The zooarchaeological identification of a ‘Morisco’ community after the Christian conquest of Granada (Spain, early 16th century): sociocultural continuities and economic innovations
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
García García, Marcos; García-Contreras Ruiz, Guillermo; Alexander, Michelle M.; Banerjea, Rowena Y.; Pluskowski, AleksEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Early Modern period Zooarchaeology Meat consumption Identity Crypto-Muslim
Date
2021-03-02Referencia bibliográfica
García-García, M., García-Contreras, G., Alexander, M.M. et al. The zooarchaeological identification of a ‘Morisco’ community after the Christian conquest of Granada (Spain, early 16th century): sociocultural continuities and economic innovations. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 13, 57 (2021). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-021-01288-2]
Patrocinador
Developed in the framework of the ‘Landscapes of (Re)Conquest’ Project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (grant number AH/R013861/1); The archaeological excavation was funded by the Vicerretorado de Infraestructuras of the University of GranadaRésumé
This article presents the results of the zooarchaeological analysis of an assemblage dating to the second quarter of the 16th
century that was discovered on the current university campus of Cartuja, on the outskirts of Granada (Andalusia, Spain). During
the Middle Ages, this area was largely used for agricultural purposes, including as estates owned by high officials of the Nasrid
dynasty, the last Islamicate polity in the Iberian Peninsula. The Castilian conquest of Granada in 1492 brought significant
changes to the area, with the construction of a Carthusian monastery and the transformation of the surrounding landscape,
including changes in property structures, different agrarian regimes and the demolition of pre-existing structures. Among these
transformations was the filling up of a well with construction materials, and its further use as a rubbish dump. This fill yielded an
interesting and unique zooarchaeological assemblage, the study of which is presented here. The results advance our understanding
of changing patterns in animal consumption during the formative transition from the Middle Ages to the Early Modern period
at the heart of the former Nasrid Kingdom of Granada, and indicate the continuity of some Andalusi consumption patterns along
with specialised production and distribution systems of meat products that have no archaeological precedent in the region,
suggesting that the bones were dumped by a possible ‘Morisco’ community (autochthonous Muslims forced to convert to
Christianity in 1502).