Modified animal remains and animal remains modified to different degrees, often into various types of pendants, are frequently found in Mesolithic and, in some cases, Early/Middle Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials Footnote 1 across Northern Europe and are a rich dataset to consider. Animal representations have also been documented and incorporated into overviews of zoological remains and zoomorphic iconography in Mesolithic graves across Europe (eg, Grünberg Reference Grünberg2013).
The last decades have seen important shifts in how human–animal relationships have been perceived, which has encouraged new approaches to archaeological assemblages and attempts to challenge anthropocentric ontologies and, instead, view animals as autonomous agentic entities and active social constitutors rather than ‘passive recipients of human cultural projections’ (Conneller Reference Conneller2011, 49; Overton & Hamilakis Reference Overton and Hamilakis2013; Overton Reference Overton2016; for an overview of attempts to move beyond anthropocentrism see Boyd Reference Boyd2017). In the same spirit, the renewed, contemporary interest in material culture has encouraged not only inquiries that focus on the ways in which people relate to material culture, but also those that question the Western theoretical distinction between active subjects (humans) and inert passive objects (Sillar Reference Sillar2009), especially with reference to materials and artefacts that derive from once living animals (eg, Conneller Reference Conneller2004; Reference Conneller2011). Nevertheless, the rich material from Northern European Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials has not been discussed much in light of these new approaches to human–animal relations. With reference to animal remains and animal objects from the graves, the predominant archaeological narratives usually focus on their economic, aesthetic, or symbolic values to humans. A few interpretations, however, do part ways with the dominant approaches and investigate the active roles animals and animal remains might have had (see Fowler’s (Reference Fowler2004) engagement with assemblages from several Scandinavian sites; Overton & Hamilakis’s (Reference Overton and Hamilakis2013) re-interpretation of Vedbæk grave 8; segments of Mannermaa’s interpretations of osprey remains from Oleniy Ostrov (Reference Mannermaa2016); as well as Macāne’s (Reference Macāne, Borić, Antonović and Mihajlović2021) proposal for interpreting the burials at Skateholm and Zvejnieki).
This paper starts by first offering a short review of the prevailing narratives about different groups of finds, unmodified animal remains, modified animal remains (mostly pendants), and animal representations from Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials across Northern Europe (including the northern parts of European Russia). It then explores notions of non-human personhood and animal and material cultural agency (objects and artefacts).
Furthermore, the paper draws upon Russian language ethnographic data about East Siberian near-recent hunter-gatherer groups (Nivkh, Nanai, Ulchi, Udege) to highlight contexts where distinctions are blurred not only between humans and animals but also humans and things, and where certain objects and artefacts can be perceived as persons. This is especially significant as the specific ethnographic material is not readily available to English speaking audiences. Siberia has recently been highlighted as an increasingly important locus of anthropological inquiries and theoretical insights into ‘human–animal relations, systems of spirituality and human perceptions of the environment’ (Jordan Reference Jordan and Jordan2011, 17). However, a significant scope of noteworthy Russian language ethno-historical and ethnographic literature, especially in relation to near-recent East Siberian hunter-gatherers, has not received much attention in Anglophone hunter-gatherer literature and, in comparison to some other hunter-gatherer groups, has been less visible in related anthropological and archaeological comparative discussions (see, however, Pasarić & Warren Reference Pasarić and Warren2019). The data that will be presented here derive from an engagement with the Russian language ethnographic literature and the Siberian ethnographic collection from the Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography in St Petersburg.
It has been argued that ‘prehistoric or ethnohistorical hunter-gatherer communities in the northern Eurasian zone shared broadly similar temporal, practical and cosmological structures’ (Zvelebil Reference Zvelebil, Bailey and Spikins2008, 42) and the role of analogy in charting interpretative archaeological frameworks has been showcased (Zvelebil & Jordan Reference Zvelebil, Jordan and Goldhahn1999). I note the potential risks of ‘Siberianisation’ of the Mesolithic (Warren Reference Warren2018, 428) as well as the inherent limitations of any ethnographic material. Yet, I follow the suggested ‘analogical’ conceptual routes accepting foundations for the analogy between Northern hunter-gatherers and Mesolithic communities. Ethnographical investigations have been regarded as invaluable – not only for developing analogies and offering insights into how animals have been placed in hunter-gatherers’ worldviews and how belief systems are reflected and constructed through material culture (such as animal remains, ornaments, and iconography), but also for highlighting the variety of human social and cultural pathways (Jordan Reference Jordan, Conneller and Warren2006, 95–9; Widlok Reference Widlok, Stein, Lazar, Candea, Diemberger, Robbins, Sanchez and Stasch2020). Acknowledging that lives and worldviews of hunter-gatherers have been rich and variable, as some recent discussion have especially underlined (eg. Lane Reference Lane, Cummings, Jordan and Zvelebil2014; Warren Reference Warren2018; Reference Warren2021), the section of ethnographic material presented in this paper aims to widen somewhat the range of ethnographic data utilised in archaeological discussions and to expand insights on possible aspects of social interaction between humans, animal remains, and artefacts. In this manner, it increases our awareness of similar archaeological possibilities and encourages us to rethink dominant perceptions about animal remains and artefacts made from them (or representing them) that are included in Mesolithic and Early Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials.
RESTING PLACES OF SYMBOLS AND RAW MATERIALS
Unmodified animal remains, animal remains modified into various types of pendants, and animal representations significantly contribute to the content of Mesolithic and, in some cases, Neolithic hunter-gatherer burial assemblages across Northern Europe. Though these finds have received a significant amount of attention, the dominant narratives tend to interpret them through economic or symbolic frameworks and thus recognise them as primarily representative of human social and symbolic actions or technical behaviour. For example, unmodified animal remains in human graves have usually been understood as raw materials or food intended for the humans in their afterlives, alternatively for the spirits, possibly also as remains of burial feasts or as sacrificial and ‘special’ offerings (Zagorska & Lõugas Reference Zagorska, Lõugas, Lang and Kriiska2000, 234; Popova Reference Popova2001, 131; Fahlander Reference Fahlander2003, 109; Grünberg Reference Grünberg2016, 19). They have also often been thought of as symbolically representative or referential of the occupations, personalities, and clan identities of the humans while they were alive. For example, a grave containing the vertebrae of a pike from Zvejnieki in Latvia has been described as a resting place of a fisherman (Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 94), while two whole bird carcasses found in a grave at the same site were thought to be in some way related to the man’s identity and occupation (Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2006, 296). Eurasian jay wings from graves at Zvejnieki and Ajvide in Sweden and the osprey legs from Oleniy Ostrov in Russia have been linked to the clan relationships of the humans buried in these graves or the identities of socially important individuals to whose clothes bird remains might have been attached (Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2008, 208; Reference Mannermaa2013). In a strictly symbolist meaning, the wings and remains of numerous waterbirds that dominate the burial faunal assemblages at Zvejnieki and Ajvide, along with the swan remains from Vedbæk (grave 8) in Denmark, have been linked with notions of protection or transport and transformation from one world to another and from one state of being to another (Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2008, 212, 217; Serjeantson Reference Serjeantson2009, 345). The osprey legs occurring in graves at Oleniy Ostrov have been linked with the power of this bird appreciated by humans and implicated in the burial. A suggestion has also been made that remains of nine animal species from grave 121 at Zvejnieki could be viewed as symbols of the Mesolithic landscape, signifying water, air, earth, or forest (Macāne Reference Macāne, Borić, Antonović and Mihajlović2021, 656).
Apart from unmodified remains, the bones of birds and other animals have been frequently found shaped into various types of pendants or beads, positioned in ways that suggest that they can be interpreted as being parts of necklaces and similar adornments or decorations attached to clothing. Beside their solely decorative and aesthetic relevance, their symbolic and social factors have been considered as well, and the pendants are often understood as personal items, such as amulets, or items having special value as exotic goods (eg, Eriksson et al. Reference Eriksson, Lõugas and Zagorska2003, 7; Larsson Reference Larsson2006; Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2008, 220; Grünberg Reference Grünberg2016).
Tooth pendants especially are considered representational of human social statuses. Current interpretations of tooth pendants consider their aesthetic and symbolic values as personal adornments or decorative items attached to clothing, belts, headdresses, footwear, or other garments of the interred humans demonstrating the status and wealth of individuals and/or their affiliations within particular family, tribe, or other grouping (Kannegaard Nielsen & Brinch Petersen Reference Kannegaard Nielsen, Brinch Petersen, Hvass and Storgaard1993; Larsson Reference Larsson2006, 253; Mannermaa et al. Reference Mannermaa, Rainio, Girya and Gerasimov2021). Elaborate assemblages of tooth pendants, most likely attached to clothes or headdresses, such as those from Zvejnieki (Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 94, 96, 98), Oleniy Ostrov (Gurina Reference Gurina1956, 58), Popovo (Oshibkina Reference Oshibkina2016), and Skateholm and Duonkalnis (Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 98), have been especially linked with the identities of prominent members of societies, such as lead shamanic practitioners or skilled hunters. Recent interpretations link tooth pendants with child carriers/papooses and with their function as rattles (Vang Petersen Reference Vang Petersen2016; Rainio & Tamboer Reference Rainio and Tamboer2018; Rainio et al. Reference Rainio, Gerasimov, Girya and Mannermaa2021).
Though less numerous in comparison to these pendants, zoomorphic representations have also been documented and their analyses usually follow similar symbolical, interpretative pathways or highlight human identities and social stratification. However, Iršėnas (Reference Iršėnas2007) considers the possibility that zoomorphic figurines could also have functioned as toys. Rods with sculptural elk or reindeer heads from the rich female and male graves at Zvejnieki and at Oleniy Ostrov and male graves from other burial grounds in Russia have been interpreted as insignias of status and power, indicating burials of chiefs, shamans, or mature and respected members of society, perhaps even elk hunters (Gurina Reference Gurina1956; Iršėnas Reference Iršėnas2000, 99; Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 96; Zhulnikov & Kashina Reference Zhulnikov and Kashina2010; Mantere & Kashina Reference Mantere and Kashina2020). Judging from their location in the graves and relation to human bodies, several bird figurines from Zvejnieki have been described as amulets, parts of a necklace, or as decorative headgear (Zagorska & Lõugas Reference Zagorska, Lõugas, Lang and Kriiska2000, 230; Zagorskis Reference Zagorskis2004, 38; Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2006, 297). The presence of bird figurines in graves in Latvia and Sweden (at the Ajvide site) has also been linked with their significance in seasonal hunting or with their symbolism of re-incarnation or translocation of the human soul, or with notions of birds as guiding spirits for the journey to the afterlife (Zagorska Reference Zagorska2000, 90; Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2008, 220). Animals have been represented in bone and antler but also clay and amber as well as wood.
These significant analyses highlight different aspects of human–animal relationships and the possible economic, symbolic, mythico-religious, and social relevance some animals might have had in prehistoric hunter-gatherer communities. However, animal remains, artefacts made from them, and animal representations are seen as symbolic referents or signposts to a meaning and their agency as objects does not form a significant part of the interpretations. Though there has been a lot of consideration of active material culture and human–animal relations in the theoretical literature, there is still little evidence of it in how we are making sense of this material.
ACTIVE MESOLITHIC OBJECTS AND PERSONS
Several authors have already considered animal remains and objects made from them in the archaeology of the Mesolithic as active social constitutors of worlds rather than just natural resourses or objects that are simply thought of or acted upon by humans.
For example, Mansrud (Reference Mansrud2017) studied fishhooks made from osseous remains of ungulates from the north-eastern Skagerrak area of eastern Norway and western Sweden. Relying on Descola’s (Reference Descola2013) account that, in animist or totemist societies, animals and objects are often perceived as animated, Mansrud (Reference Mansrud2017, 40) also proposes that fishhooks, as objects retaining the animals’ ‘anima’ within them, can be considered animated by certain attributes of the once living animals. As large ungulates, such as elk, are the most frequently portrayed animals on Mesolithic rock art and have played an important part not only in the subsistence but in the cosmologies of Mesolithic communities, perhaps even as ancestors or creator beings, Mansrud (Reference Mansrud2017, 43) understands fishhooks as liminal agents in acquiring vital aquatic food and in ‘mediating [the] dangers and insecurities of an unpredictable “life aquatic”’.
Several works have been inspired by concepts of embodiment deriving from Amerindian ontologies and the theory of perspectivism brought forward by Viveiros de Castro (Reference Viveiros de Castro1998), proposing that humans and animals have the same unchangeable interiority (spirit or soul) while their exteriority (body) is alterable but also where the core of being human or animal is located, encompassing all the unique qualities of being and their engagement with the environment. Employing the concept of ‘affects’ (Viveieros de Castro Reference Viveiros de Castro1998), understood as an animal’s perspective or way of being and acting in the world, Conneller (Reference Conneller2004; Reference Conneller2011) considered red deer antler barbed points and antler frontlets from Star Carr in England as being imbued with different animal attributes. For example, hyper-male aggressiveness could have been harnessed in the barbed points, while red deer frontlets, worn on a human body, might have facilitated a certain deer-like way of acting in the world (Conneller Reference Conneller2004; Reference Conneller2011, 62). Similarly, Overton (Reference Overton2016) considered small mammal (wildcat, marten, fox, or wolf) remains from the Kennet and Colne Valleys in England that, potentially worn by humans as amulets and pendants, allowed them to adopt not only the bodily abilities that pertain to certain animal species but their perspectives in ways of being, as well. Footnote 2
Animal remains and animal bone/tooth artefacts from Mesolithic burials, along with the effects they might have had on humans and human bodies and identities, have also been considered. Following the concept of perspectivism Živaljević (Reference Živaljević2015) discusses practices of placing animal body parts alongside human bodies in the Mesolithic–Neolithic Danube Gorges by exploring how various aspects of animals’ ways of being, or experiencing the world conveyed through the body, could have affected human permeable bodies. In reference to Skateholm and Zvejnieki burials Macāne (Reference Macāne, Borić, Antonović and Mihajlović2021, 658) highlights the importance of viewing animals as human companions and animal remains as entangled and embodied entities in the acts of becoming.
Relying on notions of individual personhood and concepts of partibility and permeability deriving from Melanesian and Indian ethnographies, Fowler (Reference Fowler2004) contends that animal body parts and tooth pendants found in close association with humans in Mesolithic burials from Denmark and Sweden (eg, Vedbæk, Skateholm) could have contributed to the construction of human personhood. Animal body parts are often found near human sensory organs or bodily openings, making it easier for them to affect human bodies with their animal-like qualities (Fowler Reference Fowler2004, 75). However, into his broad definition of personhood, a condition or state of being a person, Fowler (Reference Fowler2004, 4) includes any entity, human or non-human, which can be imagined and treated as a person, thus acknowledging the possibility for animals and objects to be considered as persons as well.
Fowler also notes fluidity and flexibility as two of the inherent characteristics of personhood that allow persons to be constituted, de-constituted, maintained, and altered in social practices through life and death, a process that is dependent on particular contexts. This has been a useful concept for studies engaging with the creation of human personhood in the Mesolithic, which has been understood as a relationship that can be negotiated, expressed, and mediated through, among other things, objects and artefacts; by the placement of grave goods with certain human individuals, for example (Janik Reference Janik and Cannon2019). The relationship between objects and the personhood of animals has been discussed as well, though not in reference to the Mesolithic period. For example, Argent (Reference Argent and Broderick2016) proposes that the horses interred in the Iron Age Scythian burial mound Pazyrik were considered as persons and that the differently detailed and ornamented riding gear, head garments, and other objects the horses were buried with reflected their own individualities and personhoods.
Animal personhood in prehistory has indeed been thematised and several works highlight social relations as essential vectors in the conceptualisation of animals as persons. Just as Brück (Reference Brück2001, 655), in reference to humans, acknowledges a person to be made up of a wider set of social relations, which is also where agency should be recognised, Hill (Reference Hill2013) notes how the agency of animals and their recognition as subjects in the constitution of social worlds entitles them, at least in some cases, to be considered as persons. As evident from discussions about Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic hunter-gatherer personhood, the subjectivity and individuality of animals tend to have been recognised through their mortuary treatments (especially in the cases involving dogs, wolves, and bears; eg, Larsson Reference Larsson, Larsson and Lundmark1989; Reference Larsson, Vermeersch and Van Peer1990; Fowler Reference Fowler2004; Losey et al. Reference Losey, Bazaliiskii, Garvie-Lok, Germonpré, Leonard, Andrew, Katzenberg and Sablin2011; Hill Reference Hill2013; Živaljević Reference Živaljević2015). Overton and Hamilakis (Reference Overton and Hamilakis2013) and Overton (Reference Overton2016) shift our focus from the dead to the once living animals and their embodied interactions with humans. In specific reference to swan–human interactions in the Mesolithic they stress that swans were recognised by Mesolithic hunters as persons and individuals since they exhibit unique physical characteristics and intentional actions (vocal and bodily communication) that facilitate social interactions, amongst themselves first of all, but also with humans. As part of their dedication to challenging generic interpretations and stressing the importance of inter-corporeal, sensuous, and affective mutual engagements of animals and humans, Overton and Hamilakis (Reference Overton and Hamilakis2013) offer a different perspective in understanding animal remains found in burials together with humans. Re-interpreting the finds from the famous grave 8 at Vedbæk in Denmark they argue that the remains of the whooper swan found in close association with those of a young child and a female should be thought of as the remains of an individual swan infused with understandings and relationships borne through specific embodied interactions (eg, hunting, killing, consumption) between humans and the swan instead of, for example, a generic symbol of flight and transference of the human spirit to the afterlife (Overton & Hamilakis Reference Overton and Hamilakis2013, 131–6).
The highlighted discussions recognise living animals as agentic entities that engage in social relationships between humans and non-humans and consider the ways non-human personhoods might have been acknowledged and negotiated in life and death. Similarly, objects made from animal remains were understood to carry a certain ‘animalness’ within them, be capable of actively mediating human behaviour, and making up a part of human identities while increasing the range of their corporal and sensorial capacities. Yet, the possibility that objects might also have been recognised as sentient agents that have the power to act and that they might have been perceived and treated as persons has not been addressed. The archaeological implications of such notions will be explored below. However, I first turn to the Siberian ethnographic material to explore the contexts of sociality and communication occurring between animal remains, objects, and humans through which non-human personhood can be acknowledged and expressed.
‘COME AND MAKE MY CHILD BRAVE’
An example may be given of how some hunter-gatherer communities may have attributed subjectivity, social agency, and capacities of conscious intentionality not only to animals but also to their remains and even the objects representing them, and, as a result, interacted with them as with persons. This is well demonstrated in Siberian ethnographies and worldviews of some East Siberian near-recent hunter-gatherer groups. For example, notions that all living beings (humans, animals, landscape features, etc) are gifted with reason and a soul and have their own spirit masters are present in the traditional beliefs of the Ulchi people (Ivashenko et al. Reference Ivashenko, Kile and Smolyak1994, 64). As highlighted by Ivanov (Reference Ivanov1977, 80), according to the Nanai people, everything in the environment, including human-made objects and households, are endowed with life, consciousness, and volition. Things can enter into various social relations with humans on the initiative of humans but also according to their own will (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977, 80–1). Apart from living animals, the unmodified or modified remains of animals, as well as their figural representations, are also perceived as sentient beings with their own will and power to act. Through different forms of social interactions they have been perceived by humans as any other person could be.
Ethnographic data about the Nanai, synthetised by Ivanov (Reference Ivanov1977), offer valuable insights into forms of human and non-human interaction. The settlements and households of the Nanai people have been dwelling places for different animals, such as rabbits, foxes, geese, ducks, cranes, bears, and dogs. Some animals were kept in settlements due to the belief that they were able to affect and influence the lives of others. For example, owls were thought to be very effective at protecting children. Beliefs that animals have abilities to influence human lives and cause strong affects (emotions) were extended to their post-mortal remains, which encouraged practices of keeping small dead animals, such as dried fish or birds (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977, 86). Teeth, jaws, claws, and other parts of feet could have been simply curated or modified into pendants and similar artefacts and worn around necks or on belts, wrapped around parts of humans’ bodies. These objects were of significant importance to East Siberian indigenous people. The Nanai believed these artefacts were able to assist in hunting endeavours, affect people’s safety, increase health, provide strength and endurance, or offer comfort in certain emotional states, and they also had very prominent roles in healing (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977, 81, 87; MAE 5530-1; Footnote 3 8, 29, 30, 31, 33, 36). Sometimes, animal body parts or entire animals would be manufactured from chosen and/or available materials. Among East Siberian hunter-gatherers, wood or wood bark was most commonly used. For example, a bear or dog’s paw, a figurine of an owl or a pike, a spider, a cuckoo, or a pig would be manufactured in order to comfort a child in fear and distress and aid in various states of their discomfort (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977; MAE 5530-5, 8, 7). With a similar aim, figurines of boars and turtles or models of Siberian musk deer canines were manufactured and believed to ease the difficulties women might experience during pregnancy (MAE 5530-12, 29, 33, 36). Beliefs in the healing properties of figurines in the shapes of animals were documented among the Nivhi people as well (Taksami Reference Taksami2007, 168). Figurines in the shapes of animals could also represent the protective spirits of homes and families of the Nanai and Ulchi people (Bereznitsky et al. Reference Bereznitskii, Gaer, Karabanova, Kile, Kocheshkov, Podmaskin, Sem, Sem, Starcev, Turajev, Fetisova, Fadeeva and Shanshina2003, 172).
Most importantly, these artefacts were involved in a variety of social, performative interactions with humans. Ivanov (Reference Ivanov1977, 87) notes that they were considered able to understand human language and were often spoken to, given personal names, and asked for favours. To secure a child’s intelligence one would take a bone from a boar’s skull, attach it to the youngster’s clothes and say: ‘Come and give my child wit’ (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977, 89). Animal canines were believed to hear and understand human words directed at them and be able to react. A bear’s canine would be addressed in this way: ‘You are strong and not afraid of anything, come and help me, make my child brave’. Since both the animal remains and the made figurines were considered to be alive and/or endowed with a spirit, the Nanai people would also feed them by smearing them with porridge or sprinkle them with the blood of a sacrificed animal (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977, 87; Bereznitsky et al. Reference Bereznitskii, Gaer, Karabanova, Kile, Kocheshkov, Podmaskin, Sem, Sem, Starcev, Turajev, Fetisova, Fadeeva and Shanshina2003, 172). However, if the artefacts failed to fulfil the desired requests, the Nanai may beat them or otherwise express their frustrations by discarding them or simply neglecting them (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977). In other words, the artefacts were also seen as persons with their own will, capabilities, and characteristics entangled in the web of social relations with humans through various types of communication (physical, verbal and affective [emotional]).
Prompted by the ethnographic data, this paper further investigates the likely archaeological implications of perceiving and treating some artefacts and animal remains as persons and focuses on the material consequences of communicative actions and performative acts carried out by humans in relation to artefacts and animal remains that might have been perceived as having the qualities of a person. Mortuary practices, acts which not only represent social relations but also constitute them, stand out as important social arenas where the personhood of humans, animals, or artefacts can be acknowledged and/or negotiated. The personhood of animal remains and objects from the Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials will thus be explored through different performative actions carried out by humans, such as their placement and arrangement within the burial and their possible treatment prior to deposition.
COMMUNICATING PERSONHOOD
Due to the nature of archaeological material, certain aspects of sociality between persons (things, animals, and humans) highlighted by the ethnographies inevitably remain hidden (eg, communication through language) or would require chemical analyses to determine whether some remains and artefacts were perhaps smeared with food or blood. However, the graves themselves are important contextual arenas where personhoods can be negotiated, acknowledged, and materially expressed. Looking into possible aspects of their entanglement in social performative interactions prior to or during their incorporation in the burial lays out the possibility of viewing animal remains and objects not simply as signifiers of human identities and human symbolic and economic values but potentially as persons in their own right. The inclusion of animal remains and artefacts in burials can serve as a starting point for considering ways in which their personhoods might have been acknowledged and communicated, followed by an analysis of their positioning in the grave and treatment prior to deposition. Clearly, the different ways in which animals have been perceived and the ways in which they interacted with humans throughout their life spans might have affected the processes of procuring their body parts and the decisions that led to them being transformed into particular artefacts and, further, how they were placed in the graves. Therefore, the personhood of animal remains and the artefacts made from them could also have been linked with other factors involving the identity and individuality of the living animals and their specific relations to humans.
Positioning in the graves
As an example of how some animal remains and artefacts can be singled out and treated differently from others, one can consider the arrangements and positions some tooth pendants occupied in graves. Tooth pendants, with or without use-wear, are perhaps the most numerous finds of animal origin included in Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials across Northern Europe. They are usually found in rows or clusters in close connection to human bodies and, in most cases, they have been attached to headgear and clothing. However, some tooth pendants stand out as they occupy a distinctive arrangement in the burial, hold an autonomous position in relation to the human body, or were treated differently in other ways.
For example, grave 8 at the Mesolithic burial ground Popovo in Russia contained 120 animal tooth pendants most probably attached to the pelvic belt of a young male individual described as a successful hunter (Oshibkina Reference Oshibkina2016, 804). However, several tooth pendants, made from beaver incisors, together with crane and pike osteological remains and small pieces of coal, occupied a distinct position as they were placed in a separate small pit located inside the grave area (Oshibkina Reference Oshibkina2016, 805). Similarly, in grave 57 in the Zvejnieki cemetery a group of elk tooth pendants was found in the pelvic area of an interred female individual (Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 96), while several other clusters of tooth pendants had an autonomous position in relation to the human body and were distinctively arranged. For example, groupings of pendants, mainly comprised of elk and red deer teeth, were positioned in fan-like shapes beside the body while six elk teeth surrounded a stone axe placed above the head of the woman (Larsson Reference Larsson2006, 260). This indicates that not all tooth pendants found in graves are necessarily in close association with the bodies of human individuals as parts of ornaments or clothing decorations, as already observed by Larsson (Reference Larsson and Zagorska2006, 260) and suggests a distinction between pendants of mortuary costumes and other forms of pendant depositions which may be linked with their own distinct social identities.
Grave 300 from Zvejnieki, dating to the Baltic Early Neolithic, contained 59 tooth pendants, which most probably constituted a rich headdress of an adult male individual (Zagorska & Lõugas Reference Zagorska, Lõugas, Lang and Kriiska2000, 234). Interestingly, at the mouth area, two symmetrically arranged wolf molars were positioned between his upper and lower jaws (Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 98). Wolf remains are not frequent at Zvejnieki and only several teeth belonging to this species have been noted in other graves. Footnote 4 Similarly, molar tooth pendants can be seen to be less frequent finds in graves in comparison to pendants manufactured from canines and incisors. Footnote 5 If the molars were part of a larger headdress, their position in the jaw area of the male individual from grave 300 could be related with their, possibly accidental, placements in the ornament. However, their symmetrical arrangement at the mouth area could have also been deliberate. It even evocates vocal communication between the human individual and the molars. Observed morphological changes indicative of healed inflammation processes probably caused by direct infection of the scalp areas, which was also the only area in the grave where ochre was found (Jankauskas & Palubeckaitė Reference Jankauskas and Palubeckaitė2006, 157–8; Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 98), perhaps also suggest that the communication process that might have been going on between the man and the animal’s molars involved requests for protection, healing, or aid for physical discomfort from one person to another.
The female individual, 19C, from the triple grave 19 at Bøgebakken in Denmark was not accompanied by a large number of tooth pendants placed around her pelvic area (Vang Petersen Reference Vang Petersen2016, 119), which is otherwise common in female graves on the site. Instead, 50 pendants made from red deer, auroch, wild boar, and human teeth, the jaw of a pine marten, and the distal end of a roe deer hoof were positioned at her chest area (Fig. 1; Brinch Petersen Reference Brinch Petersen1979, 47 cited in Vang Petersen Reference Vang Petersen2016, 119). However, all the tooth pendants were uniquely placed, being positioned upside down with the reverse side turned upwards (Brinch Petersen et al. Reference Brinch Petersen, Jønsson, Jeul and Kjær2015, 143). The arrangement was first interpreted as a woman’s chest adornment but, since all the elements were placed with their face downwards, suggestions were made that they were adornments attached to a piece of cloth, such as a carpet or woman’s belt (Brinch Petersen et al. Reference Brinch Petersen, Jønsson, Jeul and Kjær2015, 144). Others suggested that, despite their location on the women’s chest, the tooth pendants and the animal remains were actually in association with the child and functioned as amulets placed on a child carrier (Vang Petersen Reference Vang Petersen2016, 119). While both suggestions are credible, it can also be proposed that turning the items face-downwards was a deliberate act and a performative action communicating a change in the nature of an important relationship between several categories of persons.
Notions that the world of the living and the world of the dead inversely mirror each other have been recorded among East Siberian hunter-gatherers, such as the Ulchi (Hasanova Reference Hasanova2007, 137). The type of communication that might have been going on between the woman, the animal remains, and the tooth pendants ceased with her death and was visually and physically acknowledged in the burial treatment.
Animal representations
Animal representations or figurines frequently found in close relation to human bodies can also be considered as artefacts that might have been involved in communicative processes with humans. Elk-headed rods, usually interpreted as insignias of human power and status, have been found placed next to the legs, shoulders, and skulls of inhumations at Zvejnieki, Oleniy Ostrov, and other burial grounds in Russia (Gurina Reference Gurina1956, 379–80; Zagorska Reference Zagorska2006, 96, fig. 3; Iršėnas Reference Iršėnas2006; Mantere & Kashina Reference Mantere and Kashina2020). Bird figurines or bird shaped pendants have been unearthed in female, male, and child graves at Zvejnieki (Fig. 2), Ajvide, and Tamula in Estonia, usually placed at the head and chest area but also in the vicinity of the legs and feet of the deceased (Zagorskis Reference Zagorskis2004; Kriiska et al. Reference Kriiska, Lõugas, Lõhmus, Mannermaa and Johanson2007, 96; Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2008, 211). Representations of other animals have been reported as well. For example, snake figurines were found at Oleniy Ostrov and Tamula in the vicinity of the shoulders and legs of the interred humans (Gurina Reference Gurina1956, 379–80; Kriiska et al. Reference Kriiska, Lõugas, Lõhmus, Mannermaa and Johanson2007, 96–9). An amber figurine from the double grave at Valma in Estonia possibly depicts a seal, although it has also been identified as a wild boar or a beaver (Ots Reference Ots and Tamla2010, 14–5, fig. 2, cited in Luik Reference Luik, Choyke and O’Connor2013, 83), and a zoomorphic pendant from a male grave at Tamula resembles a boar (Iršėnas Reference Iršėnas2010, 184, fig. 6/5). Though the positions of some of these artefacts may indicate the ways in which they were possibly worn next to or on human bodies, leading to their interpretation as markers of status, amulets, or parts of larger ornaments (Zagorska & Lõugas Reference Zagorska, Lõugas, Lang and Kriiska2000; Zagorskis Reference Zagorskis2004, 38; Iršėnas Reference Iršėnas2006; Mantere & Kashina Reference Mantere and Kashina2020), these artefacts might have interacted with humans in other ways than simply being worn or handled. As informed by ethnographic material concerning near-recent East Siberian hunter-gatherers, animal representations can be viewed as sentient beings or persons to whom humans communicated their wishes and requests for protection, successful hunting or other endeavours, general well-being, or for the healing of more specific states and illnesses (eg, Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977; Taksami Reference Taksami2007, eg, MAE 5530-5, 5530-7, 5530-8, 5530-29, 5530-33). Although we can only speculate, perhaps the specific placement of animal figurines in graves may also indicate the relationships these artefacts could have had with living humans, such as the parts of their bodies they were asked and expected to protect and heal or the activities they were expected to assist in. Such requests would be expressed through communicative processes between humans and artefacts prior to their deposition while the personhood, individuality, and capabilities of these objects could have been ritually acknowledged by the performative act of including them in the burial.
Evidence of prior use of staffs before their interment has been recognised by Gurina (Reference Gurina1956, 215) on the handle of an elk-headed example from the female grave at Oleniy Ostrov (Fig. 3). As shown in recent work by Mantere and Kashina (Reference Mantere and Kashina2020), elk-headed staffs across Northern Europe have been found not only in graves and mostly intact but also in settlements where they appear to have been involved in performative communicative processes and embodied interactions with humans. Mantere and Kashina (Reference Mantere and Kashina2020, 10–12) have demonstrated that most of the elk-headed staffs found in settlements have been broken in different ways and were, most probably, deliberately fragmented or, in some cases, exhibited signs of repair. They suggested that staffs were tightly associated with the personal achievements of their owners, as performers of ritual activities or successful elk hunters, which prevented other members from using the staffs and, thus, led to their fragmentation. If staffs are to be understood as artefacts that are, in some way, imbued with the power of the animal they represent and/or are manufactured from (Mantere & Kashina Reference Mantere and Kashina2020, 13–15), it can be proposed that, rather than focusing solely on human actions, they were fragmented because their capabilities to effect, cause affects (emotions), and influence actions declined and they could no longer deliver the expectations humans placed on them. On the other hand, individuality and capabilities of some of these artefacts could have been acknowledged and ceremonially displayed through the act of placement in the burials.
Treatment prior to deposition
Treatment of items prior to deposition in graves is another aspect worth considering. Use-wear patterns, incisions, and other visible traces are indicative of embodied interactions between humans and animal remains and potentially of performative communication as well. The burial of a female and a child at Bad Dürrenberg in Germany, originally interpreted as a shaman’s grave due to the presence of deer frontlets and antlers (Grünberg et al. Reference Grünberg, Graetsch, Heußner and Schneider2016a, 310), included tooth plates from five longitudinally split lower canines of a wild boar, two of which were found around the throat region of the deceased. These impressively large and longitudinally split canines were, interestingly, not used as knives. Instead, their lingual faces were shaped by scraping, their ends were rounded, and their surfaces were smoothed out. Traces of forming and shaping as well as several perforations on one of the canines (three perforations side by side at the proximal end, a single perforation at the distal end, and defective holes at the proximal and distal ends), suggest a considerable amount of embodied interaction with the canine, most probably as it was formed into a pendant. The assemblage also contained the right thyrohyoid bone of boar perforated at one end while three transversely incised lines are visible side by side on its convex side (Grünberg et al. Reference Grünberg, Graetsch, Heußner and Schneider2016a, 315).
Worked remains of boars have usually been interpreted as clothing decorations (Grünberg et al. Reference Grünberg, Graetsch, Heußner and Schneider2016a, 314) while recent discussions shift the focus from the adult female to the child buried in the grave, viewing the boar canines as the child’s amulets (Vang Petersen Reference Vang Petersen2016, 121). The Bad Dürrenberg burial also included halves of the metatarsus and metacarpus of a red deer shaped into awls and displaying significant use-wear. The smaller one exhibits incised decorations while the longer piece, missing the joint section, has been interpreted as a part of a working kit or, alternatively, a woman’s hair pin (Grünberg et al. Reference Grünberg, Graetsch, Heußner and Schneider2016a, 307). Generally, the incisions observed as decorations on bone, antler, and lithics have so far been linked with the identities, culture, age groups, or gender of those who made the engraving (Karsten & Knarrström Reference Karsten and Knarrström2003, 118 cited in Conneller Reference Conneller2011, 86; Andersson et al. Reference Andersson, Karsten, Knarrström and Svensson2004) or, in specific cases, their apotropaic function has been highlighted (Conneller Reference Conneller2011, 90). Nevertheless, the act of shaping, forming, and decorating a piece of bone or engaging with it by making systematically associated patterns can potentially also be seen as a visually, tactilely, and olfactorily pleasing way of creating, acknowledging, and negotiating the material individuality of the object.
Three fragmented mandible halves originating from roe deer found at Bad Dürrenberg have been interpreted as sickles and fragments of several pond turtle carapaces have been interpreted as bowls or raw material. Scratches and black stains indicating traces of fire have been noted on the inner side of several pieces of carapace (Fig. 4) and potentially linked with techniques of separating the layers of the scutes and removing the vertebrae (Grünberg et al. Reference Grünberg, Graetsch, Heußner and Schneider2016a, 311, 321). A shaft, an artefact made from red deer antler with a perforation and a rounded burr from heavy use, was included in the same burial (Grünberg et al. Reference Grünberg, Graetsch, Heußner and Schneider2016a, 307). Though some of these objects exhibit clear use-wear (awls, shaft) they may have been put to a variety of uses and need not have been used exclusively as tools. They could have been assigned several social tasks during their lifetime, perhaps even simultaneously, and their usage could have changed over their lifespan. They could have been involved in a multiplicity of communicative processes with humans through which they were acknowledged as persons and, as suggested by the Siberian ethnographies, people might have laid their expectations on them and subsequently even expressed emotions. These could include anger and frustration leading to the mistreatment of the artefacts (beating or discarding) (Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977) or to deliberate exposure to fire and scratching or over -extensive usage, if we envision such possibilities in the cases of the turtle carapaces and the red deer antler shaft from Bad Dürrenberg. Though not in association with burials, evidence for selection, curation, and movement of animal body parts that exhibit features related to human activity (burning and charring, polishing, trimming) and even introducing them to sites as single elements, has been demonstrated by Overton (Reference Overton2016, 570) in reference to the Mesolithic in southern England. Evidence suggesting intentional damage of various objects that were placed in Mesolithic graves has also been put forward (eg, Zagorskis Reference Zagorskis2004). It has been suggested that osprey and white-tailed eagle bones from several burials at Oleniy Ostrov, were intentionally broken before deposition (Mannermaa Reference Mannermaa2016, 789). The custom of causing damage to artefacts that are placed in graves has also been noted in the ethnographic evidence relating to East Siberian hunter-gatherers, such as the Orochi and Udege (Avrorin & Koz’minskiy Reference Avrorin and Koz’minskiy1949, 326, 327; Startsev Reference Startsev2005, 227).
DISCUSSION
Building from archaeological discussions about animal personhood and agency, as well as the agency of objects made from animal remains, and following interpretations offered by Siberian ethnographies, this paper proposes that some objects made from animal remains and animal representations might have been considered as persons within prehistoric Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer communities. The ethnographic data about East Siberian near-recent hunter-gatherer groups, which have not been previously introduced to English speaking audiences, have been brought forward with the aim of including them within the scope of ethnographies from other parts of the world (eg, Amazonia, India, Melanesia, or other parts of Siberia) that have previously been considered in discussions of prehistoric hunter-gatherers and explorations of archaeological possibilities. The data are employed to highlight aspects of worldviews in which human agency is not necessarily in primacy, where some animal remains and animal artefacts have been perceived as effective and affecting animated things and to draw out archaeological implications. Although it is hard to be certain, the treatment of animal remains as persons (or with agency) is at least possible and, in some cases, can help us understand the material treatment.
By exploring non-human personhood, the intention has been to highlight the possible shared characteristics and qualities of humans and non-humans, to rethink the superiority of human agency, and not to incorporate the non-human into the category of human. As Viveiros de Castro (Reference Viveiros de Castro2004, 467) notes, anthropomorphism does not necessarily stand next to anthropocentrism, especially if viewed through an animist framework. Notions that not only animals but also plants, things, and landscape features are animated, endowed with soul, and can be perceived as persons are common to a variety of animist/totemist communities (Hallowell Reference Hallowell and Diamond1960 cited in Anderson Reference Anderson2017; Ivanov Reference Ivanov1977; Viveiros de Castro Reference Viveiros de Castro2004; Fausto Reference Fausto2007). Yet, the degree to which these elements would have been considered alive or comprehended as persons depends on the context and social relations with other persons (eg, Ingold Reference Ingold2000, 97; Sillar Reference Sillar2009, 369). As Fowler (Reference Fowler2004, 88) puts it: ‘it is what things and animals and non-humans do that allows them to be understood as persons’.
Ethnographic data about Siberian near-recent hunter-gatherers and, especially, about the Nanai people speak of sociality and communication occurring between animal remains, objects, and humans involving food and physical, verbal, and affective (emotional) communication. Perhaps these can be viewed as actions through which one’s personhood, a state of being that is not exclusively human, can be negotiated and acknowledged. Yet, unlike humans and animals, whose agency is embodied in their physical ability to act and engage in social relations (Sillar Reference Sillar2009, 370), or that of plants as living things whose growth and form may be attributed to their own agency (Rival Reference Rival, Brightman, Grotti and Ulturgasheva2014), artefacts are somewhat different. Though, as shown by the Siberian ethnographies, some objects can be perceived as having their own intentions and capacities to act, to be in possession of a spirit or a soul and therefore also being animated, the recognition and negotiation of the personhood of such artefacts will be expressed through human actions and perceptions.
Following Fowler’s (Reference Fowler2004, 85) notions that there can be no single process through which personhood is attained and no definition of personhood that applies to all contexts, different performative actions have been considered in relation to various animal remains and the artefacts made from them in Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer graves. They can, however, be understood as material consequences of communicative actions carried out by humans in relation to artefacts and animal remains that might have been perceived as having qualities of a person (or with agency) and as categorical and consequential actions or formalised acts (see Lambek Reference Lambek2013, 147) constitutive of societies where humans are not the exclusive social agents.
The unique placement and positioning of some artefacts and animal remains in burials, which provides them with a distinct or independent position in relation to the human bodies, unlike other finds of the same kind, can perhaps be viewed as acts that communicated their distinctive, individual importance and/or were ritual displays of the unique relations they had with other persons (humans) or the termination of such relations in the world of the living (eg, tooth pendants from Popovo, Zvejnieki, and Bøgebakken).
Though the link between the placement of animal remains next to or on the human body and the pathological processes on human bone tissue, potentially causing discomfort to the individual throughout their lifetime, has been made, so far, only in the case of wolf molars (placed between the upper and lower jaw of the man) and the human individual buried at Zvejnieki (grave 300), conceptions that animal remains have inherent abilities to protect, heal or aid in the physical discomfort of the human body are conceivable and noteworthy considerations. Notions of the agentic qualities of not only animals and animal remains but their representations as well, as suggested by the ethnographies, and especially their abilities to act, protect, or heal, encourage us to at least consider the possibility of communicative processes between humans and artefacts such as the animal figurines or the elk-headed staffs and the requests and expectations humans might have placed on them prior to their deposition. The agentic capabilities and individualities of some animal figures and staffs could have been ritually acknowledged by the performative act of including them in the burial.
The act of shaping animal representations itself can, perhaps, also be recognised as a way of visually, tactilely, and materially inscribing the personhood of a once living animal into bone or antler by morphologically shaping the artefacts into the animal’s resemblance. Other animal artefacts could also have been involved in a variety of communicative interactions with humans through which they were acknowledged as persons with specific capabilities and their own intentions, those whom humans depended on and to whom they directed different requests and expressed various emotions. These may have included disappointments and frustrations, possibly resulting in physical interaction with the artefacts, eg, through burning, scratching, or over-using, or in other ways damaging or altering the artefact.
The intention of this paper has been to rethink the notion that animal artefacts and animal representations included in Mesolithic and Neolithic hunter-gatherer burials were solely grave-goods accompanying a human person and to view them instead as effective and affecting animated things evocative of worldviews in which different types of persons have communicated, interacted, and mutually shaped each other. The material consequence of the communicative actions and performative acts carried out by humans in relation to artefacts and animal remains that might have been perceived as having the qualities of a person discussed here can be seen as constitutive of non-anthropocentric societies where there has been more than one social (human) agent. The focus on burials permitted a view of fixed archaeological contexts that have been acknowledged as important settings for the expressed consequences of human acts and attention. Scattered graves, animal remains, and artefacts, though providing a rather generalised view, also serve as prompts for future discussions on non-human personhood since it is through the dynamic process of human interaction with physical objects, including our and others’ bodies, that our self-consciousness emerges as well as our capacity to conceptualise the perspective of another person (Mead Reference Mead1934, cited in Sillar Reference Sillar2009, 370).
Acknowledgements
I wish to thank Yuri Kirillovich Chistov for granting me permission to study the objects from the Siberian ethnographic collections in Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography (Kunst-kamera), Vladimir Davydov who kindly facilitated the work at the Museum and provided access to databases and Vladimir Kysel’ for assisting the access and work with the artefacts. I am grateful to Graeme Warren for perceptive comments on a draft of this paper. Three anonymous referees provided helpful further advice on the initial submission. I am responsible for any errors of fact or judgement that remain.
This work was supported by European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement no. 701636.