Violent aftermath for warriors at Alken Enge

Date:

Share post:

Four pelvic bones on a stick and bundles of desecrated bones testify to the ritual violence perpetrated on the corpses of the many warriors who fell in a major battle close to the Danish town of Skanderborg around 2,000 years ago.

Violent aftermath for warriors at Alken Enge
Four pelvic bones on a stick [Credit: Peter Jensen, Aarhus University]

Denmark attracted international attention in 2012 when archaeological excavations revealed the bones of an entire army, whose warriors had been thrown into the bogs near the Alken Enge wetlands in East Jutland after losing a major engagement around 2,000 years ago. Work has continued in the area since then and archaeologists and experts from Aarhus University, Skanderborg Museum and Moesgaard Museum have now made sensational new findings.

“We have found a wooden stick bearing the pelvic bones of four different men. In addition, we have unearthed bundles of bones, bones bearing marks of cutting and scraping, and crushed skulls. Our studies reveal that a violent sequel took place after the fallen warriors had lain on the battlefield for around six months,” relates Project Manager Mads Kähler Holst from Aarhus University.

Religious act

The remains of the fallen were gathered together and all the flesh was cleaned from the bones, which were then sorted and brutally desecrated before being cast into the lake. The warriors’ bones are mixed with the remains of slaughtered animals and clay pots that probably contained food sacrifices.

“We are fairly sure that this was a religious act. It seems that this was a holy site for a pagan religion — a sacred grove — where the victorious conclusion of major battles was marked by the ritual presentation and destruction of the bones of the vanquished warriors,” adds Mads Kähler Holst.

Violent aftermath for warriors at Alken Enge
Archaeology students from Aarhus University Ulla Ragna Berg 
Rasmussen og Anders Bonde Mørk in the excavation at the Alken Enge 
[Credit: Anders Trærup/AU Foto]

Remains of corpses thrown in the lake

Geological studies have revealed that back in the Iron Age, the finds were thrown into the water from the end of a tongue of land that stretched out into Mossø lake, which was much larger back then than it is today.

“Most of the bones we find here are spread out over the lake bed seemingly at random, but the new finds have suddenly given us a clear impression of what actually happened. This applies in particular to the four pelvic bones. They must have been threaded onto the stick after the flesh was cleaned from the skeletons,” explains Field Director Ejvind Hertz from Skanderborg Museum.

Internal Germanic conflict

The battles near Alken Enge were waged during that part of the Iron Age when major changes were taking place in Northern Europe because the Roman Empire was expanding northwards, putting pressure on the Germanic tribes. This resulted in wars between the Romans and the Germanic tribes, and between the Germanic peoples themselves.

Archaeologists assume that the recent finds at the Alken dig stem from an internal conflict of this kind. Records kept by the Romans describe the macabre rituals practised by the Germanic peoples on the bodies of their vanquished enemies, but this is the first time that traces of an ancient holy site have been unearthed.

Source: Aarhus University [July 28, 2014]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

Roman-era clay tablet with verses from Homer’s Odyssey unearthed in Ancient Olympia

Archaeologists have unearthed an ancient tablet engraved with 13 verses of the Odyssey in the ancient city of...

Study raises question: Why are fossilized hairs so rare?

When most people hear the word fossil, they probably think of gigantic leg bones or sharp teeth. But,...

Face of ‘ordinary poor’ man from medieval Cambridge graveyard revealed

New facial reconstruction of a man buried in a medieval hospital graveyard discovered underneath a Cambridge college sheds...

Medieval cemetery and evidence of Iron Age settlement unearthed in German town of Geseke

After archaeological investigations that were necessary in the course of the planned redesign of the market square in...

Jain basadi at Talakad to be excavated

The ancient site of Talakad continues to beckon archaeologists and explorers hoping to uncover the world buried in...

Nitrogen Revolution: Study breathes new life into 2.3 billion year old ‘Great Oxidation Event’

Research – led by the University of St Andrews and published yesterday in the journal Nature – provides...

First archaeological finds revealed from Chester Northgate site

Archaeologists working on the Northgate site alongside the Council’s contractors, have discovered several Roman artefacts which include what...

‘Smoothed’ light will help search for Earth’s twins

Physicists of MIPT (Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology) and the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy...