Conflict, violence, and warfare among early farmers in Northwestern Europe

Author:

Fibiger Linda1ORCID,Ahlström Torbjörn2ORCID,Meyer Christian3,Smith Martin4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of History, Classics and Archaeology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, Scotland

2. Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Lund University, Lund SE-221 00, Sweden

3. OsteoARC - OsteoArchaeological Research Centre, Goslar 38644, Germany

4. Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, Forensic and Biological Anthropology, Bournemouth University, Poole BH12 5DD, United Kingdom

Abstract

Bioarchaeological evidence of interpersonal violence and early warfare presents important insights into conflict in past societies. This evidence is critical for understanding the motivations for violence and its effects on opposing and competing individuals and groups across time and space. Selecting the Neolithic of northwestern Europe as an area for study, the present paper examines the variation and societal context for the violence recorded in the human skeletal remains from this region as one of the most important elements of human welfare. Compiling data from various sources, it becomes apparent that violence was endemic in Neolithic Europe, sometimes reaching levels of intergroup hostilities that ended in the utter destruction of entire communities. While the precise comparative quantification of healed and unhealed trauma remains a fundamental problem, patterns emerge that see conflict likely fostered by increasing competition between settled and growing communities, e.g., for access to arable land for food production. The further development of contextual information is paramount in order to address hypotheses on the motivations, origins, and evolution of violence as based on the study of human remains, the most direct indicator for actual small- and large-scale violence.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference89 articles.

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4. M. J. Smith, “The war to begin all wars? Contextualizing violence in Neolithic Britain” in The Routledge Handbook of the Bioarchaeology of Human Conflict, C. Knüsel, M. J. Smith, Eds. (Routledge, 2013), pp. 109–126.

5. M. J. Smith R. J. Schulting L. Fibiger “Settled lives unsettled times: Neolithic violence” in The Cambridge World History of Violence: Volume 1 The Prehistoric and Ancient Worlds G. G. Fagan L. Fibiger M. Hudson M. Trundle Eds. (Cambridge University Press 2020) pp. 79–98.

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