Thursday, August 23, 2012

Bog Army at Alken Enge





I am curious as to how we come to the conclusion that these soldiers were ever sacrificed. I certainly see the losers of a tribal conflict been throttled and tossed into the bog, even if surprised and captured. The reality of barbarian warfare was simple. Without a handy slave market to sell captured men in particular into made these folks surplus and a real and present danger.

We can presume women and children would be absorbed as slaves into the tribe during the aftermath. This is one really good reason that named tribes disappear but do not disappear from the genetic record.

In the barbarian world, these events happened over and over again, and were generally always that bloody. The advent of ritualized cannibalism was surely a response to the surplus male slaves naturally acquired. Yet as a dietary mainstay, it was always insufficient and most likely used irregularly as perhaps a feast.

Tribal warfare always kept populations rather low in terms of potential as empty lands became important in terms of strategic defence.

Alken Enge: Danish Bog Excavation Reveals Remains Of Hundreds Of Ancient Soldiers

The Huffington Post By Samreen Hooda Posted: 08/14/2012 5:32 pm



A team of archaeologists has uncovered the remains of 'hundreds' of ancient warriors at a Danish bog known as Alken Enge.

The skeletons, thought to date back about 2,000 years, appear to have been sacrificed at the bog, according to a written statement from Aarhus University, which conducted the dig along with collaborators from Denmark's Skanderborg and Moesgård Museums.

"It's clear that this must have been a quite far-reaching and dramatic event that must have had profound effect on the society of the time," Project Manager Mads Kähler Holst, professor of archaeology at Aarhus University said in the statement.

The particular motivation for the sacrifices remains unclear, but the Skanderborg Museum's website notes that "The area has been a focal point for a wider hinterland as a place to conduct sacrificial rituals, which appear to have taken place regularly during the Iron Age."

Alken Enge has been of interest to archaeologists since the 1950s, when the first human remains were found there. Excavations in 2008 and 2009 yielded scattered bones, and the current dig was planned based on these previous searches.

Geologists from Aarhus University note that the bog's sediments will yield important information for the archaeologists. The Skanderborg Museum notes that "Apparently the peat layers are chronologically deposited which therefore creates a timeline for the discoveries that are found in each layer."

Although the summer dig period is nearing completion, excavation Field Director Ejvind Hertz said in Aarhus University's statement that the bog hasn't yet given all it has to give:
"We've done small test digs at different places in the 40 hectare Alken Enge wetlands area, and new finds keep emerging." 

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