Non-funerary commensality in the Argaric Culture: Archaeozoological analysis of Structure E50.44 from Peñalosa (Baños de la Encina, Jaén, Spain).
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/109052Metadatos
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2025-11-13Referencia bibliográfica
Tinoco Domínguez, L., Moreno García, M., Moreno Onorato, A. y Contreras Cortés, F. (2025). Non-funerary commensality in the Argaric Culture: Archaeozoological analysis of Structure E50.44 from Peñalosa (Baños de la Encina, Jaén, Spain). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 69, 105497, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2025.105497.
Patrocinador
Contrato predoctoral FPU (FPU20/05745) del Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España). ‘Propuesta para preparación de nueva solicitud a las próximas convocatorias María de Maeztu de la Unidad Científica de Excelencia “Archaeometrical Studies: Inside the artefacts & ecofacts” de la Universidad de Granada’ (QUAL21-13) del Plan Andaluz de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación Proyecto ‘Cocinando nuevas propuestas. Estudio diacrónico de las prácticas alimenticias en la Prehistoria Reciente del sureste de la península ibérica’ (C-HUM-354-UGR23) Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (European Regional Development Fund).Resumen
Acts of commensality are well recorded throughout the Late Prehistory of the Iberian Peninsula, as well as throughout the rest of Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Moreover, meat played a fundamental role in marking social differences and strengthening communal ties in special celebrations laden with strong cultural, economic, political, and social connotations. Research on commensality associated with the Argaric Culture (2200–1550 BCE) of the southeast of the Iberian Peninsula has focused almost exclusively on finds of faunal remains in funerary contexts. This study opens a new line of research on this phenomenon through the analysis of an exceptional faunal deposit (Structure E50.44) brought to light in the acropolis of the settlement of Peñalosa (Baños de la Encina, Jaén). The feature consists of a circular masonry pit and filled for the most part with faunal remains. Taxonomic and taphonomic analyses of the finds have identified species common to the site, notably cattle, caprines, pig, red deer, wild boar, rabbit, and hare. However, the most notable characteristic is its predominance of horse. The presence of butchery marks, the rarity of bones in anatomical connection, the abundance of prime meat-bearing elements belonging for the most part to adults of all species, in addition to a lack of structure’s deliberate internal organisation, allow linking it and its fill to an act of commensality that very probably represented an exceptional event for the residents of Peñalosa.





