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Mortuary Practices in the Face of Mortality Crisis — A Story of Human Frailty and Resilience

public.project.responsible_investigator_cria: Anne Malcherek

public.project.research_group: Practices and Politics of Culture


public.project.keyword

Heritage Management | Mortuary Practices | Mortality Crisis | Palaeopathology

public.project.institution_funder

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

public.project.partners

Câmara Municipal do Porto, Departamento Municipal de Gestão do Património Cultural

public.project.state

public.project.open

public.project.start_date

01-01-2025

public.project.end_date

31-12-2028

public.project.reference

2024.02630.BDANA


public.project.abstract

The project will undertake a comparative analysis of burial sites and mortuary practices in Porto focussing on the 19th century, a time of pandemics and war, to investigate human frailty and resilience in the face of mortality crises. The 19th century saw pronounced changes in burial practices across Europe (and its colonies), driven by mortality crises, as well as reflecting new ways of thinking and feeling about death.
An interdisciplinary and multimethodological approach will be employed, combining bioarchaeology, anthropology, archaeological and historical data to analyse and interpret human remains and their mortuary contexts. Toward this end a database of documented burial sites in the city of Porto will be constructed from which suitable sites, linked to mortality crises, are drawn for analysis and aggregated with data from the BeFRAIL project.
This holistic approach will generate insight into mortuary treatment as social practices changing in response to mortality crisis, as well as people’s resilience in maintaining their practices of caring for their dead.

public.project.team

Full members

Francisca Alves Cardoso

Manuela do Carmo Santos Ribeiro (Câmara Municipal do Porto, Departamento Municipal de Gestão do Património Cultural)