Written in ‘her’ bones: Cremation and identity in Roman Beirut
Kalenderian, V. ; Thompson, T.J.U. ; De Looff, D. ; ; Nowell, G.M. ; El Haibe, G. ; Seif, A.
Kalenderian, V.
Thompson, T.J.U.
De Looff, D.
Nowell, G.M.
El Haibe, G.
Seif, A.
Publication Date
2025-05
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© 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ).
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2025-01-16
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Abstract
At the time of its annexation in the 1st c. BC, cremation was not a customary practice in the Roman province of Syria. This contrasts with the western provinces of the Empire, where burning the body for burial remained the method of choice until the turn of the 2nd c. AD. As such, the discovery of cremation burials in the Roman Near East raises questions about the identities and origins of the buried individuals. This article focuses on one such example from Berytus, the first Roman colony in the Near East (modern Beirut, Lebanon). It implements a multidisciplinary approach through osteological, chemical, and material analyses to explore various aspects of mortuary practice and identity. Osteological and isotopic results indicate that the buried individual was likely a female of non-local origin. On the other hand, FTIR-ATR analysis, along with the macroscopic examination of the bones, suggest the burning of a fresh body at elevated temperatures. Furthermore, exceptional environmental conditions led to the formation of calcite crystals within the urn and on the human remains, which were identified using Raman spectroscopy. Similarly, unique burial conditions resulted in the preservation of textile pseudomorphs, which offer rare insights into body treatment practices that are typically absent from the archaeological record of the Levantine coast. By contextualizing the different bioarchaeological and material findings, this study reconstructs the life-history of the interred individual and examines the social and cultural significance of this burial within the context of the Roman colonization of Beirut.
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Kalenderian V, Thompson TJU, De Looff et al (2025) 'Written in ‘her’ bones: Cremation and identity in Roman Beirut'. Journal of Archaeological Science. 177: 106153.
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