The Herald

Skeleton discovered during HS2 work is suspected Iron Age murder victim

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A SKELETON believed to be a murder victim from the Iron Age has been discovered by archaeolog­ists working on the HS2 rail project in Buckingham­shire.

HS2 said the find was unearthed during the excavation work at Wellwick Farm, near Wendover, when the archaeolog­ists found the skeleton of an adult male buried face down in a ditch with hands bound together under his pelvis.

The unusual burial position suggests the Iron Age man may have been a victim of a murder or execution, it added.

Osteologis­ts are currently examining the skeleton for further evidence of foul play, HS2 said.

Other discoverie­s at the site span more than 4,000 years of human history, including a circular timber monument resembling the layout of Stonehenge.

Project Archaeolog­ist Dr Rachel Wood said: “We already knew Buckingham­shire is rich in archaeolog­y but discoverin­g a site showing human activity spanning 4,000 years came as a bit of a surprise to us.

“The death of the Wellwick Farm man remains a mystery to us but there aren’t many ways you end up in a bottom of a ditch, face down, with your hands bound.

“We hope our osteologis­ts will be able to shed more light on this potentiall­y gruesome death.

“The large wooden ceremonial structure, the Roman lead coffin and the mystery of the skeleton at Wellwick Farm helps bring alive the fact that people lived, worked and died in this area long before we came along.”

The archaeolog­ical works have revealed evidence of human activity dating from the Neolithic to the Medieval period, a time spanning around 4,000 years, HS2 said.

A large circular monument of wooden posts 65 metres in diameter with features aligned with the winter solstice, similar to Stonehenge in Wiltshire, was also uncovered, as well as a skeleton in a coffin lined in lead, it added.

HS2 said the buried individual must have been someone of high status to have the means to pay for such an expensive method of burial.

Lead archaeolog­ist Mike Court said the discoverie­s will be shared with communitie­s and the public through virtual lectures, open days and in an upcoming documentar­y.

He added: “Before we build the low-carbon high-speed railway between London and Birmingham, we are uncovering a wealth of archaeolog­y that will enrich our cultural heritage.

“The sheer scale of possible discoverie­s, the geographic­al span and the vast range of our history to be unearthed makes HS2’S archaeolog­y programme a unique opportunit­y to tell the story of Buckingham­shire and Britain.”

The announceme­nt of the discovery comes at the start of the Festival of British Archaeolog­y, an annual event taking place over nine days from today to July 19, where HS2 will be hosting digital events showcasing recent archaeolog­ical discoverie­s.

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