Volume 59, Issue 5 pp. 1184-1190
Paper

Burial Patterns during Times of Armed Conflict in Cyprus in the 1960s and 1970s

Maria Mikellide M.A.

Corresponding Author

Maria Mikellide M.A.

Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus (CMP) in Cyprus, PO Box 21642, Nicosia, 1590 Cyprus

Additional Information and reprint requests:

Maria Mikellide, M.A.

Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus

UN Buffer Zone

PO Box 21642

Nicosia 1590

Cyprus

E-mails: [email protected], [email protected]

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First published: 27 June 2014
Citations: 7
Presented at the 64th Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, February 20–25, 2012, in Atlanta, GA.

Abstract

The island of Cyprus experienced two periods of intercommunal conflict during which c. 2000 individuals went missing. The Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus began a program of exhumations in 2005, through which more than 185 burial sites pertaining to the two periods of conflict have been identified and excavated. The aim of this study was twofold: (i) to present a classification of the main types of clandestine burial and (ii) to test the hypothesis that the nature of conflict influences the mode of interment. Burials can be divided into “public burials” and “concealed burials,” based on the possible motives of those involved in the interment and then subdivided into smaller categories based on similarities in archeological context. A comparison of results from the two periods of conflict reveals that there are statistical differences (< 0.005), which indicate that the mode of interment may reflect the nature, character, and atmosphere of conflict.

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