That seems to be the case of the inside small ditched enclosure of Bela Vista 5. The small enclosure has inside just one pit used to bury a woman, together with three pots, a pricker and a “Palmela” arrow head (so much for the “male worrier” theory for “Ferradeira horizon” graves). It is dated from the last quarter of the third millennium BC, contemporaneous of the process of the filling of the ditch.
It is interesting to notice that the pit grave is not
at the centre of this small enclosure, just with 6/7 m diameter, but in a side,
like it frequently happens in megalithic chambers. In fact, the all context,
announcing a new world with new perspectives regarding individuality, steel suggests
a memory of Neolithic times, inclusive with evidences of body manipulation
after the first deposition. The inner enclosure seems to have been built to
receive this grave, and the outside ditch reveals practices that can only be
understood in the context of a highly ceremonial activity (see previous post on
Bela Vista 5).
All of this for one woman? If so, she was an important
one, no doubt.
PS – The data from this sites and reflexions on the
problems that it raises will be presented next February, in ERA annual meeting. Monographic publication
will follow.
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