1.
Parker Pearson, M.: The archaeology of death and burial. Sutton, Stroud (1999).
2.
Pettitt, P.: The palaeolithic origins of human burial. Routledge, London (2011).
3.
Metcalf, P., Huntington, R.: Celebrations of death: the anthropology of mortuary ritual. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991).
4.
Gowland, R., Knüsel, C.: Social archaeology of funerary remains. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2006).
5.
Stutz, L.N., Belfer-Cohen, A.: The Oxford handbook of the archaeology of death and burial. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013).
6.
Bahn, P.G.: Tombs, graves and mummies. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London (1996).
7.
Chapman, R., Randsborg, K.: Approaches to the archaeology of death. In: The Archaeology of death. pp. 1–24. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1981).
8.
Duday, H.: The archaeology of the dead: lectures in archaeothanatology. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2009).
9.
Centre for Archaeology guidelines: Human bones from archaeological sites: guidelines for producing assessment documents and analytical reports, http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/publications/human-bones-from-archaeological-sites/humanbones2004.pdf/.
10.
Metcalf, P., Huntington, R.: Symbolic associations of death. In: Celebrations of death: the anthropology of mortuary ritual. pp. 62–75. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1991).
11.
Insoll, T.: The Oxford handbook of the archaeology of ritual and religion. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2011).
12.
Insoll, T.: Archaeology, ritual, religion. Routledge, London (2004).
13.
Kyriakidis, E.: Finding ritual: calibrating the evidence. In: The archaeology of ritual. pp. 9–22. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles (2007).
14.
Vanzetti et al., A.: The iceman as a burial. Antiquity. 84, 681–692 (2010).
15.
Binford, L.: Mortuary practices: their study and their potential. In: Approaches to the social dimensions of mortuary practices. pp. 6–29. Society for American Archaeology, [Washington D.C.] (1971).
16.
Bloch, M.: Placing the dead: tombs, ancestral villages and kinship organization in Madagascar. Seminar Press, London (1971).
17.
Danforth, L.M., Tsiaras, A.: The death rituals of rural Greece. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1982).
18.
David, N., Kramer, C.: Mortuary practices, status, ideology and systems of thought. In: Ethnoarchaeology in action. pp. 378–408. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001).
19.
Kus, S.: Toward an archaeology of body and soul. In: Representations in archaeology. pp. 168–177. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (1992).
20.
Mack, J.: The concept of ‘the ancestors’. In: Madagascar: island of the ancestors. pp. 62–66. Published for the Trustees of the British Museum by British Museum Publications, London (1986).
21.
Pearson, M.P.: Mortuary practices, society and ideology: An ethnoarchaeological study. In: Symbolic and structural archaeology. pp. 99–113. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1982).
22.
Pearson, M.P.: Eating money. Archaeological Dialogues. 7, 217–232 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1380203800001768.
23.
Parker-Pearson, M.: Funerary monumentality and the colonial period in the twentieth century. In: Pastoralists, warriors and colonists: the archaeology of southern Madagascar. pp. 472–513. Archaeopress, Oxford (2010).
24.
Peter J. Ucko: Ethnography and Archaeological Interpretation of Funerary Remains. World Archaeology. 1, 262–280 (1969).
25.
Armit, I.: Shamans on the march. In: Headhunting and the body in Iron Age Europe. pp. 45–68. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2012).
26.
Boulestin, B., et al.: Mass cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture at Herxheim (Palatinate, Germany). Antiquity. 83, 968–982 (2009).
27.
Chamberlain, A.: To infinity and beyond? The embalming of corpses in contemporary British and American culture. In: Earthly remains: the history and science of preserved human bodies. pp. 169–188. British Museum, London (2001).
28.
Degusta, D.: Fijian cannibalism and mortuary ritual: bioarchaeological evidence from Vunda. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 10, 76–92 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-1212(200001/02)10:1<76::AID-OA506>3.0.CO;2-#.
29.
Rebay-Salisbury, K.: Cremations: fragmented bodies in the Bronze and Iron Ages. In: Body parts and bodies whole: changing relations and meanings. pp. 64–71. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2010).
30.
Tarlow, S.: The aesthetic corpse in nineteenth century Britain. In: Thinking through the body: archaeologies of corporeality. pp. 85–97. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York (2002).
31.
Turner, C.G.: Cannibalism in Chaco Canyon: The charnel pit excavated in 1926 at Small House ruin by Frank H.H. Roberts, Jr. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 91, 421–439 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330910403.
32.
Arnold, B.: The illusion of power, the power of illusion: ideology and the concretization of social difference in Early Iron Age Europe. In: Ideologies in archaeology. pp. 151–172. University of Arizona Press, Tucson (2011).
33.
Morris, I.: ‘Mos Romanus’: cremation and inhumation in the Roman empire. In: Death-ritual and social structure in classical antiquity. pp. 31–69. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1992).
34.
Peebles, C.S., Kus, S.M.: Some Archaeological Correlates of Ranked Societies. American Antiquity. 42, 421–448 (1977).
35.
Wason, P.K.: The archaeology of rank. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
36.
Williams, H.: Death Warmed up: The Agency of Bodies and Bones in Early Anglo-Saxon Cremation Rites. Journal of Material Culture. 9, 263–291 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1177/1359183504046894.
37.
Bradley, R.: Projecting future pasts. Monuments and the formation of memory. In: The past in prehistoric societies. pp. 82–111. Routledge, London (2002).
38.
Cummings, V., Henley, C., Sharples, N.: The chambered cairns of South Uist. In: Set in stone: new approaches to Neolithic monuments in Scotland. pp. 37–54. Oxbow, Oxford (2005).
39.
Fleming, A.: Post-processual Landscape Archaeology: a Critique. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 16, 267–280 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774306000163.
40.
Tilley, C.Y., Bennett, W.: From body to place to landscape. A phenomenological perspective. In: The materiality of stone. pp. 1–31. Berg, Oxford (2004). https://doi.org/10.5040/9781474215732.
41.
Insoll, T.: Archaeology, ritual, religion. Routledge, London (2004).
42.
Parker Pearson, M.: Chapter 7: The Human Experience of Death. In: The archaeology of death and burial. pp. 142–170. Sutton, Stroud (1999).
43.
Pettitt, P.: The palaeolithic origins of human burial. Routledge, London (2011).
44.
Taylor, T.: The edible dead. In: The buried soul: how humans invented death. pp. 56–85. Beacon Press, Boston, Mass (2002).
45.
Chidester, D.: Patterns of transcendence: religion, death, and dying. Wadsworth Cengage Learning, Australia (2002).
46.
Kuijt, I.: Negotiating Equality through Ritual: A Consideration of Late Natufian and Prepottery Neolithic A Period Mortuary Practices. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 15, 313–336 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1006/jaar.1996.0012.
47.
Parker Pearson, M.: The archaeology of death and burial. Sutton, Stroud (1999).
48.
Taylor, J.H.: Death and resurrection in Ancient Egyptian society. In: Death and the afterlife in ancient Egypt. pp. 10–45. British Museum, London (2001).
49.
British Association of Biological Anthropology and Osteoarchaeology: Code of Ethics, https://www.babao.org.uk/assets/Uploads/BABAO-Code-of-Ethics-2019.pdf?
50.
Cox, M.: The scientific investigation of mass graves: towards protocols and standard operating procedures. Cambridge University Press, New York (2008).
51.
Pearson, M.P., Schadla-Hall, T., Moshenska, G.: Resolving the Human Remains Crisis in British Archaeology. Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. 21, (2011). https://doi.org/10.5334/pia.369.
52.
Sayer, D.: Ethics and burial archaeology. Duckworth, London (2010).
53.
Zimmerman, L.J.: Made radical by my own: an archaeologist learns to accept reburial. In: Conflict in the archaeology of living traditions. pp. 60–67. Routledge, London (1994).
54.
Curl, J.S.: The Victorian celebration of death. Sutton, Stroud (2000).
55.
Jalland, P.: Victorian death and its decline: 1850 to 1918. In: Death in England : an illustrated history / Peter C. Jupp and Clare Gittings, editors. pp. 230–255.
56.
Morley, John: Death, heaven and the Victorians. Studio Vista, London (1971).
57.
Tarlow, Sarah: Ritual, belief and the dead in early modern Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011).
58.
Clayden, A.: Reclaiming and reinterpreting ritual in the woodland burial ground. In: Sacred places in modern western culture. pp. 289–294. Peeters, Leuven [etc.] (2011).
59.
Clayden, A., Hockey, J., Powell, M.: Natural burial: the de-materialising of death? In: The matter of death: space, place and materiality. pp. 148–164. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
60.
Hockey, J., Green, T., Clayden, A., Powell, M.: Landscapes of the dead? Natural burial and the materialization of absence. Journal of Material Culture. 17, 115–132 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/1359183512442631.
61.
Speyer, Josefine, Wienrich, Stephanie, Natural Death Centre: The natural death handbook. Rider, London (2003).
62.
Pettitt, P.: The palaeolithic origins of human burial. Routledge, London (2011).
63.
Riel-Salvatore, J., Gravel-Miguel, C.: Upper Palaeolithic mortuary practices in Eurasia: a critical look at the burial record. In: The Oxford handbook of the archaeology of death and burial. pp. 303–346. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013).
64.
Vanhaeren, M., d’Errico, F.: Grave goods from the Saint-Germain-la-Rivière burial: Evidence for social inequality in the Upper Palaeolithic. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 24, 117–134 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2005.01.001.
65.
Zilhao, J.: Burial evidence for the social differentiation of age classes in the early Upper Palaeolithic. In: Comportements des hommes du Paléolithique moyen et supérieur en Europe : territoires et milieux / sous la direction de Denis Vialou, Josette Renault-Miskovsky, Marylène Patou-Mathis. pp. 231–241.
66.
Chamberlain, A.: Caves and the funerary landscape of prehistoric Britain. In: Sacred darkness: a global perspective on the ritual use of caves. pp. 81–86. University Press of Colorado, Boulder (2012).
67.
Lamdin-Whymark, Hugo: The residue of ritualised action: Neolithic deposition practices in the Middle Thames Valley. Archaeopress, Oxford (2008).
68.
Schulting, R.: Non-monumental burial in Britain: a (largely) cavernous view. Bericht (Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Römisch-Germanische Kommission). 88, 581–603 (2007).
69.
Thomas, Julian, Thomas, Julian: Understanding the Neolithic. Routledge, London (1999).
70.
Faulkner, Raymond O., Andrews, Carol: The ancient Egyptian Book of the dead. British Museum Press, London (2010).
71.
Reeves, C. N.: The complete Tutankhamun: the king, the tomb, the royal treasure. Thames & Hudson, London (1990).
72.
Quirke, Stephen: Going out in daylight: prt m hrw : the ancient Egyptian Book of the dead : translations, sources, meanings. Golden House Publications, London (2013).
73.
Spellane, J.: Image into reality: the vignette of Spell 151 of the Book of the Dead and its integration throughout the burial of Sennedjem. Archaeological review from Cambridge. 22, 58–74 (2007).
74.
Taylor, John H.: Death and the afterlife in ancient Egypt. British Museum, London (2001).
75.
Taylor, John H., British Museum: Journey through the afterlife: ancient Egyptian Book of the dead. British Museum Press, London (2010).