Event: DIVINE CONSUMPTION: SACRIFICE, ALLIANCE BUILDING, AND MAKING ANCESTORS IN WEST AFRICA


Date & Time

May 24, 2022 - 6:00pm
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Contact Information

Michelle Jacobson
mjacobson@ioa.ucla.edu

Location

Online

Event Type

Cotsen Public Lecture

Event Details

The Cotsen Institute of Archeology Press invites you to the latest Author Spotlight with

Stephen Dueppen

Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Oregon

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Mounded sites (tells) are common throughout West Africa, including in western Burkina Faso where clusters of mounds dating to the past three millennia are common. Extensive fieldwork at the long inhabited and well-preserved site of Kirikongo (ca. 100—1650 AD), has established that the community started as a small farming settlement, grew to a large community centered on the village’s founders, rejected inequalities in an egalitarian revolution, and survived the Black Death pandemic. This talk explores patterns in architecture, material culture and organic remains (animal bones and botanical remains) to argue that the mounds at Kirikongo are not only residential, but also stratified ancestor shrines whose ritual deposits inform on the divine associations of different houses in a ritual landscape.