posted on 2014-12-15, 10:42authored byKirsty Elizabeth Owen
This thesis considers the definition of elite identity and its relationship to the
constitution of power structures through the manipulation of material culture. The
following discussion will assess the nature of identity and how it is comprehended within
contemporary archaeological theory. Thereafter the formation of medieval and early
modem elite identities will be considered with reference to the manipulation of ideals of
piety through the funerary material culture of Gloucestershire c.1350-1700. This study
will consider how monuments that proposed a link between worldly wealth and divine
favour might articulate elite selves in relation to each other and in opposition to those
unaccustomed or unable to erect a monument to themselves or their kin. Funerary
evidence will be analysed alongside the ideal of dying well as presented in the Ars
Moriendi texts. It will be found that the ideological potential of 'dying well' was
exploited to its fullest potential during the period under study. The idealised pious death
provided the affluent with a focus for competition, the significance of which can only be
fully comprehended if the texts are analysed alongside other forms of material culture.