Anthropology
Related: About this forumButchered bones reveal massacre in Bronze Age Britain
December 16, 2024
Imma Perfetto
Cosmos science journalist
The remains of at least 37 people unearthed from the Early Bronze Age site of Charterhouse Warren in England have revealed the darker side of human prehistory. Recent analysis suggests the individuals were killed, butchered, and probably partly eaten before being thrown down a 15m-deep shaft.
This is the largest-scale example of interpersonal violence from British prehistory, and which archaeologists have concluded was likely carried out to dehumanise the victims. The more than 3,000 human bones and bone fragments were radiocarbon dated to between 2,210 and 2,010 years before 1950, when direct evidence of violent conflicts such as this are rare.
We actually find more evidence for injuries to skeletons dating to the Neolithic period in Britain than the Early Bronze Age, so Charterhouse Warren stands out as something very unusual, says Rick Schulting from the University of Oxford, UK, who led the research. It paints a considerably darker picture of the period than many would have expected.
The remains were initially unearthed in the 1970s. They represent a mix of men, women, and children, suggesting the group may represent a community.
Recent analysis revealed the skulls display evidence of violent deaths from blunt force trauma. Numerous cutmarks and perimortem fractures (made around the time of death) were also found on the bones, suggesting that they were intentionally dismembered, defleshed, and may have been partly consumed.
More:
https://cosmosmagazine.com/history/archaeology/massacre-bronze-age-britain/
bucolic_frolic
(47,436 posts)Maybe they were eating the dogs
mahatmakanejeeves
(61,437 posts)Hat tip, cickbaity Vice
By Luis Prada
December 17, 2024, 2:14pm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2024
Rick J. Schulting, Teresa Fernández-Crespo, Javier Ordoño, Fiona Brock, Ashleigh Kellow, Christophe Snoeck, Ian R. Cartwright,
David Walker, Louise Loe, and Tony Audsley
Abstract
Direct physical evidence for violent interpersonal conflict is seen only sporadically in the archaeological record for prehistoric Britain. Human remains from Charterhouse Warren, south-west England, therefore present a unique opportunity for the study of mass violence in the Early Bronze Age. At least 37 men, women and children were killed and butchered, their disarticulated remains thrown into a 15m-deep natural shaft in what is, most plausibly, interpreted as a single event. The authors examine the physical remains and debate the societal tensions that could motivate a level and scale of violence that is unprecedented in British prehistory.
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