@article{Bintliff_2021, title={Gioulika-Olga Christakopoulou, To Die in Style! The Residential Lifestyle of Feasting and Dying in Iron Age Stamna, Greece}, volume={6}, url={https://archaeopresspublishing.com/ojs/index.php/JGA/article/view/1055}, DOI={10.32028/jga.v6i.1055}, abstractNote={<p>This short essay presents some of the most interesting information from a major Early Iron Age cemetery in the province of Aetolia, in North-West Mainland Greece. Its presentation is rather uneven – the location of the site is not even immediately presented in the opening text, and there is no overall plan of the site – although the content is important enough to make it worth the effort. Over 600 tombs of the earliest Iron Age, the Protogeometric (PG) era (ca. 1050-900 BC), have so far been uncovered in a burial zone some 4km in length along the periphery of Lake Aetolikon, both cremations and inhumations. Several tombs appear to belong to elite ‘warrior’ males, indicating a ranked society.</p>}, journal={Journal of Greek Archaeology}, author={Bintliff, John}, year={2021}, month={Dec.}, pages={401–403} }