Pre-Roman Libyan Religion
Colonial Ethnography and the Problem of Religious “Survivals”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.20318/revhisto.2021.6553Keywords:
North Africa, anthropology, colonialism, historiography, Iron Age, Maghreb, religion, romanAbstract
Since its inception, the study of Iron Age North African (“Libyan”) religion has been bound up with European ethnographic accounts of modern Berber practices and mentalities. Analyses are based around notions of “survival” and “permanence” observed in later (Roman, post-antique) material and retrojected as belonging to an earlier stage. This approach is itself drawn from 19th century anthropology, and remains current. To move the study of Iron Age cult forwards, we must pose new questions which recognise that religión is never an ahistorical mentality, but rather is entangled with dynamics of social power and lived experience.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
The holder of the copyright for the contents of this journal is the Instituto de Historiografía "Julio Caro Baroja" of the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid.