Pillar Tombs and the City: Creating a Sense of Shared Identity in Swahili Urban Space

被引:0
作者
Monika Baumanova
机构
[1] Uppsala University,Department of Archaeology and Ancient History
[2] University of Basel,Centre of African Studies
[3] University of West Bohemia,undefined
来源
Archaeologies | 2018年 / 14卷
关键词
Swahili; Pillar tombs; Identity; Urban space;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper reviews published research on Swahili pillar tombs, as a specific type of tombs built of stone, by summarising records on almost fifty sites on the east coast of Africa. Dated to the 13th–16th centuries AD, the pillar tombs represented a core component of Swahili urban space. By considering their spatial setting, characteristics and comparative case studies from Africa and the Indian Ocean world, the paper reconsiders how pillar tombs might have functioned as a type of material infrastructure for creating social ties and notions of shared identity in a society that has never formally united.
引用
收藏
页码:377 / 411
页数:34
相关论文
共 62 条
[1]  
Allen JDV(1974)Swahili culture reconsidered Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 9 105-138
[2]  
Breen C(2003)Archaeological approaches to East Africa’s changing seascapes World Archaeology 35 469-489
[3]  
Lane P(1963)Kilwa and the Arab settlement of the East African coast The Journal of African History 4 179-190
[4]  
Chittick HN(1967)Discoveries in the Lamu Archipelago Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 2 37-67
[5]  
Chittick HN(1970)Relics of the past in the region of Dar es Salaam Tanzania Notes and Records 71 65-68
[6]  
Chittick HN(1982)Medieval Mogadishu Paideuma 28 45-62
[7]  
Chittick HN(1999)Group size, memory and interaction rate in the evolution of cooperation Current Anthropology 40 369-377
[8]  
Cox SJ(2001)Time and the ancestors: Landscape survey in the Andratsay region of Madagascar Antiquity 75 825-836
[9]  
Sluckin TJ(2013)Stone cairns across eastern Africa: A critical review Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 48 218-240
[10]  
Steele J(1987)Life in the Swahili town house reveals the symbolic meaning of spaces and artefact assemblages African Archaeological Review 5 181-192