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The archaeology of early medieval violence: the mass grave at Budeč, Czech Republic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2016

Ivo Štefan*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague, Celetná 20, 116 36 Praha, Czech Republic (Email: stefanivos@seznam.cz)
Petra Stránská
Affiliation:
Institute of Archaeology of Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Letenská 4, 118 01 Praha, Czech Republic
Hana Vondrová
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague, Celetná 20, 116 36 Praha, Czech Republic (Email: stefanivos@seznam.cz)
*
*Author for correspondence
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Abstract

Widespread violence and military conflicts dominate many historical accounts of the Early Middle Ages in Europe, but archaeological evidence to corroborate such a picture has hitherto been scarce. Analysis of human remains from the Bohemian stronghold of Budeč offers a unique insight into one such event: a wave of violence that probably followed the removal of Duke Wenceslas from power by his brother Boleslav I in AD 935. A mass grave near the hillfort holds mainly male burials that show numerous injuries sustained from sword blows, testifying to the human cost of this disturbance and demonstrating the structure and reality of early medieval violence.

Information

Type
Research
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2016 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Aerial view of the fortified settlement at Budeč; the arrow marks the position of the mass grave; the church of St Peter and St Paul at the acropolis of the stronghold is in the middle (photograph by M. Gojda).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Plan of the Budeč stronghold; the continuous line marks the proven early medieval fortification, the broken line the unproven. 1) The mass grave and burial ground in the locality Na Týnici; 2) Sts. Peter and Paul church in the NW corner of the ‘ducal court’ (grey) situated on the edge of the acropolis; 3) Virgin Mary church in the centre of the acropolis; 4) a cut through the earthwork between the acropolis and the first bailey with traces of fire; 5) Zákolany burial ground.

Figure 2

Figure 3. The mass grave during excavation: A) view from the south-east; B) detail of the deposit of bones; C) preserved part of the skeleton (photograph by Ivan Krutina).

Figure 3

Figure 4. The ground plan and the profile of the mass grave deposited in a vanished sunken-floored building; the arrow marks the female skull with eight S-shaped temple rings. Layers in the profile: 2 & 3: mass grave; 4–11: backfill of the sunken-floored building; 12 & 13: undersoil.

Figure 4

Table 1. Age structure of the dead buried in the mass grave based on skulls and skull fragments. The number of skull fragments may not correspond to the number of individuals.

Figure 5

Figure 5. The examples of injuries identified on bones: A) healed sharp-force injury, tangential right parietal and occipital bone; B) sharp-force injury on right processus mastoideus of temporal bone and condylus occipitalis of occipital bone, interpreted as evidence of decapitation; C) sharp-force trauma, led frontally through both parietal bones; D) cut-off on atlas, possible decapitation; E) cuts on mandible, indicating a possible decapitation; F) sharp-force injury and crack on distal head of tibia.

Figure 6

Figure 6. The distribution of the slash wounds on the post-cranial skeleton and skull suffered perimortem (unhealed injuries); the left and right sides are not distinguished for paired cranial bones; the numbers refer to the frequency of each injury, as documented in Table 2.

Figure 7

Table 2. Slash wounds, depressed fractures and linear fractures suffered perimortem (unhealed) and (*) antemortem (healed); cranial skeleton injuries are shown in light grey and post-cranial skeleton injuries in dark grey.

Figure 8

Figure 7. The burial ground around the mass grave: A) newborn baby (or foetus); B) infants I–III, or possibly younger juveniles; C) adult women; D) adult men; E) adult, sex undetermined.

Figure 9

Table 3. AMS radiocarbon dates of three left femora undertaken by Poznań radiocarbon laboratory, calibrated with Oxcal 4.2.

Figure 10

Figure 8. The slaughter of priests attended by their wives in Psalm 78:64, as imagined by the illustrator of the Stuttgart Psalter (Saint-Germain-des-Prés, AD 820–830); © Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart.