Contextos funerarios en la transición del mundo prerromano al romano en el sur peninsular
Abstract
Las necrópolis datadas entre los siglos III a. C. y I a. C. se inscriben en una etapa
en general mal documentada arqueológicamente y que plantea diversas cuestiones teóricas
sobre la interpretación de un conjunto de materiales tradicionalmente asociados a
una fase de 'transición' entre el mundo ibérico y el romano. En este artículo se analizan
algunas de las causas que han contribuido a dificultar el estudio de los contextos
funerarios pertenecientes a este período y los cambios rituales producidos en ellos
como consecuencia de la colonización romana a través del ejemplo concreto de las necrópolis
de Castulo (Linares, Jaén). The period between the 3rd and 1st centuries BCE suffers
generally from poor archaeological documentation. The materials from necropoleis of
this time raise various theoretical questions, as they are associated with the transitional
phase between the Iberian and Roman worlds. This article analyzes some of the reasons
contributing to the difficulty of the study of funerary contexts from this period,
and the changes in funerary rituals that resulted from Roman colonization, using the
specific example of the necropoleis of Castulo (Linares, Jaén).
Type
Other articleSubject
necrópolisibérico
romano
republica
Ulterior
Betica
Castulo
rituales funerarios
romanización
ajuar funerario
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Alicia Jiménez
Assistant Professor of Classical Studies
Alicia is Assistant Professor at the Department of Classical Studies at Duke University.
Her research engages with archaeological theory and Roman visual and material culture,
specifically in the western and central Mediterranean in the period 218 BCE-200 CE.
In particular, she focuses on the study of Roman expansion in the western Mediterranean,
Roman colonialism, cultural change and monetization in Hispania, with a special emphasis
in funerary, urban and milita

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