The Routledge Handbook of the Senses in the Ancient Near East
Type de matériel :
TexteLangue : Anglais Détails de publication : Taylor & Francis Routledge [Imprint] 2022Description : 1 online resourceType de contenu : - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780367235284
- 9780429280207
- 9781032065663
- Civilization, Ancient
- Civilization, Classical
- Senses and sensation -- Middle East -- History
- Civilisation ancienne
- Ancient history
- Civilization, Ancient
- Civilization, Classical
- HISTORY / Ancient / General
- History and Archaeology
- History
- Senses and sensation
- death and sensory studies in the near east
- death and the senses in antiquity
- dress and the senses in the near east
- emotions and cognition in the near east
- ritual and sensory studies in the near east
- ritual and the senses in antiquity
- ritual and the senses in the near east
- senses in mesopotamia
- senses in the ane
- senses in the near east
- sensory experience in the near east
- sensory studies and ancient dress
- sensory studies and ancient urbanism
- sensory studies and cognition
- sensory studies and language in the near east
- sensory studies and the ancient body
- sensory studies in the near east
- sound in the near east
- the body and sensory studies in the near east
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This chapter surveys and analyses the aromatic substances associated with burial and the preservation of the dead in the Iron Age Phoenician Levant (c. 1100-300 BCE), as part of an exploration of the lost smellscapes of the ancient world. First, Phoenician vocabulary related to smelling and pungent substances is outlined and investigated. Then, a review of coastal Levantine archaeological and textual evidence, along with comparanda from the wider Mediterranean world, is used to establish the range of smells and substances that would have been associated with mortuary practice at this time. While oleo-resins in use in the burial record overlap to some degree with those used in everyday life-in perfumes, religious practice, and other uses of scented oils and incense-the unique constellations of aromatics used to inter the dead highlight the importance of these deeply mnemonic sensory elements in our understanding of the Iron Age past.
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