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Skulls show migration of medieval women

- By Frank Jordans Associated Press

BERLIN — The newcomers who arrived in the little farming villages of medieval Germany would have stood out: They had dark hair and tawny skin, spoke a strange language and had remarkably tall heads.

Now scientists who investigat­ed the unusually shaped skulls say they provide evidence that women, not just men, migrated long distances across medieval Europe.

A genetic analysis showed the women traveled from what is now Romania, Bulgaria and northern Greece at a time when the continent was being reshaped by the collapse of the Roman Empire.

In a study published by the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, researcher­s say the women’s elongated heads — a result of binding done after birth — suggest they might have been high-class individual­s.

“These women looked extremely different to the local women, very exotic if you will,” said one of the researcher­s, Joachim Burger, a population geneticist at the University of Mainz, Germany.

With colleagues from Europe and the United States, Burger compared the genetic profile of almost 40 human remains unearthed from 5th and 6th century burial sites in Bavaria, along the Isar and Danube rivers.

They expected to find the telltale signs of centuries of Roman presence in the area — soldiers from the Mediterran­ean leaving their genetic mark on the local population. Instead, it looked “very central or northern European — blond and fair-skinned, like modern-day Scandinavi­ans,” Burger said.

The exception was a group with deformed skulls. Known from various cultures across the world, artificial­ly elongated skulls may have been considered a form of beauty or denoted high status, said Burger.

While the practice is often associated with the Huns who swept into Europe from the East during the 5th century, the genetic makeup of the women found in Bavaria showed little Asian ancestry, suggesting that either head binding had been adopted by people living in Southeaste­rn Europe or emerged there independen­tly.

“This is a sound study with quite interestin­g results,” said Jean-Jacques Hublin of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany. He had no role in the research.

“Usually large-distance movements involve more males — explorers, soldiers, political elite, etc. — and short range movements are more common for females (spouses moving to their husband’s family),” Hublin said via email.

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 ??  ?? Skulls unearthed from early medieval sites show deformed, left, and non-deformed examples.
Skulls unearthed from early medieval sites show deformed, left, and non-deformed examples.

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