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Possible Cannibalism in Paleolithic Britain
February 17, 2011
2:45 pm PDT
JDHarrison
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December 29, 2012
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I just read a very interesting artice Visit My Website alleging that cannabalism may have taken place in ice age Britain. The use of skull caps for bowls and drinking vessels is well documented, but the argument for cannibalism is weak although possible. What do you think? (WARNING: The article, while a scientific paper is graphic and may be disturbing to some. Also it is chock full of anthropological and archaeological terms, so if there are any questions, post here and I will do my best to answer).

Archaeology is the peeping Tom of the sciences. It is the sandbox of men who care not where they are going; they merely want to know where everyone else has been.- Jim Bishop
April 12, 2012
9:51 pm PDT
Persephone
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Recent evidence that Druids possibly committed cannibalism and ritual human sacrifice—perhaps on a massive scale—add weight to ancient Roman accounts of Druidic savagery, archaeologists say.

After a first century B.C. visit to Britain, the Romans came back with horrific stories about these high-ranking priests of the Celts, who had spread throughout much of Europe over a roughly 2,000-year period.

Julius Caesar, who led the first Roman landing in 55 B.C., said the native Celts "believe that the gods delight in the slaughter of prisoners and criminals, and when the supply of captives runs short, they sacrifice even the innocent."

First-century historian Pliny the Elder went further, suggesting the Celts practiced ritual cannibalism, eating their enemies' flesh as a source of spiritual and physical strength.

But with only the Romans' word to go on—the ancient Celts left no written record of their own—it's been easy for historians to dismiss such tales as wartime propaganda.

Until now, that is.

[u]Gruesome Druid Discoveries[/u]

Recent gruesome finds appear to confirm the Romans' accounts, according to Secrets of the Druids, a new documentary airing Saturday on the U.S. National Geographic Channel.

Perhaps the most incriminating evidence is the 2,000-year-old, bog-mummified body of Lindow Man, discovered in England in the 1980s. Lindow Man's manicured fingernails and finely trimmed hair and beard suggest that he may have been of high status—possibly even a Druid himself.

At least one thing appears nearly certain about the ancient twentysomething: He was the victim of a carefully staged sacrifice.

Recent studies have revealed that Lindow Man's head had been violently smashed and his neck had been strangled and slashed.

[u]Druid Fountain of Blood[/u]

"You've got a rope tightened round his neck, and at the moment where the neck was constricted, the throat was cut, which would cause an enormous fountain of blood to rise up," said archaeologist Miranda Aldhouse-Green, an archaeologist at Cardiff University in Wales and an expert on the Druids.

Another clue lay inside the body's well-preserved gut: pollen grains from mistletoe, a plant that was sacred to the Druids. (Romans wrote that Druids cut mistletoe from trees with golden sickles.)

Lindow Man's death is dated to around A.D. 60, when the Romans launched a new offensive in the island of Great Britain, currently part of the United Kingdom.

He may have been sacrificed to persuade the Celtic gods to halt the Roman advance, Aldhouse-Green said.

"Something had to be done to stop them in their tracks," she said in the documentary. "And what better way than sacrificing a high-status nobleman?"

The idea jibes with something Julius Caesar wrote: In times of danger, the Celts believed that "unless the life of a man be offered, the mind of immortal gods will not favor them."

[u]Mass Druid Sacrifice?[/u]

Other grisly clues come from a cave in Alveston, England.

Skeletons belonging to as many as 150 people and dating back to about the time of the Roman conquest were discovered in 2000.

Druids may have killed the victims—who show evidence of skull-splitting blows—in a single event. It may have been the Roman invasion itself that escalated the Druids' ritualized slaughter, researchers say.

Mark Horton, an archaeologist at the University of Bristol, thinks the pile of bodies suggests savage resistance to the Romans, either on the battlefield or through deadly ritual.

"Maybe the whole thing is a gigantic sacrifice … an appeasement to the gods in order that they will get ultimate victory against the Romans," Horton said.

The Alveston cave bones hint at something even more sinister—cannibalism.

A human thighbone in the cave had been broken open in exactly the same method people use to get at the nutritious bone marrow of nonhuman animals.

But if the bone is proof of Celtic cannibalism, the practice was probably extremely rare, Horton said. It may be evidence of increasing hunger and desperation as Roman invaders closed in, he added.

"Least Bad Evidence"

Researchers have struggled in the past to link any archaeological evidence to the Druids, let alone signs of human sacrifice or cannibalism, said archaeologist Simon James of the University of Leicester, U.K.

"There has always been a suspicion that what the Romans were saying was atrocity propaganda. But some recent finds like Lindow Man suggest that there were dark and bloody goings-on," said James, who was not involved in the new documentary.

The mistletoe pollen from Lindow Man is the "least bad archaeological evidence we've got that fits in with these stories about the Druids," he added.

"Maybe mistletoe plants had been dusted on his food ritually, a bit like spraying holy water around, or dunked in his drink," James said.

If Lindow Man and others were in fact sacrificed in a bid to stop the Romans, their lives were lost in vain.

By the early centuries of the first millennium A.D., the Celts' defeat and absorption into the Roman Empire was nearly complete across Europe.

Today, their once wide-ranging culture lives on mainly in the traditional languages of Ireland, Wales, and Brittany, France.

(Read "The Celtic Realm" from National Geographic magazine.)

http://news.nationalgeographic…..s-sacri…

[size=5]Persephone[/size]
April 12, 2012
9:52 pm PDT
Persephone
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I know Celtic as well as Germanic warlords keenly collected the heads of their most contentious enemies and rivals, as trophies. In their beliefs it was akin to taking magical possession of their souls, to capture whatever skills or cunning. Heroic sagas often mention the skull caps used as drinking vessels for an ironic conclusion to the retribution, by making its unwitting kindred drink from it. This sort of practice persisted in some feudal kingdoms well into the 17th century. Of course in popular history we only hear of the Borgias indulging in such morbidities.

by Quasizoid on Pagan UnderWorld

[size=5]Persephone[/size]
July 27, 2012
5:32 am PDT
Darla
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Persephone…I just watched a Documentary about that..the Druids/Celts being cannibals for ritualistic purposes..I was shocked.

July 27, 2012
3:59 pm PDT
Persephone
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Darla, I bet this would be found in most parts of the World at that time. Thank goodness we no longer have that need I just wish we lost some of our other bad habits /sad.png' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':(' />

[size=5]Persephone[/size]
July 28, 2012
3:22 pm PDT
KuriusKat
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I would not be surprised to find out that it was a fairly widespread practice, either. I don't know why but it doesn't shock me that much.

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