The Enigmatic Burial of a Woman with an Ancient Sword and Mirror

The Enigmatic Burial of a Woman with an Ancient Sword and Mirror



A roughly‍ 2,000-year-old woman with a potentially violent streak has emerged from skeletal rubble found‍ on an island off southwestern England’s coast.
The island grave dates to roughly 100 B.C. ⁤to 50 B.C., based ‌on radiocarbon dating of a⁣ partial bone and the types of metal objects found in the burial. Given tooth‌ wear, the woman died between the ages of 20 and 25.
Since the burial’s accidental ⁣discovery in 1999 by a farmer plowing a field on England’s Bryher Island, researchers have wondered whether the stone-lined grave contained a man or woman. No other Western European Iron Age grave includes a sword, typically found in male burials from that region, and a mirror, often associated with female burials.
Human skeletal biologist Simon Mays of Historic England, ⁣a public organization that‌ protects​ and studies historical places, in Portsmouth⁢ and colleagues speculate that the woman may have fought in raids and helped to fend off enemy attacks. Violence between communities may often​ have occurred in Iron Age Europe (SN: 10/6/20). And growing evidence suggests that‍ ancient women, not just ‍men, could be warriors too (SN:​ 9/13/17).

2023-12-01 12:00:00
Post⁢ from www.sciencenews.org

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