Anthropology
Related: About this forumNeolithic women in Europe were tied up and buried alive in ritual sacrifices, study suggests
By Tom Metcalfe published 2 hours ago
The research found evidence of the "incaprettamento" method of murder at 14 Neolithic sites in Europe.
The murder of sacrificial victims by "incaprettamento" tying their neck to their legs bent behind their back, so that they effectively strangled themselves seems to have been a tradition across much of Neolithic Europe, with a new study identifying more than a dozen such murders over more than 2,000 years.
The study comes after a reassessment of an ancient tomb that was discovered more than 20 years ago at Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux near Avignon, in southern France. The tomb mimics a silo, or pit where grain was stored, and it held the remains of three women who were buried there about 5,500 years ago.
The new study, published Wednesday (April 10) in the journal Science Advances, reinterprets the positions of two of the skeletons and suggests the individuals were deliberately killed first by tying them up in the manner called "incaprettamento" and then by burying them while they were still alive, perhaps for an agricultural ritual.
Study senior author Eric Crubézy, a biological anthropologist at Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse, France, told Live Science that there was a lot of agricultural symbolism to the tomb. He noted that a wooden structure built over it was aligned with the sun at the solstices and that several broken stones for grinding grain were found nearby. "You have the alignment, you have the silo, you have the broken stones so it seems that it was a rite related to agriculture."
More:
https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/neolithic-women-in-europe-were-tied-up-and-buried-alive-in-ritual-sacrifices-study-suggests
ColinC
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