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The human remains from early Medieval Domburg (Netherlands) and other coastal communities in international perspective: towards an international research agenda for the cemeteries of the North Sea Emporia
Ten Harkel, L.; van Dierendonck, R.; Farber, E.; Dee, M.; Doeve, P.; Hamerow, H.; Jansma, E.; Le Roux, P.; Panhuysen, R.; Deckers, P. (2023). The human remains from early Medieval Domburg (Netherlands) and other coastal communities in international perspective: towards an international research agenda for the cemeteries of the North Sea Emporia. Medieval Archaeology 67(1): 29-72. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00766097.2023.2204661
In: Medieval Archaeology. Routledge: Abingdon. ISSN 0076-6097; e-ISSN 1745-817X, more
Peer reviewed article  

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  • Ten Harkel, L.
  • van Dierendonck, R.
  • Farber, E.
  • Dee, M.
  • Doeve, P.
  • Hamerow, H.
  • Jansma, E.
  • Le Roux, P.
  • Panhuysen, R.
  • Deckers, P., more

Abstract
    THIS PAPER ADDRESSES THE QUESTION, who were the people who were buried at the early medieval North Sea emporia? Conclusions about the mercantile character of the North Sea emporia are often based on portable material culture. In recognition of the fact that it is difficult to draw conclusions about the identities of people based on finds assemblages, two pilot projects have been completed that involved bioarchaeological analyses of cemetery populations associated with these sites. The first of these, the Investigating the Dead in Early Medieval Domburg project, undertook multi-disciplinary analyses of the (very small) surviving burial population from the mostly destroyed sites in the Domburg area (Netherlands), combining isotope analysis, radiocarbon dating, biological anthropology, dendrochronology, and provenancing and study of previous use of coffin wood. The second, the Medieval Migrants of the North Sea World project, inventoried available isotopic evidence for human remains from emporia sites in England, the Netherlands and Scandinavia, alongside contextual archaeological information. This paper presents both projects, providing the detailed information from Domburg in its wider, international context, and highlighting the need for a comprehensive research agenda to fill current gaps in our understanding of early medieval emporia populations.

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