Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas

Archaeological and textual sources have long been considered complementary although they often appear contradictory. Nowadays the dependence of archaeology on written sources within historical periods is steadily being replaced by a different concept of interdisciplinarity : rather than seeking to v...

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Main Authors: Dominique Castex, Patrice Georges, Philippe Blanchard
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Fédération pour l'Edition de la Revue Archéologique du Centre de la France 2009-05-01
Series:Revue Archéologique du Centre de la France
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/racf/1218
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author Dominique Castex
Patrice Georges
Philippe Blanchard
author_facet Dominique Castex
Patrice Georges
Philippe Blanchard
author_sort Dominique Castex
collection DOAJ
description Archaeological and textual sources have long been considered complementary although they often appear contradictory. Nowadays the dependence of archaeology on written sources within historical periods is steadily being replaced by a different concept of interdisciplinarity : rather than seeking to validate one source by another, the different disciplines form a common research project so as to make efficient use conjointly of all available data and allow discussion of the results. This procedure is indispensable in all analyses of historical sites and is fundamental in the interpretation of mortality crises of the past due to epidemics. It underlies recent interdisciplinary studies linked to archaeological discoveries in Berry (France) like Bourges (Cher) and Issoudun (Indre) and archive prospections like Lignières-en-Berry (Cher). Because of their originality we wish to present these examples and to compare them with the other victims' sites of epidemics abroad (Saint Benoît from Prague to Czech Republic and Venosa in Italy), sites among which the quantity and the quality of the documentation allowed a good exploitation and already supplied first results with terms of interpretation. Without aspiring to the exhaustive treatment of every site, some of which are still in the course of study, our comment is more simply to propose a reflection on some aspects of the archaeology of the epidemics, to deliver certain number of questionings and to discuss the feasibility of the syntheses of the written and archaeological sources. Our results already allow us to bring new light to the history of epidemics; on one hand they highlight aspects very different from those generally admitted in context of crises of mortality ( mastered management of corpses, integration of the deaths by epidemic, etc.), on the other hand, they commit us to be particularly watchful as for the origin of the epidemics proposed by certain written sources.
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spelling doaj-art-80e8fd763e6c450d8cf7a610c6c55a092025-01-09T15:39:13ZfraFédération pour l'Edition de la Revue Archéologique du Centre de la FranceRevue Archéologique du Centre de la France0220-66171951-62072009-05-0147Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de casDominique CastexPatrice GeorgesPhilippe BlanchardArchaeological and textual sources have long been considered complementary although they often appear contradictory. Nowadays the dependence of archaeology on written sources within historical periods is steadily being replaced by a different concept of interdisciplinarity : rather than seeking to validate one source by another, the different disciplines form a common research project so as to make efficient use conjointly of all available data and allow discussion of the results. This procedure is indispensable in all analyses of historical sites and is fundamental in the interpretation of mortality crises of the past due to epidemics. It underlies recent interdisciplinary studies linked to archaeological discoveries in Berry (France) like Bourges (Cher) and Issoudun (Indre) and archive prospections like Lignières-en-Berry (Cher). Because of their originality we wish to present these examples and to compare them with the other victims' sites of epidemics abroad (Saint Benoît from Prague to Czech Republic and Venosa in Italy), sites among which the quantity and the quality of the documentation allowed a good exploitation and already supplied first results with terms of interpretation. Without aspiring to the exhaustive treatment of every site, some of which are still in the course of study, our comment is more simply to propose a reflection on some aspects of the archaeology of the epidemics, to deliver certain number of questionings and to discuss the feasibility of the syntheses of the written and archaeological sources. Our results already allow us to bring new light to the history of epidemics; on one hand they highlight aspects very different from those generally admitted in context of crises of mortality ( mastered management of corpses, integration of the deaths by epidemic, etc.), on the other hand, they commit us to be particularly watchful as for the origin of the epidemics proposed by certain written sources.https://journals.openedition.org/racf/1218Middle Agesarcheo-anthropologywritten sourcesepidemicsModern Period
spellingShingle Dominique Castex
Patrice Georges
Philippe Blanchard
Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas
Revue Archéologique du Centre de la France
Middle Ages
archeo-anthropology
written sources
epidemics
Modern Period
title Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas
title_full Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas
title_fullStr Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas
title_full_unstemmed Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas
title_short Complémentarité et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archéo-anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalité par épidémie. Études de cas
title_sort complementarite et discordances entre sources textuelles et sources archeo anthropologiques en contexte de crises de mortalite par epidemie etudes de cas
topic Middle Ages
archeo-anthropology
written sources
epidemics
Modern Period
url https://journals.openedition.org/racf/1218
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