Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

The abandonment of souterrains: evolution, catastrophe or dislocation?

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dc.creator Armit, Ian
dc.date 2008-11-13T14:13:02Z
dc.date 2008-11-13T14:13:02Z
dc.date 1999
dc.identifier Armit, I. (1999). The abandonment of souterrains: evolution, catastrophe or dislocation? Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. Vol. 129, pp. 577-596.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10454/889
dc.description No
dc.description This paper considers the evidence for the abandonment of souterrains in that part of east central Scotland characterized by Wainwright as 'southern Pictland'. The evidence suggests that most souterrains here were deliberately destroyed, or at least infilled, and that none seems to have outlasted the early third century AD. The process of destruction seems to have been associated with a significant degree of ritual activity not previously noted. It is postulated that the evidence would allow for a single episode of abandonment (a 'souterrain abandonment horizon'), in the late second or early third century AD, which might be related to a major reorientation of social and political structures, perhaps associated with changes in Roman frontier policy.
dc.language en
dc.relation http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsdata/PSAS_2002/pdf/vol_129/129_577_596.pdf
dc.subject Souterrains
dc.subject Abandonment
dc.subject Scotland
dc.subject Southern Pictland
dc.title The abandonment of souterrains: evolution, catastrophe or dislocation?
dc.type Article


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