Exploring patterns of prehistoric kinship from socio-cultural anthropological perspectives

HORIZON.1.2HORIZON-TMA-MSCA-PF-GFID: 101108084
EC Contribution
€2,943
Consortium Size
2 orgs
Summary

Research context During the past decade, the “ancient DNA revolution” has reopened key questions about prehistoric kinship that within archaeogenetics is narrowly viewed as genetic proximity. From a socio-cultural anthropological perspective, however, kinship is not only a biological but also a performative and imaginary principle for structuring and maintaining social relations. Frequently, it is not blood but houses that play a crucial role in forming kinship relations. Therefore, a unified study of dwelling spaces and biological markers of kinship is crucial to understanding kinship in prehistory. Research questions •How can the material structures such as settlements, buildings, artifacts, and biological markers be read as ‘material codes’ of prehistoric kinship?•How can ethnographic reports exemplify rather than verify variability in kinship during prehistory? Research sitesFour research sites in southeastern Europe and Anatolia have been selected: Çatalhöyük, Lepenski Vir, Arslantepe, and Vučedol. Methods KINSCA will align ethnographic reports with archaeological data to further contextualize houses and settlements as well as biological signatures of individuals to illuminate prehistoric kinship practices. This will be achieved through triangulation of analytical methods By employing archaeology of kinship approaches based on cross-cultural anthropological insights, controlled comparison between ethnographic and archaeological material, and regional comparison between archaeological sites.InnovationSeveral archaeologists have voiced the need for archaeologists to move beyond understanding kinship through biogenetic links but as a social practice instead – joining well-known insight from earlier socio-cultural anthropology. For the first time, kinship in prehistory will be addressed from an interdisciplinary perspective, including socio-cultural anthropology, bioarchaeology, and prehistoric archaeology, within a common analytical framework.

Consortium (2)

Project Results (7)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (4)
Beyond Genetics: Exploring Aspects of Non-Biological Kinship in Prehistoric Times
Nature Anthropology· 2025DOI
Cveček Sabina, Herrero-Corral Ana, Rebay-Salisbury Katharina, Banffy Eszter, Brami Maxime, Chaix Raphaëlle, Hrnčíř Václav, Johnson Kent, F. Lancy David, Le Roy Mélie, Mace Ruth, Schweitzer Peter, Sear Rebecca, Seguin-Orlando Andaine, Shankland David, Somel Mehmet, Souvatzi Stella, Whiteley Peter, Žegarac Aleksandra
Enthrone, dethrone, rethrone? The multiple lives of matrilineal kinship in Aegean prehistory
Archaeological Dialogues· 2025DOI
Sabina Cvecek
Fostering interdisciplinary dialogues
Archaeological Dialogues· 2025DOI
Sabina Cvecek
Why kinship still needs anthropologists in the 21st century
Anthropology Today· 2024DOI
Sabina Cveček
Deliverables (2)
Other Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 1 - X-KIN (Exploring patterns of prehistoric kinship from socio-cultural anthropological perspectives)