In the Massacre of Schletz, more than 200 Neolithic people were killed by blunt force 7,000 years ago (5000 BC), towards the end of the Linear Pottery culture epoch, before being carelessly dumped in a mass grave on the site of the present-day village of Schletz (in the municipality of Asparn an der Zaya in Lower Austria).
Massacre of Schletz | |
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Location | Schletz, modern-day Austria |
Date | c. 5000 BC |
Attack type | Mass murder, assault |
Deaths | 200 |
Perpetrators | unknown |
Excavation
editThe Linear Pottery settlement area of Schletz, about 50 kilometers north of Vienna, was discovered on the basis of aerial archaeological features and archaeologically investigated between 1983 and 2005. The settlement was enclosed by an oval ditch, which was double in sections and can be interpreted as a fortification. The oval ditch had a width of up to four meters, a depth of two meters, and a longitudinal diameter of 330 meters.[1] Several earth bridges provided access to the interior of the settlement, where the ground plans of at least 12 longhouses have been traced.[2]
Findings
editIn the course of the excavations, which covered about 20 percent of the site, the skeletons of about 200 individuals were discovered in the outer trench, most of whom died as a result of severe injuries to their skulls caused by blunt force (with shoe-last celts), and in one case also by arrow shot. The trenches remained open for some time, so that the position of some corpses was altered by animals. The dead - men, women and children - had mostly been laid in prone position, in many examined skeletons arms or legs were missing, also severed skulls were found separately. It was remarkable that there were hardly any young women among the dead.[3] Probably all inhabitants were killed or captured during an attack on the settlement; after that the settlement area was no longer inhabited.
According to the findings, all the dead were laid down about 7000 years ago.[4] The massacre of Schletz consequently occurred at the same time as the massacres at Kilianstädten (Hesse) and Talheim (Baden-Württemberg). [citation needed]
References
edit- ^ Michael Schefzik: Hinweise auf Massaker in der frühneolithischen Bandkeramik. In: Harald Meller und Michael Schefzik (Hrsg.): Krieg – eine archäologische Spurensuche. Begleitband zur Sonderausstellung im Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte Halle (Saale). Theiss, Stuttgart 2015, S. 174–175, ISBN 978-3-8062-3172-4
- ^ Erdwerke der Linearbandkeramik in Asparn an der Zaya/Schletz, Niederösterreich
- ^ Maria Teschler-Nicola et al.: Anthropologische Spurensicherung: die traumatischen und postmortalen Veränderungen an den linearbandkeramischen Skelettresten von Asparn/Schletz. In: Helmut Windl (Publisher): Rätsel um Gewalt und Tod vor 7000 Jahren: eine Spurensicherung. Ausstellung im Museum für Urgeschichte Asparn a. d. Zaya. Katalog des Niederösterreichischen Landesmuseums, No. 393, Asparn a. d. Zaya, 1996, text
- ^ Eva Maria Wild et al.: Neolithic Massacres: Local Skirmishes or General Warfare in Europe? In: Radiocarbon. Volume 46, No 1, 2004, S. 377–385, text