
Pedro Peixoto
I’m a Lecturer of Ancient History at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. My expertise lies in the study of Iron Age Britain, with a particular focus on the East Yorkshire burials. My research interests revolve around the intersection of age, gender, funerary archaeology, and the production of social differences.
Although I am not very active online and do not use social media, I am gradually re-engaging with Academia.edu. Feel free to reach out!
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Professor de História Antiga da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Minha pesquisa envolve o estudo da Idade do Ferro bretã, em particular as tumbas de East Yorkshire. Entre meus interesses estão o estudo de questões etárias, de gênero, da arqueologia funerária e da produção de diferenças sociais.
Não uso mídias sociais, mas estou tentando, aos poucos, voltar a usar o academia.edu. Contatos são sempre bem vindos!
Address: Ancient History Lab. (LHIA)
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Largo de São Francisco nº 1, 211 A
Rio de Janeiro, RJ 20051070, Brazil
Although I am not very active online and do not use social media, I am gradually re-engaging with Academia.edu. Feel free to reach out!
**
Professor de História Antiga da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Minha pesquisa envolve o estudo da Idade do Ferro bretã, em particular as tumbas de East Yorkshire. Entre meus interesses estão o estudo de questões etárias, de gênero, da arqueologia funerária e da produção de diferenças sociais.
Não uso mídias sociais, mas estou tentando, aos poucos, voltar a usar o academia.edu. Contatos são sempre bem vindos!
Address: Ancient History Lab. (LHIA)
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Largo de São Francisco nº 1, 211 A
Rio de Janeiro, RJ 20051070, Brazil
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Uploads
Papers by Pedro Peixoto
Keywords: Ceramics; Iron Age; Britain; Burials; Yorkshire.
not as individual entities but as parts of a larger sum. This includes, for instance, different monuments incorporated by the cemeteries, and which often predate the Iron Age, as well as certain funerary performances and the possible relationships between some of the buried individuals in terms of their osteobiographies.
Keywords: Funerary Landscape; Material Knowledge; Iron Age; East Yorkshire.
Keywords : Iron Age, Gender, Historiography.
potential as a field for the study of the past, particularly in terms of the
contributions of Funerary Archaeology. The article offers a synthesis
of some of the most important intellectual contributions offered by Antiquarianism, Processual, and Post-Processual Archaeology to the study
of mortuary practices, with the aim of presenting to the reader a variety
of ways in which these contributions might help us today to think about
death and burials in multiple past contexts. How can Funerary Archaeology enrich History, and why is it still only marginally present in our discussions of the past? In order to answer some of these questions, the article will also contain suggestions of areas for action, showing a possible path taken for those who seek to study the past through the funerary vestiges it has left us.
Talks by Pedro Peixoto
Keywords: Ceramics; Iron Age; Britain; Burials; Yorkshire.
not as individual entities but as parts of a larger sum. This includes, for instance, different monuments incorporated by the cemeteries, and which often predate the Iron Age, as well as certain funerary performances and the possible relationships between some of the buried individuals in terms of their osteobiographies.
Keywords: Funerary Landscape; Material Knowledge; Iron Age; East Yorkshire.
Keywords : Iron Age, Gender, Historiography.
potential as a field for the study of the past, particularly in terms of the
contributions of Funerary Archaeology. The article offers a synthesis
of some of the most important intellectual contributions offered by Antiquarianism, Processual, and Post-Processual Archaeology to the study
of mortuary practices, with the aim of presenting to the reader a variety
of ways in which these contributions might help us today to think about
death and burials in multiple past contexts. How can Funerary Archaeology enrich History, and why is it still only marginally present in our discussions of the past? In order to answer some of these questions, the article will also contain suggestions of areas for action, showing a possible path taken for those who seek to study the past through the funerary vestiges it has left us.