1
Smith, P., L.E Stager, J.A. Greene & G. Avishai. 2013. Age estimations attest to infant
sacrifice at the Carthage Tophet. Antiquity 87: 1191–1199.
http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/087/ant0871191.htm © Antiquity Publications Ltd.
Age estimations attest to infant sacrifice at the Carthage Tophet
Patricia Smith
1*
, Lawrence E. Stager
2
, Joseph A. Greene
2
& Gal Avishai
1
1
Laboratory of Bio-anthropology and Ancient DNA, Faculties of Medicine and Dentistry,
Hadassah-Ein Karem, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91120, Israel (Email:
pat@cc.huji.ac.il; gal.avishai@mail.huji.ac.il)
2
Semitic Museum, FAS Near Eastern Languages, 6 Divinity Avenue, Harvard University,
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA (Email: stager@fas.harvard.edu; greene5@fas.harvard.edu)
*
Author for correspondence
This paper is published in full in Antiquity 87 no. 338 December 2013. Here we publish
supplementary material.
Two articles in recent issues of Antiquity have taken opposing views of the infant burials in
the ‘Tophet’, the precinct at Carthage, sacred to the goddess Tanit, that contained funerary
urns of thousands of cremated infants. The first (Smith et al. 2011) held that these must be
evidence of the infant sacrifice that was so loudly condemned by Greek and Roman writers,
since the infants were not perinatal, although most were under two months old at the time of
death. In a rejoinder, Schwartz et al. (2012) argued that the Carthage Tophet was the place
of burial for the very young regardless of the cause of death. They estimated age at death
between prenatal and six months, consistent with the recorded incidence of perinatal
mortality in certain societies in recent periods.
Here we close the debate with two related papers. In the first of these, Patricia Smith and her
co-authors return to argue that infant sacrifice is still (in their view) the most likely
interpretation of the data, based on the age distribution of the deceased. In the second, Paolo
Xella and colleagues, too, are convinced that infant sacrifice took place. They step aside from
the details of the cremated remains, however, to emphasise a range of other social and
archaeological aspects of the Tophet in Carthage and elsewhere that are critical for
understanding these sanctuaries and their rituals.