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Completed H2020 European Commission

Sacrificial food in Classical, Hellenistic and Roman Cyprus: an interdisciplinary diachronic approach in an island laboratory.

€236.9K EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization The Cyprus Institute
Country Cyprus
Start Date Nov 01, 2021
End Date Oct 31, 2024
Duration 1,095 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101029092
Grant Description

Animal sacrifice was a major institution for meat distribution in Classical, Hellenistic and Roman societies.

Early research suggested that meat consumption was infrequent in the Greco-Roman world but recent zooarchaeological and isotopic data indicate larger quantities from a diverse suite of animals consumed in temple precincts. Sacrificial meat was also consumed in secular contexts but the details are unknown.

Despite recent advances, important aspects are in urgent need of investigation through primary data.

These include the husbandry systems that produced the animals, the selection process for sacrificed and non-sacrificed animals, the logistics of consumption and differences between religious and secular contexts.

Plants also played roles in sacrificial practices and fluctuations in their use is another proxy for cultural and economic change.

In addition to these themes, our knowledge of sacrificial food suffers from geographical gaps and a dearth of diachronic studies.

Project SACHROFICS addresses these gaps through an interdisciplinary study of sacrificial food in Classical, Hellenistic and Roman Cyprus.

This choice covers an important geographic gap, provides an ideal ‘laboratory’ to assess external influences and a cultural melting pot to study the fusion of eastern and Greco-Roman cultures.

The project aspires to achieve high-resolution insights into animal treatment before, during and after sacrificial events through a methodological suite spearheaded by zooarchaeology and complemented by stable isotope, dental microwear and archaeobotanical analyses.

These insights form a solid basis to fulfil its objective of understanding the entire chain of operations involved in sacrificial food (production, consumption, deposition), and contribute to debates on the role of food in Greco-Roman societies diachronically.

The integration of the project’s findings in the eastern Mediterranean amplifies the knowledge produced and increases its relevance to other areas.

All Grantees

The Cyprus Institute

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