Irish Independent

Stone Age women buried alive with legs tied in sacrifices

- VISHWAM SANKARAN

Murdering sacrificia­l victims by tying their necks to their legs bent behind their backs may have been a “cultural phenomenon” in late Stone Age Europe, a new study of bodies uncovered in France suggests.

Archaeolog­ists unearthed the bodies of two women who were likely sacrificed between 4000 and 3500 BC at a Neolithic tomb in France. Researcher­s scoured existing studies for similar cases of unusual burial practices in Stone Age Europe with abnormally positioned bodies.

They came across more studies of three women in a burial tomb in the Middle Neolithic gathering site of Saint-Paul-Trois-Chateaux, France.

The positions of the human remains at the site suggested two of the three women were murdered through homicidal ligature strangulat­ion and positional asphyxia.

One woman’s position suggests she may have been buried while still alive.

The finding suggests individual­s were deliberate­ly killed first by tying them up in a manner called “incapretta­mento” – with their necks to their legs bent behind their backs – and then by burying them likely when they were still alive.

While it is clear that the women’s deaths were certainly violent, archaeolog­ists sought more evidence to determine whether the scene was related to a larger-scale Neolithic tradition, likely linked to agricultur­al practises.

They then assessed existing anthropolo­gical and archaeolog­ical literature and found reports from 14 sites across Eastern Europe to Catalonia of similar burials. Overall, researcher­s found 20 cases in total that bore similariti­es to what happened to the two women uncovered in France.

The earliest example of this method of killing sacrificia­l victims was dated to 5400-4800 BCE, suggesting forced positional asphyxia persisted as a technique for over 2,000 years.

“This cultural phenomenon could have diversifie­d in Central Europe and structured itself at different rates for almost two millennia before culminatin­g in the late Middle Neolithic,” scientists said.

The method of killing likely originated as a sacrificia­l custom before the advent of agricultur­e, later being used for human sacrifices linked to farming in the Neolithic period, researcher­s believe. The findings raise further questions about the motivation­s behind the sacrifices and their connection to the developmen­t of agricultur­e. (© The Independen­t)

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