Exploring religious practices on Polynesian atolls: A comprehensive architectural approach towards the marae complex in the Tuamotu Islands.

Authors

  • Guillaume Molle The Australian National University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.125.3.263-288

Keywords:

Polynesia, Tuamotu Islands, marae, typology, indigenous rituals, religious architecture

Abstract

The archaeology of the Tuamotu Islands in central East Polynesia mainly derives from studies of ritual architecture. Since the pioneering works of Kenneth P. Emory in the 1930s, around 650 marae have been recorded in the archipelago. Surface inventories show that the basic architectural features of marae were organised in a diversity of patterns, which reflect the complex histories of local communities. To investigate the variability of these monuments, a taxonomic classification of these marae sites was developed, the first geographically extensive analysis of its kind. Relying on archaeological and ethnohistorical evidence, in addition to oral traditions, an attempt is made here to explain the development of these sites, considering endogenous socio-political processes, ritual innovations and external influences.

Author Biography

Guillaume Molle, The Australian National University

Guillaume Molle is a Lecturer in Pacific Archaeology at the Australian National University in Canberra. He completed his PhD in 2011 at the University of French Polynesia with a dissertation focussing on the prehistory of Ua Huka in the Marquesas Islands. Since 2009, he has also conducted archaeological research in Tuamotu Islands, the Gambier Archipelago and Teti‘aroa Atoll in the Society Islands, with French and American collaborators. His research interests include timing and process of human colonisation in East Polynesia and the development of ceremonial architecture.

Downloads

Published

2016-09-25