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Herxheim (archaeological site)

The archaeological site of Herxheim, located in the municipality of Herxheim in southwest Germany, was a ritual center and a mass grave formed by people of the Linear Pottery culture (LBK) culture in Neolithic Europe. The site is often compared to that of the Talheim Death Pit and Schletz-Asparn, but is quite different in nature. The site dates from between 5300 and 4950 BC.[1] The site contained the scattered remains of more than 1000 individuals from different, in some cases faraway regions. Whether they were war captives or human sacrifices is unclear, but the evidence indicates that they were roasted and consumed.[2]

Skull found in the archaeological site of Herxheim, exhibited in the museum of Heidelberg University

Discovery edit

Herxheim was discovered in 1996 on the site of a construction project when locals reported finds of bones, including human skulls. The excavation was considered a salvage or rescue dig, as parts of the site were destroyed by the construction.[1][3][4]

Culture edit

The people at Herxheim were part of the LBK culture. Styles of LBK pottery, some of a high quality, were discovered at the site from local populations as well as from distant lands from the north and east, even as far as 500 kilometres (310 mi) away. Local flint as well as flints from distant sources were also found.[3]

Settlement edit

The structures at Herxheim suggested that of a large village spanning up to 6 hectares (15 acres) surrounded by a sequence of ovoid pits dug over a duration of several centuries. These pits eventually cut into one another, forming a triple, semi-circular enclosure ditch split into three sections. The way the pits were dug over such a length of time, in addition to their use, suggests a pre-determined layout.[1] The structures within the enclosure eroded over time, and "yielded only a small number of settlement pits and a few graves".[1] These pits were either trapezoidal or triangular in nature.[4]

Mass grave edit

The enclosure ditches around the settlement comprise at least 80 ovoid pits containing the remains of humans and animals, and material goods such as pottery (some rare and high-quality), bone and stone tools, and "rare decorative artifacts".[1] The remains of dogs, often found intact, were also recovered.[1][3]

The human remains were primarily shattered and dispersed within the pits, rarely intact or in anatomical position. Using a quantification process known as "minimum number of individuals" (MNI), researchers concluded that the site contained at least 500 individual humans ranging from newborns to the elderly.[1] However, "since the area excavated corresponds to barely half the enclosure, we can assume that in fact more than 1000 individuals were involved".[1] The deposition of the human remains occurred only within the final 50 years of occupation at the site.[1]

Mortuary practices edit

A 2006[3] study revealed the intentional breakage and cutting of various human elements, particularly skulls. Bones were broken with stone tools in a peri-mortem state (around the time of death), as is evident by the fragmentation patterns on the bones, which differ between fresh and dry (old) conditions.[5]

A 2009[1] study confirmed many findings from the 2006 study, but added new information. In just one pit deposit, this study found 1906 bones and bone fragments from at least 10 individuals ranging from newborns to adults. At least 359 individual skeletal elements were identified. This in-depth study revealed many more cut, impact, and bite marks made upon the skulls and post-cranial skeletal elements.[1] It was apparent that parts of the human bodies were singled out for their marrow content, suggesting cannibalization (see below).

Due to the fractures present on the bones being peri-mortem, the blows to the bones could have been made immediately prior (including as cause of) or soon after death. However, because of their precision placement, it seems more likely that most cuts and blows were made soon after the person's death, indicating a process of defleshing and dismemberment rather than the person being killed.[1]

Skull cult practices edit

Of particular note from both studies[1][3] was the peculiar treatment of the humans' skulls. Many skulls were treated in a similar manner: skulls were struck on "the sagittal line, splitting faces, mandibles, and skull caps into symmetrical halves".[3] A few skulls were clearly skinned prior to being struck, again, all in the same manner: "horizontal cuts above the orbits, vertical cuts along the sagittal suture, and oblique cuts in the parietals".[3]

The vault of the skull was preserved and shaped into what is referred to as a calotte (calvarium). During this process the brain, which is a source of dietary fat, may have been extracted. Additionally, a later study revealed that the tongues of humans were removed.[1]

Ritual cannibalism edit

Whether for religious purpose or war, it is apparent from the 2009 study that the humans at the site of Herxheim were butchered and eaten.[1] Not only were cut marks found on locations of the skeleton that are made during the dismemberment and filleting process, bones were also crushed for the purposes of marrow extraction, and chewed. Besides the fresh-bone fractures present on many bones, "[processing] for marrow is also documented by the presence of scrape marks in the marrow cavity on two fragments."[1]

Skeletal representation analysis revealed that many of the "spongy bone" elements - such as the spinal column, patella, ilium, and sternum - were underrepresented compared to what would be expected in a mass grave. "All these observations are similar to those observed in animal butchery."[1] Additionally, preferential chewing of the metapodials and hand phalanges "speak strongly in favour of human choice rather than more or less random action by carnivores".[1]

The number of people concerned at Herxheim obviously suggests that cannibalism for the simple purpose of survival is highly improbable, all the more so as the characteristics of the deposits show a standard, repetitive, and strongly ritualised practice.[1]

A detailed study published by the excavators in 2015 estimates that the site contains the scattered remains of more than 1000 individuals, all of whom were butchered and eaten.[6] More than a third of the dead were juveniles, ranging from newborns to teenagers. Both men and women were among the victims, but in most cases sex determination was not possible.[7] The age distribution of the corpses is typical of communities living in preindustrial times, but deviates from the typical age-of-death distribution in such societies; therefore the excavators consider it likely that the victims were deliberately killed rather than dying a natural death.[8]

The evidence indicates that the bodies were cooked, probably by spit-roasting them whole (including the heads) over open fires. Both flesh and bone marrow were eaten, and the skulls were processed into cups.[9] An analysis of the bones shows that the victims had lived in a variety of geographical regions – some might have lived near Herxheim, others in other regions populated by the Linear Pottery culture, and a third group had lived in mountainous areas not inhabited by members of that culture.[10] The treatment of the skull cups (which were used as drinking vessels while feasting on their former owners and then discarded) suggests that the dead were regarded as enemies or outsiders rather than estimated relatives or community members (in the latter case, skull cups were sometimes made as well, but kept as honoured relics).[11]

Two alternative explanations have been suggested for how people from quite different regions ended up in Herxheim, where their lives were violently ended and their bodies consumed. One is that warriors from the region around Herxheim raided other territories and brought captives back for consumption, which would mean that the site was an important centre of a successful warrior culture. The other explanation is that the site was a major religious centre where human sacrifices (followed by cannibalism) took place and which was visited by people coming from various, sometimes faraway areas, some of whom were killed there. In this case, too, the excavators suspect that the sacrificed were brought as captives or slaves to the site, considering it unlikely (though not completely impossible) that people would have voluntarily travelled towards a faraway region to be sacrificed and eaten there.[12]

Earlier alternative hypotheses: secondary burial and necropolis edit

The original conclusion from the earlier 2006 study was that the site of Herxheim was a ritual mortuary center – a necropolis – for the LBK people of the area, where the remains of the dead were not just buried, but for reasons unknown, destroyed. They considered the large number of corpses as well as the transportation of pottery and flint from distant areas to the site further arguments for this conjecture.[3]

The projection of the number of individuals present ... to a probable total of 1,300 to 1,500 rules out the possibility of a local graveyard — and points a regional centre at Herxheim to which human remains were transported for the purpose of reburial.... To organise the transport not only of stone tools and pottery but also of human bones and partial or maybe even complete corpses implies an efficient organisational and communication system.[3]

The authors of this study suggested that Herxheim was a site for a type of burial known as secondary burial, which consists of the removal of the corpse or partial corpse and subsequent placement elsewhere. They concluded this from the lack of complete, articulated skeletons in the majority of the burials. Another discussed possibility was that of sky burial, in which the corpse is exposed to the elements and many bones are carried off by scavengers.[1][3]

The later 2009 study rejected these possibilities in favour of the cannibalism hypothesis. This resulted in a controversy about which explanation was more plausible, with other archaeologists maintaining that the evidence better fits a scenario in which the dead were reburied following dismemberment and removal of flesh from bones. "Evidence of ceremonial reburial practices has been reported for many ancient societies."[13]

However, in their later more detailed study the excavators point out that that the human remains were put into the ditches quite shortly after their death (probably no more than a few days), when various body parts were still kept together by soft tissue. This rules out secondary burials and sky burials, since in either case more time would have passed before the deceased would have found their final resting place at Herxheim. It also indicates that the buried died (likely by being killed) at or near Herxheim rather than in the regions where they had lived (which were in some cases far away).[14] Moreover, the specific treatment of the bodies, such as the splitting of bones to extract the marrow, is typical for cannibalism and does not fit the observed patterns of secondary burials, and various other traces show that the corpses were processed in the same way as animals that are butchered, roasted and eaten. Therefore they consider cannibalism the only plausible explanation.[15]

See also edit

  • Fontbrégoua Cave, another noted Neolithic site with evidence of potential cannibalism

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Boulestin, B.; et al. (2009). "Mass cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture at Herxheim (Palatinate, Germany)". Antiquity. 83 (322): 968–982.
  2. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, pp. 101, 115, 123, 126.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Orschiedt, J.; Haidle, M. N. (2006). (PDF). Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 2 (1): 153–167. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-27.
  4. ^ a b Projekt Herxheim (German language).
  5. ^ Johnson, E. (1985). "Current developments in bone technology". Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 8: 157–235. JSTOR 20170189.
  6. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, pp. 101, 115.
  7. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, pp. 102–106.
  8. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, pp. 109–114.
  9. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, p. 115.
  10. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, p. 123.
  11. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, pp. 123–124.
  12. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, p. 126.
  13. ^ Bower, Bruce (4 December 2009). "Controversial Signs of Mass Cannibalism". Wired. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  14. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, p. 26.
  15. ^ Boulestin & Coupey 2015, pp. 40–46, 63, 69–70.

Further reading edit

  • Boulestin, Bruno; Coupey, Anne-Sophie (2015). Cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture: The Human Remains from Herxheim. Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Projekt Herxheim: Ongoing list of related publications in German, English, and French.

herxheim, archaeological, site, this, article, about, archaeological, site, germany, other, uses, herxheim, disambiguation, archaeological, site, herxheim, located, municipality, herxheim, southwest, germany, ritual, center, mass, grave, formed, people, linear. This article is about the archaeological site in Germany For other uses see Herxheim disambiguation The archaeological site of Herxheim located in the municipality of Herxheim in southwest Germany was a ritual center and a mass grave formed by people of the Linear Pottery culture LBK culture in Neolithic Europe The site is often compared to that of the Talheim Death Pit and Schletz Asparn but is quite different in nature The site dates from between 5300 and 4950 BC 1 The site contained the scattered remains of more than 1000 individuals from different in some cases faraway regions Whether they were war captives or human sacrifices is unclear but the evidence indicates that they were roasted and consumed 2 Skull found in the archaeological site of Herxheim exhibited in the museum of Heidelberg University Contents 1 Discovery 2 Culture 3 Settlement 4 Mass grave 5 Mortuary practices 6 Skull cult practices 7 Ritual cannibalism 8 Earlier alternative hypotheses secondary burial and necropolis 9 See also 10 References 11 Further readingDiscovery editHerxheim was discovered in 1996 on the site of a construction project when locals reported finds of bones including human skulls The excavation was considered a salvage or rescue dig as parts of the site were destroyed by the construction 1 3 4 Culture editMain article Linear Pottery culture The people at Herxheim were part of the LBK culture Styles of LBK pottery some of a high quality were discovered at the site from local populations as well as from distant lands from the north and east even as far as 500 kilometres 310 mi away Local flint as well as flints from distant sources were also found 3 Settlement editThe structures at Herxheim suggested that of a large village spanning up to 6 hectares 15 acres surrounded by a sequence of ovoid pits dug over a duration of several centuries These pits eventually cut into one another forming a triple semi circular enclosure ditch split into three sections The way the pits were dug over such a length of time in addition to their use suggests a pre determined layout 1 The structures within the enclosure eroded over time and yielded only a small number of settlement pits and a few graves 1 These pits were either trapezoidal or triangular in nature 4 Mass grave editThe enclosure ditches around the settlement comprise at least 80 ovoid pits containing the remains of humans and animals and material goods such as pottery some rare and high quality bone and stone tools and rare decorative artifacts 1 The remains of dogs often found intact were also recovered 1 3 The human remains were primarily shattered and dispersed within the pits rarely intact or in anatomical position Using a quantification process known as minimum number of individuals MNI researchers concluded that the site contained at least 500 individual humans ranging from newborns to the elderly 1 However since the area excavated corresponds to barely half the enclosure we can assume that in fact more than 1000 individuals were involved 1 The deposition of the human remains occurred only within the final 50 years of occupation at the site 1 Mortuary practices editA 2006 3 study revealed the intentional breakage and cutting of various human elements particularly skulls Bones were broken with stone tools in a peri mortem state around the time of death as is evident by the fragmentation patterns on the bones which differ between fresh and dry old conditions 5 A 2009 1 study confirmed many findings from the 2006 study but added new information In just one pit deposit this study found 1906 bones and bone fragments from at least 10 individuals ranging from newborns to adults At least 359 individual skeletal elements were identified This in depth study revealed many more cut impact and bite marks made upon the skulls and post cranial skeletal elements 1 It was apparent that parts of the human bodies were singled out for their marrow content suggesting cannibalization see below Due to the fractures present on the bones being peri mortem the blows to the bones could have been made immediately prior including as cause of or soon after death However because of their precision placement it seems more likely that most cuts and blows were made soon after the person s death indicating a process of defleshing and dismemberment rather than the person being killed 1 Skull cult practices editOf particular note from both studies 1 3 was the peculiar treatment of the humans skulls Many skulls were treated in a similar manner skulls were struck on the sagittal line splitting faces mandibles and skull caps into symmetrical halves 3 A few skulls were clearly skinned prior to being struck again all in the same manner horizontal cuts above the orbits vertical cuts along the sagittal suture and oblique cuts in the parietals 3 The vault of the skull was preserved and shaped into what is referred to as a calotte calvarium During this process the brain which is a source of dietary fat may have been extracted Additionally a later study revealed that the tongues of humans were removed 1 Ritual cannibalism editWhether for religious purpose or war it is apparent from the 2009 study that the humans at the site of Herxheim were butchered and eaten 1 Not only were cut marks found on locations of the skeleton that are made during the dismemberment and filleting process bones were also crushed for the purposes of marrow extraction and chewed Besides the fresh bone fractures present on many bones processing for marrow is also documented by the presence of scrape marks in the marrow cavity on two fragments 1 Skeletal representation analysis revealed that many of the spongy bone elements such as the spinal column patella ilium and sternum were underrepresented compared to what would be expected in a mass grave All these observations are similar to those observed in animal butchery 1 Additionally preferential chewing of the metapodials and hand phalanges speak strongly in favour of human choice rather than more or less random action by carnivores 1 The number of people concerned at Herxheim obviously suggests that cannibalism for the simple purpose of survival is highly improbable all the more so as the characteristics of the deposits show a standard repetitive and strongly ritualised practice 1 A detailed study published by the excavators in 2015 estimates that the site contains the scattered remains of more than 1000 individuals all of whom were butchered and eaten 6 More than a third of the dead were juveniles ranging from newborns to teenagers Both men and women were among the victims but in most cases sex determination was not possible 7 The age distribution of the corpses is typical of communities living in preindustrial times but deviates from the typical age of death distribution in such societies therefore the excavators consider it likely that the victims were deliberately killed rather than dying a natural death 8 The evidence indicates that the bodies were cooked probably by spit roasting them whole including the heads over open fires Both flesh and bone marrow were eaten and the skulls were processed into cups 9 An analysis of the bones shows that the victims had lived in a variety of geographical regions some might have lived near Herxheim others in other regions populated by the Linear Pottery culture and a third group had lived in mountainous areas not inhabited by members of that culture 10 The treatment of the skull cups which were used as drinking vessels while feasting on their former owners and then discarded suggests that the dead were regarded as enemies or outsiders rather than estimated relatives or community members in the latter case skull cups were sometimes made as well but kept as honoured relics 11 Two alternative explanations have been suggested for how people from quite different regions ended up in Herxheim where their lives were violently ended and their bodies consumed One is that warriors from the region around Herxheim raided other territories and brought captives back for consumption which would mean that the site was an important centre of a successful warrior culture The other explanation is that the site was a major religious centre where human sacrifices followed by cannibalism took place and which was visited by people coming from various sometimes faraway areas some of whom were killed there In this case too the excavators suspect that the sacrificed were brought as captives or slaves to the site considering it unlikely though not completely impossible that people would have voluntarily travelled towards a faraway region to be sacrificed and eaten there 12 Earlier alternative hypotheses secondary burial and necropolis editThe original conclusion from the earlier 2006 study was that the site of Herxheim was a ritual mortuary center a necropolis for the LBK people of the area where the remains of the dead were not just buried but for reasons unknown destroyed They considered the large number of corpses as well as the transportation of pottery and flint from distant areas to the site further arguments for this conjecture 3 The projection of the number of individuals present to a probable total of 1 300 to 1 500 rules out the possibility of a local graveyard and points a regional centre at Herxheim to which human remains were transported for the purpose of reburial To organise the transport not only of stone tools and pottery but also of human bones and partial or maybe even complete corpses implies an efficient organisational and communication system 3 The authors of this study suggested that Herxheim was a site for a type of burial known as secondary burial which consists of the removal of the corpse or partial corpse and subsequent placement elsewhere They concluded this from the lack of complete articulated skeletons in the majority of the burials Another discussed possibility was that of sky burial in which the corpse is exposed to the elements and many bones are carried off by scavengers 1 3 The later 2009 study rejected these possibilities in favour of the cannibalism hypothesis This resulted in a controversy about which explanation was more plausible with other archaeologists maintaining that the evidence better fits a scenario in which the dead were reburied following dismemberment and removal of flesh from bones Evidence of ceremonial reburial practices has been reported for many ancient societies 13 However in their later more detailed study the excavators point out that that the human remains were put into the ditches quite shortly after their death probably no more than a few days when various body parts were still kept together by soft tissue This rules out secondary burials and sky burials since in either case more time would have passed before the deceased would have found their final resting place at Herxheim It also indicates that the buried died likely by being killed at or near Herxheim rather than in the regions where they had lived which were in some cases far away 14 Moreover the specific treatment of the bodies such as the splitting of bones to extract the marrow is typical for cannibalism and does not fit the observed patterns of secondary burials and various other traces show that the corpses were processed in the same way as animals that are butchered roasted and eaten Therefore they consider cannibalism the only plausible explanation 15 See also editFontbregoua Cave another noted Neolithic site with evidence of potential cannibalismReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Boulestin B et al 2009 Mass cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture at Herxheim Palatinate Germany Antiquity 83 322 968 982 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 pp 101 115 123 126 a b c d e f g h i j Orschiedt J Haidle M N 2006 The LBK Enclosure at Herxheim Theatre of War or Ritual Centre References from Osteoarchaeological Investigations PDF Journal of Conflict Archaeology 2 1 153 167 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 27 a b Projekt Herxheim German language Johnson E 1985 Current developments in bone technology Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory 8 157 235 JSTOR 20170189 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 pp 101 115 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 pp 102 106 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 pp 109 114 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 p 115 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 p 123 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 pp 123 124 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 p 126 Bower Bruce 4 December 2009 Controversial Signs of Mass Cannibalism Wired Retrieved 18 July 2017 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 p 26 Boulestin amp Coupey 2015 pp 40 46 63 69 70 Further reading editBoulestin Bruno Coupey Anne Sophie 2015 Cannibalism in the Linear Pottery Culture The Human Remains from Herxheim Oxford Archaeopress Projekt Herxheim Ongoing list of related publications in German English and French Settlement Site Hints at Mass Cannibalism Discovery News Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herxheim archaeological site amp oldid 1173308659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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