Fernández-Götz studied Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology and Ancient History at the universities of Seville, Madrid and Kiel. He completed his binational PhD at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel (Germany) and the Complutense University of Madrid (Spain) in 2011. His research focuses on the evolution of Iron Age communities in northeast Gaul, and in particular in the Middle Rhine-Moselle region with special consideration given to questions of social identity. He has also participated in a number of field projects in Germany, France, Spain and Portugal and worked as coordinator of the Heuneburg project at the State Office for Cultural Heritage Baden-Württemberg in Germany. In 2013 he was appointed as Chancellor’s Fellow in Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh. He has authored more than 80 publications on Iron Age Europe and theoretical approaches to archaeological identity.

Archaeological Institute of America-Milwaukee Society General Information:
All lectures are held on Sunday afternoons at 3:00 p.m. in Sabin Hall Room G90 on the UWM Campus (3413 North Downer, corner of Newport and Downer Avenues). On Sundays, parking is available in the Klotsche Center surface lot directly north of Sabin or on nearby streets.

All lectures are free and open to the public and followed by refreshments. They are co-sponsored by the Departments of Anthropology, Foreign Languages and Literature-Classics, and Art History at UW-Milwaukee.

Details

Date:
May 3, 2015
Time:
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Cost:
Free

Venue

Sabin Hall, Room G90
3413 N. Downer Ave
Milwaukee,
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