School of Archaeology, Jilin University, Changchun, China.
School of History, Classics and Archaeology, the University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2021 May;175(1):81-94. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24194. Epub 2020 Dec 11.
Violence affected daily life in prehistoric societies, especially at conflict zones where different peoples fought over resources and for other reasons. In this study, cranial trauma was analyzed to discuss the pattern of violence experienced by three Bronze to early Iron Age populations (1,000-100 BCE) that belonged to the Subeixi culture. These populations lived in the Turpan Basin, a conflict zone in the middle of the Eurasian Steppe.
The injuries on 129 complete crania unearthed from the Subeixi cemeteries were examined for crude prevalence rate (CPR), trauma type, time of occurrence, possible weapon, and direction of the blow. Thirty-three injuries identified from poorly preserved crania were also included in the analyses except for the CPR. Data was also compared between the samples and with four other populations that had violence-related backgrounds.
Overall, 16.3% (21/129) of the individuals showed violence-induced traumatic lesions. Results also indicated that most of the injuries were perimortem (81.6%), and that women and children were more involved in conflict than the other comparative populations. Wounds from weapons accounted for 42.1% of the identified cranial injuries. Distribution analysis suggested no dominant handedness of the attackers, and that blows came from all directions including the top (17.1%). Wounds caused by arrowheads and a special type of battle-ax popular in middle and eastern Eurasian Steppe were also recognized.
A comprehensive analysis of the skeletal evidence, historical records, and archeological background would suggest that the raiding to be the most possible conflict pattern reflected by the samples. The attackers were likely to have been nomadic invaders from the steppe (such as the Xiongnu from historical records), who attacked the residents in the basin more likely for their resources rather than territory or labor force.
史前社会的暴力行为影响了人们的日常生活,尤其是在冲突地区,不同民族为争夺资源和其他原因而发生冲突。本研究通过分析颅骨创伤,探讨了属于苏贝希文化的三个青铜时代至早期铁器时代(公元前 1000 年至公元前 100 年)人群所经历的暴力模式。这些人群生活在吐鲁番盆地,这是欧亚草原中部的一个冲突地区。
对从苏贝希墓地出土的 129 具完整颅骨进行了检查,分析了粗发生率(CPR)、创伤类型、发生时间、可能的武器和打击方向。对 33 例保存不佳的颅骨损伤也进行了分析,但不包括 CPR。还将数据与其他四个具有暴力背景的人群进行了比较。
总体而言,129 例个体中有 16.3%(21 例)显示出暴力导致的创伤性病变。结果还表明,大多数损伤是濒死期(81.6%),女性和儿童比其他可比人群更易卷入冲突。由武器造成的伤口占已识别颅骨损伤的 42.1%。分布分析表明,攻击者没有明显的惯用手,打击来自各个方向,包括头顶(17.1%)。还识别出了箭头和一种在中东部欧亚草原流行的特殊类型的战斧造成的伤口。
对骨骼证据、历史记录和考古背景的综合分析表明,袭击最有可能反映出样本所反映的冲突模式。攻击者可能是来自草原的游牧侵略者(如历史记载中的匈奴),他们袭击盆地居民可能是为了获取资源,而不是为了领土或劳动力。