2013
DOI: 10.7592/fejf2013.55.oras
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Sacrifice or Offering: What Can We See in the Archaeology of Northern Europe?

Abstract: This article analyses the concepts of sacrifice and offering, with a further aim to discuss how to decode and differentiate these practices in archaeological material. The main criteria for distinguishing sacrifice and offering from anthropology and comparative religious studies are presented. The focal points are the relationship between sacrifice and offering, questions of linguistic preferences, and qualitative criteria such as concepts of value, destruction and sanctification. The problems of making a dist… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…Anthropological discussions of sacrifice occasionally differentiate “sacrifice” from “offering,” maintaining that these are distinct forms of ritual killing, although many scholars continue to use the words interchangeably. For an extensive review, see Oras (2013) who concludes that these distinctions are dependent on their specific contexts. I use both terms interchangeably, defining sacrifice as “the ritualized taking of life with the expectation that it will bring some benefit” (Yuan and Flad 2005:252).…”
Section: Faunal Assemblage Categoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anthropological discussions of sacrifice occasionally differentiate “sacrifice” from “offering,” maintaining that these are distinct forms of ritual killing, although many scholars continue to use the words interchangeably. For an extensive review, see Oras (2013) who concludes that these distinctions are dependent on their specific contexts. I use both terms interchangeably, defining sacrifice as “the ritualized taking of life with the expectation that it will bring some benefit” (Yuan and Flad 2005:252).…”
Section: Faunal Assemblage Categoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%