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thesweetcheat
Sep 16, 2012 22:09:06
Replying to
tiompan
tiompan
wrote:
The Eternal
wrote:
A healthy respect for the dead, by superstition, is what it was.
But what if there were no dead , as is often the case in BA barrows and sometimes earlier Neolithic barrows ?
I guess that wouldn't have always been apparent though. You might assume the presence of bodies in a barrow, even if there aren't any.
T
tiompan
Sep 16, 2012 22:30:39
Replying to
thesweetcheat
thesweetcheat
wrote:
tiompan
wrote:
The Eternal
wrote:
A healthy respect for the dead, by superstition, is what it was.
But what if there were no dead , as is often the case in BA barrows and sometimes earlier Neolithic barrows ?
I guess that wouldn't have always been apparent though. You might assume the presence of bodies in a barrow, even if there aren't any.
Not if you belonged to a culture that for millenia would recognise that many barrows and deposition sites did not have human remains in them .
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