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This content will become publicly available on June 27, 2026

Title: Sacred Land and Ecological Grief Session Title: The Ethnoarchaeology of Landscapes and Mobility Session Organizers: Brenda J. Bowser, John W. Arthur, and Ahana Ghosh
In southern Ethiopia, the sacred ancestral landscapes, Bayira Deriya, often ignite Boreda elder’s memories about resettlement, drought, conflict, and disease. Likely in the 13th century, Boreda ancestors ascended from the eastern lowlands to find refuge in the Bayira Deriya forested plateaus. These mountaintop landscapes also harbored a commanding view over the Rift Valley, from which many Boreda successfully defended their sovereignty during a series of 15th to 19th-century incursions. By the early 20th century, the confluence of disease and colonization by the Ethiopian state led to the abandonment of mountaintop communities and resettlement in the valleys. Forests bloomed in and around Bayira Deriya’s historic settlements, defensive architecture, and graves. Boreda elders frequently recalled pilgrimages to these sacred forests to propitiate ancestors imbued with the power to relieve grief and anxiety associated with infertility, illness, human peril, and drought. Many Boreda elders today lament that abandoning their ancestral rites and indigenous ritual-technological practices has again turned their land to ash! They blame migration from rural valleys to towns, the persistence of drought (since 2016), locust swarms (circa 2020), and the death of countless elders (Covid-19) on those who have abandoned their ritual practices at Bayira Deriya landscapes.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1916933
PAR ID:
10634361
Author(s) / Creator(s):
Publisher / Repository:
World Archaeological Congress
Date Published:
Format(s):
Medium: X
Location:
Darwin, Australia
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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