2011
DOI: 10.1017/s0003598x00067417
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Human sacrifice and intentional corpse preservation in the Royal Cemetery of Ur

Abstract: The Royal Tombs at Ur have been long famous for their chilling scenario of young soldiers and courtesans who loyally took poison to die with their mistress. The authors investigate two of the original skulls with CT scans and propose a procedure no less chilling, but more enforceable. The victims were participants in an elaborate funerary ritual during which they were felled with a sharp instrument, heated, embalmed with mercury, dressed and laid ceremonially in rows.

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Cited by 33 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…There are hints that also cadavers buried at the Royal Cemetery of Ur in the late Early Dynastic phase (c. 2500 BC) were preserved by means of heat and mercury (Baadsgaard et al. ).…”
Section: Periods Of Embalmingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…There are hints that also cadavers buried at the Royal Cemetery of Ur in the late Early Dynastic phase (c. 2500 BC) were preserved by means of heat and mercury (Baadsgaard et al. ).…”
Section: Periods Of Embalmingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This exenteration characterized the preservation of human remains for the next millennia. There are hints that also cadavers buried at the Royal Cemetery of Ur in the late Early Dynastic phase (c. 2500 BC) were preserved by means of heat and mercury (Baadsgaard et al 2011).…”
Section: Periods Of Embalming Ancient Culturesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The practice of killing and interring people upon the death of a ruler clearly reinforced the subordinate status of other classes-from specialists to commoners to prisoners (e.g., Campbell 2014; Morris 2014). Such sacrifices are seen in the Royal Tombs of Ur (Baadsgaard et al 2011), which was constructed by the Indus civilization's contemporaries in Mesopotamia. When clear evidence of this sort is absent, evidence for craft specialization, long-distance exchange, and even relative wealth differences in residential contexts cannot serve as a substitute.…”
Section: Do Complex Societies Necessarily Have a Ruling Class?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, ancient societies who chose to dispose of corpses in single interments have been privileged for bioarchaeological research. Collective burials serve many functions such as preserving family and community identity (Bentley, ; Bloch, ; Rott, Päffgen, Haas‐Gebhard, Peters, & Harbeck, ), companionship or sacrifice (Baadsgaard, Monge, Cox, & Zettler, ; Judd & Irish, ), health risk intervention (e.g., plague pits) (Grainger, Hawkins, Lynne, & Mikulski, ), and space or time constraints (Fiorato, Boylston, & Knüsel, ; Kjellström, ; Palubeckaite et al, ). Episodic commingled collections result from multiple interments following a single event such as a mass disaster or battle (Osterholtz, Baustian, & Martin, ), and may be laid in rows so that with careful excavation individuals are relatively complete (Fiorato et al, ; Kyle, Reitsema, Tyler, Fabbri, & Vassallo, ; Rott et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%