Authority, Acquisition and Adaptation: Nineteenth century artefacts of personal consumption from the Prisoner Barracks at Port Arthur
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Thesis, HonoursAuthor/s
Dircks, CaitlinAbstract
Historical archaeology in Australia has countless artefact assemblages awaiting research and analysis. This thesis is the study of one such collection; the artefacts of personal consumption recovered during the first archaeological excavation at Port Arthur. The site was the Prisoner ...
See moreHistorical archaeology in Australia has countless artefact assemblages awaiting research and analysis. This thesis is the study of one such collection; the artefacts of personal consumption recovered during the first archaeological excavation at Port Arthur. The site was the Prisoner Barracks and was excavated in 1977 by Maureen Byrne and a team of volunteers but was never fully analysed due to Byrne's sad death the same year. The assemblage, with all artefacts excluding the faunal material, has been catalogued and analysed for this thesis. The results present an interpretation of the assemblage, considering personal consumption and the effects of hierarchy on the general ways of life of the occupants. This thesis uses archaeological and documentary evidence to build on the understanding of the site's history. It explores who the occupants were; privileged convicts in the early phases, and military regiments, constables or officers and their families in the later phases of the nineteenth century. Through the artefact analysis, everyday life is examined, revealing how consumption was a combination of occupants adapting to make do and also reaching supplies beyond the settlement's confines. The physical and institutional isolation added complexity to the acquisition and consumption of goods, while these elements of the site also changed over time. By exploring the potential of the site and collection, this thesis also establishes the assemblage for further research involving larger scale comparisons.
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See moreHistorical archaeology in Australia has countless artefact assemblages awaiting research and analysis. This thesis is the study of one such collection; the artefacts of personal consumption recovered during the first archaeological excavation at Port Arthur. The site was the Prisoner Barracks and was excavated in 1977 by Maureen Byrne and a team of volunteers but was never fully analysed due to Byrne's sad death the same year. The assemblage, with all artefacts excluding the faunal material, has been catalogued and analysed for this thesis. The results present an interpretation of the assemblage, considering personal consumption and the effects of hierarchy on the general ways of life of the occupants. This thesis uses archaeological and documentary evidence to build on the understanding of the site's history. It explores who the occupants were; privileged convicts in the early phases, and military regiments, constables or officers and their families in the later phases of the nineteenth century. Through the artefact analysis, everyday life is examined, revealing how consumption was a combination of occupants adapting to make do and also reaching supplies beyond the settlement's confines. The physical and institutional isolation added complexity to the acquisition and consumption of goods, while these elements of the site also changed over time. By exploring the potential of the site and collection, this thesis also establishes the assemblage for further research involving larger scale comparisons.
See less
Date
2013-01-01Licence
The author retains copyright of this workDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Department of ArchaeologyShare