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Age is a key axis upon which social identities and social relationships are negotiated over the life course, and early life experiences can also have significant implications for individual and population health outcomes. However, children and childhood have historically been

Age is a key axis upon which social identities and social relationships are negotiated over the life course, and early life experiences can also have significant implications for individual and population health outcomes. However, children and childhood have historically been marginalized in the study of past societies, and non-elite children have been remarkably invisible in reports on ancient Greece. This dissertation employs a bioarchaeological approach to investigate age-related social identities, early childhood health, and the impact of prolonged childhood illness on familial social dynamics during the Archaic Period in Athens, Greece (ca. 700-480 BCE), focusing on 179 preadults interred at the non-elite cemetery of Phaleron. First, contextual mortuary evidence is used to investigate how age-at-death influenced burial at Phaleron, revealing insights into the timing of the personhood acquisition, age-related social transitions, and individual agency in burial practice as expressed through variation in mortuary treatment. Then paleopathological analysis of preadult skeletal remains is leveraged to investigate early childhood health outcomes, demonstrating that children at Phaleron experienced early life physiological stress, including nutritional insufficiency that may be linked to maternal health. Furthermore, evidence of poor health among non-survivors is argued to have significant implications for later life health among those who survived to adulthood. Finally, sociohistorical, contextual, and paleopathological data are synthesized to investigate the social implications of healthcare at Phaleron. The results of this multi-scalar analysis indicate that children interred at Phaleron not only survived extended periods of potentially debilitating illness, but also that their survival would not have been possible without a community of caregivers. Moreover, the age at which children experienced illness would have significantly impacted the types of healthcare needed and the burdens that care would have placed on the household. This dissertation demonstrates the promise of early childhood health and social identity as subjects of bioarchaeological inquiry in ancient Greece and underscores the social and emotional impacts of childcare and loss on the communities that buried their deceased at Phaleron. Consequently, it lays the groundwork for future research on children and childhood in ancient Greece and the study of past lifeways in Archaic Athens.
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    Title
    • Childhood Health and Social Identity in Archaic Athens: A Bioarchaeological Perspective from Phaleron
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    Date Created
    2024
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    • Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2024
    • Field of study: Anthropology

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