Royal funerals, ritual stones and participatory networks in the maritime Tongan state
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Clark, Geoffrey
Leclerc, Mathieu
Parton, Phillip
Reepmeyer, Christian
Grono, Elle
Burley, David
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Elsevier
Abstract
Archaic states were unstable entities and centralisation was threatened by fragmentation particularly at the
death of semi-divine leaders. Royal funerals were therefore important state events as they engaged a significant
proportion of the population in participatory behaviours and networks that linked individuals of different class
and group affiliations to the politico-religious system. In the ancient Tongan state (CE 1250-1800), royal funerals
involved the placement of exotic volcanic stones (kilikili) on the grave to mark the end of public mourning -
a practice still followed by the Tongan royal family. To investigate the antiquity of the patterned ritual practice
and the funerary contribution of specialists and non-specialists, we examined the composition of kilikili stones
from chiefly tombs of known age. Analysis shows that voyages of 150 km were made to collect funerary stones
from volcanic islands in Central Tonga for ~700 years. The development of royal tombs shows an increase in
practical and ritual funerary activity that was likely overseen by a royal undertaker clan and participatory
networks that spanned and integrated the scattered population of the Tongan maritime state.
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Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
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2037-12-31
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