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Bones, teeth, and estimating age of perinates: Carthaginian infant sacrifice revisited

  • Autores: J. H. Schwartz, F. D. Houghton, L. Bondioli, R. Macchiarelli
  • Localización: Antiquity, ISSN 0003-598X, Vol. 86, Nº 333, 2012, págs. 738-745
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Writing about the �Tophet�, a children's cemetery in Carthage, Smith et al. argued in these pages that the age distribution of the children peaks at 1�1.49 months, supplying �another link in the chain of evidence�funerary practices, texts, iconography�that supports the interpretation of the Phoenician Tophets as ritual sites set aside for infant sacrifice� (2011: 871). In this they had challenged Jeffrey Schwartz and colleagues, who previously argued (2010) that �skeletal remains from Punic Carthage do not support systematic sacrifice of infants�. Here Schwartz et al. restate their position for Antiquity readers, showing that the verdict on the Phoenician practice of child sacrifice is, at best, not proven


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