BBC, 18 April 2011 Last updated at 03:10 GMT Archaeologists
have found evidence of a massacre linked to Iron Age warfare at a hill fort in
Derbyshire. A burial
site contained only women and children - the first segregated burial of this
kind from Iron Age Nine
skeletons were discovered in a section of ditch around the fort at Fin Cop in
the Peak District. Scientists
believe "perhaps hundreds more skeletons" could be buried in the
ditch, only a small part of which has been excavated so far. Construction
of the hill fort has been dated to some time between 440BC and 390BC, but it
was destroyed before completion. The
fort's stone wall was broken apart and the rubble used to fill the 400m
perimeter ditch, where the skeletons were found. A second,
outer wall and ditch had been started but not finished. Iron Age warfare The
findings provide a rare insight into warfare in pre-Roman "There
has been an almost accepted assumption amongst many archaeologists that hill forts
functioned as displays of power, prestige and status and that warfare in the
British Iron Age is largely invisible," he said. "For
the people buried at Fin Cop, the hurriedly constructed fort was evidently
intended as a defensive work in response to a very real threat." The
skeletons are of women, babies, a toddler and a single teenage male. The
archaeological team believe they were probably massacred after the fort was
attacked and captured. All were
found in a 10m long section of ditch, the only part to be excavated so far. The
ditch was 5m wide with 2m deep vertical edges and would have guarded a 4m high
perimeter wall. Animal
bones, also found in the ditch, suggest the fort's inhabitants kept cattle,
sheep and pigs. There were also remains from horses which indicate some of the
fort's inhabitants were of high status. The human
and animal remains at Fin Cop are relatively well preserved, at least partly
due to the limestone geology - the alkaline chemistry slows down decay of
organic material including bone. This may
also help explain why similar evidence of Iron Age warfare has not been found
at other sites; many hill forts are built on gritstone or sandstone whose
acidic soil accelerate the decay of organic matter. You can watch
video of Dr Waddington discussing the find, filmed by TV company. *** ******* This message contains information which may be confidential and privileged. Unless you are the addressee (or authorized to receive for the addressee), you may not use, copy or disclose to anyone the message or any information contained in the message. If you have received the message in error, please advise the sender by reply e-mail and delete the message. |
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