Ritualising the dead: decorated marble cinerary memorials in the context of early Imperial culture and art
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Mowat, Fiona Anne
Abstract
This thesis explores the imagery of funerary ritual that expresses the commemoration
of both the living and the dead in the art of the marble cinerary memorials of the early
Empire. This group of objects includes decorated marble artefacts associated with
cremation burial between the Augustan period and the reign of Antoninus Pius: ash
chests (or cineraria); ash altars and grave altars (with or without ash cavities); as well as
round urns and vase-shaped urns. The iconography chosen for cinerary memorials by
individuals in the early Empire reflects those individuals’ concerns to remember families
and friends and in turn to be remembered.
This research approaches the analysis of funerary iconography holistically as embedded
in its contemporary culture, as opposed to the focus on the art of various sub-cultures
of Roman society, seen in recent scholarship. Items with adequate ancient provenance
are used to create a sample dataset that represents individuals that belong to a middle to
high income-group of society, individuals that are united through their ability to pay and
commission these memorials, rather than by class. The epigraphic material, studied
alongside the tomb analysis, indicates that this socio-economic group included people
of different legal statuses: slaves, freed-people, non-elites and known-elites. Thus we are
able to examine how artistic motifs, and also imperial iconography and culture, were
received by a cross-section of society.
The use of semiotics allows symbols to be analysed in conjunction with other methods
such as examining narration and abstraction. This theoretical framework results in the
extraction of meaning from seemingly generic motifs and connects this interpretation
with contemporaneous cultural norms.
Using these methods and the sample dataset, the memorial typology is examined as
indicative of a focal point for funerary cult, through the connection between the object
as a replacement altar for ritual, and as a house or shrine for the commemoration of the
dead. The iconography associated with the memorials therefore relates to both the ritual
context (garlands and other ritualistic motifs) and to the object as a small building (the
architectonic façade and doors; garden and vegetative iconography). It also relates to the
commemoration of the dead (portraiture and honorific iconography) and in particular
to the idea of the spirit or manes of the deceased as being immortalised through the
memorial (underworld and mythological iconography). All elements, then, point to the
focus of the object in funerary ritual which enables the living to honour the spirit of the
deceased and acts as a memento of family and friends, bringing together both the living
and the dead in art and inscription.
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