In 1984 the body of a man preserved in peat was discovered
in Cheshire, England. Conserved in his entirety, the body of Lindow man
provided archaeologists with a wide range of information about his life and
death more than 2,000 years ago.
Approximately seven hundred hundred human bodies have been
discovered in the peat bogs of northern Europe, but few survive intact,
primarily because of the circumstances of their discovery, usually as the
result of peatcutting machinery. Peat bogs provide waterlogged, anaerobic, and
antibacterial conditions that preserve human soft tissue. Bodies of men and
women have been found, but no children's bodies have yet been found. Many have
been dated to medieval times by their clothing and accompanying artifacts, but
the most interesting and best-preserved bodies date between from 2,800 years
ago (ca. 800 BC) to AD 200, from the period of the European Iron Age until the
Roman Empire. The most famous of these intact bodies are the Tollund,
Grauballe, and Lindow men, named after the peat bogs from which they were
recovered. While some of the bog bodies were the result of accidental deaths,
some are wetland burials, some are murder victims hidden in bogs, and some
would have been suicide burials excluded from Christian graveyards. A few are
thought to have been ritual burials and/or executions.
The conservation and analysis of these bog bodies was
pioneered by Danish archaeologist Hans Helbaek, who worked on both the Tollund
and Graubolle men, who were found in peat bogs in central Jutland in Denmark.
Tollund man, discovered in 1950, died 2,100 years ago (ca. 100 BC). Based on
the account of the Roman historian Tacitus, who wrote about the practices of
the Germanic tribes of the north in his Germania, we know that "cowards,
shirkers and sodomites are pressed down under a wicker hurdle into the slimy
mud of a bog," while "traitors and deserters," he also noted,
"are hanged on trees."
It is possible that Tollund man was a criminal or a victim
of ritual sacrifice. He was naked except for a pointy leather cap, and he had
been strangled by the noose around his neck before being thrown into the bog.
His last meal was a gruel of barley, linseed, knotweed, dock, and camomile
seeds. Graubolle man was discovered in 1952. His throat had been cut, and he
had been hit on the head as well. His stomach contents comprised sixty-three
varieties of seeds, such as rye, buttercup, nightshade, clover, and spelt, and he
had died 2,070 years ago (ca. 70 BC).
Helbaek's analysis of food residues laid the foundations for
their continued use and refinement by archaeologists. Unfortunately, techniques
of preservation were not so successful in the 1950s, and only the heads of the
Tollund and Graubolle men survive in museums today.
Lindow man was luckier to be unearthed later in the
twentieth century- when techniques of freeze-drying had improved, and he
survives as he was found, because of the work of the conservation staff of the
British Museum. Lindow man, however, had one leg missing-probably because of
peat-cutting machines, which destroyed another two to three bog bodies lying
near his before they were turned off.
Lindow man was approximately twenty-five years old when he died
from being struck on the back of the head twice, garroted, and his throat cut.
Perhaps he too was a ritual sacrifice. He lived during the first and second
centuries AD. He was found naked except for a fur armband. As with the other bog
bodies, everything was analyzed, from the species of fur on the band and the
leather of the garrotte down to his blood group, the insects and pollen in the
peat surrounding his body, and the contents of his last meal. His stomach
contents comprised the remains of cereals, such as emmer, wheat, barley, and
oats.
The decline in wetland areas across northern Europe, and the
wide use of peat-cutting machinery mean that there will be even fewer bog
bodies to analyze in the future.
Further Reading
Greig, J. 2001. Palynology in archaeological research. In Encyclopedia of
archaeology: History and discoveries, ed. T. Murray, 988-991. Santa Barbara,
CA: ABC-CLIO. Stead, I., J. Bourke, and D. Brothwell, eds. 1986. Lindow man,
the body in the bog. London: British Museum. Turner, R., and R. G. Scaife.
1995. Bog bodies: New discoveries and new perspectives. London: Published for
the Trustees of the British Museum by British Museum Press.
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