TALES FROM THE BOG. By: Lange, Karen E., National Geographic,
00279358, Sep2007, Vol. 212, Issue 3
Database:
Academic Search Elite
TALES FROM THE BOG
Hanged with a leather cord and cast into a
Danish bog 2,300 years ago, Tollund Man was probably a sacrifice. Like other
bodies found preserved in Europe's peat bogs, he poses haunting questions. How
was he chosen? Who closed his eyes after death? And what god demanded his life?
The man--or what was
left of him--emerged from the Irish sod one winter day in 2003, his hair still
styled the way he wore it during his last moments alive. The back was cropped
short; the top, eight inches long, rose in a pompadour, stiffened with pine
resin. And that was only the beginning of the mystery.
Spotted in the
industrial-size sieve of a peat processing plant, he was naked, his head
wrenched sharply to the left, his legs and lower arms missing, ripped away by
the machine that had dug him from a bog in the townland of Cloriycavan. His
head and trunk carried marks of deliberate violence, inflicted before he was
cast into the mire: His nose had been broken, his skull shattered, his abdomen
sliced open. While he lay in the bog, the weight of sodden sphagnum moss had
flattened his crushed head, and the dark waters had tanned his skin to leather
and dyed his hair orange red.
A call went out to
archaeologists, for this was no ordinary murder victim: Clonycavan Man was a
bog body, a naturally embalmed testament to mysterious rituals during northern
Europe's Iron Age, the centuries just before and after Christ. Hundreds of
these unusual mummies have been found in the wetlands of Ireland, the U.K.,
Germany, the Netherlands, and especially Denmark, preserved by lack of oxygen
and antimicrobial compounds from the sphagnum.
People have been
spinning tales about bog bodies ever since they were widely recognized as
ancient in the late 1800s. Their sculpted repose contrasting with their cruel
deaths, the bodies inspire fascination and a longing to connect with a remote ancestral
past, when miry wetlands--now drained and dug out for profit--were portals to
another world. Gods inhabited bogs; so did restless outcast spirits. Here Iron
Age peoples might have buried the most feared or loathed among them, or
sacrificed loved ones and even the powerful to win the gods' favor.
These days investigators
have new tools--CT scans, three-dimensional imaging, and radiocarbon dating--to
make sense of the bodies and the few artifacts found with them. There is little
else to go on. Iron Age Europeans left no written records of their beliefs and
customs. Many of the bodies themselves vanished when they were reburied or left
to decompose. Some, in museums, suffered the restoration efforts of overeager
conservators and curators. Others are phantoms: Last year two scholars
published an article called "Imaginary People" in a German
archaeology journal. They reluctantly concluded that the late Alfred Dieck, a
German archaeologist who made cataloging bog bodies his life's work, fabricated
many of the more than 1,800 cases he recorded.
Not surprisingly, bog
body research has taken wildly wrong turns. Desperate for historical accounts
of preliterate Germanic societies, researchers turned decades ago to the
writings of Tacitus, a first-century A.D. Roman historian. But his description
of customs beyond the Rhine was based on second- and thirdhand accounts and
written to shame Romans for what he considered decadent behavior. Tacitus
declared approvingly that the Germans killed homosexuals and cowards and staked
their bodies down in bogs.
Accordingly, many bog
bodies were interpreted as people in disgrace, supposedly punished with
torture, execution, and burial in the bog instead of cremation, the customary
Iron Age practice. Windeby Girl, discovered in northern Germany in 1952, was
said to be an adulteress whose head had been shaved in a manner described by
Tacitus. Then, researchers speculated, she was blindfolded and drowned in the
bog. A body found nearby was identified as her lover.
But the theory unraveled
after Heather Gill-Robinson of North Dakota State University took a close look
at the body and tested its DNA: Windeby Girl was likely a young man.
Radiocarbon dating by other scientists revealed that the supposed lover lived
three centuries earlier. The Windeby "girl" may have lost his hair
when archaeologists digging out the body were careless with their trowels. And
growth interruptions in the bones indicated that the young man was malnourished
and sickly and might have simply died of natural causes. University of Hamburg
archaeologist Michael Gebühr speculates that the body was blindfolded before
burial to protect the living from the gaze of the dead.
In Denmark, a team of
forensic investigators including Niels Lynnerup of the University of Copenhagen
has reexamined that country's bog bodies and found that some of the damage once
interpreted as torture or mutilation was actually inflicted centuries after
death. Grauballe Man, discovered in a bog northwest of Copenhagen in 1952, is
one of the best preserved bog bodies and now the most thoroughly examined.
Previous x-rays of his body were hard to read--the bones, demineralized by
acidic bog waters, looked like glass. Now CT scans have shown that Grauballe
Man's skull was fractured by the pressure of the bog, abetted when a boy
wearing clogs accidentally stepped on the body as it was being excavated.
Grauballe Man's broken leg could also be the work of the bog and not, as some
scholars had thought, proof of a vicious blow to force him to kneel for execution.
Lynnerup, archaeologist
Pauline Asingh, and other members of the team now interpret Grauballe Man's
death some 2,300 years ago as a sacrifice to one of the fertility goddesses
that Celtic and Germanic peoples believed held the power of life and death. It
could have happened one winter after a bad harvest, the researchers say. People
were hungry, reduced to eating chaff and weeds. They believed that one of their
number had to die so the rest could survive.
Grauballe Man, a
strapping 34-year-old, apparently learned his fate a few days in advance:
Stubble on his jaw indicates that he stopped shaving. Then came the terrible
hour when the villagers--perhaps his friends and family--led him into a nearby
bog. They picked their way among holes dug for peat and bog iron, the ore from
which Iron Age people forged tools and weapons. At the edge of a flooded pit,
one of them pulled back Grauballe Man's head and, with a short knife, slit his
throat from ear to ear. The executioner pushed the dying man into the pit. The
body twisted as it fell and was swallowed by the bog.
Eamonn Kelly, keeper of
Irish antiquities at the National Museum of Ireland, thinks similar scenes of
sacrifice may have played out in his country's ancient kingdoms. Three months
after Clonycavan Man came to light, another ancient body fell from the bucket
of a backhoe digging in a bog 25 miles away. This man had once stood almost six
feet four inches tall, but only his trunk and arms remained. Arm wounds
suggested he had tried to fend off a knife before he was fatally stabbed in the
heart.
Then his body had been
oddly mutilated--his nipples apparently cut, his upper arms pierced and small
wreaths (withies) of twisted hazel threaded through the holes. Encircling one
biceps was an armband of braided leather with a bronze amulet incised with
Celtic-designs. Like Clonycavan Man's hair pomade, made with resin that
archaeologists concluded must have been imported from the south of France,
these were costly marks of status.
Another clue linked this
new body, called Oldcroghan Man, to some 40 other Irish bog bodies including
Clonycavan Man: All were buried on borders between ancient Irish kingdoms.
Together with the costly ornaments, Kelly says, the locations suggest tales of
royal sacrifice. In ancient times, he explains, Irish kings symbolically
married the fertility goddess; famine meant the goddess had turned against the
king and had to be mollified. Kelly believes the bog bodies represented the
most splendid of offerings: high-ranking hostages taken to force rebellious
lords into obedience, pretenders to the throne, or even the failed kings
themselves. Each injury they suffered honored a different aspect of the
goddess--fertility, sovereignty, and war. "It's controlled violence,"
Kelly says. "They are giving the goddess her due."
Oldcroghan Man normally
ate meat, laboratory analysis of his hair and nails showed. But residues in his
gut indicated that his last meal consisted of cereals and buttermilk, emblems
of fertility befitting a sacrifice to the goddess. After his death, his nipples
may have been cut to mark him as a rejected ruler, says Kelly--in ancient
Ireland a king's subjects ritually demonstrated their submission by sucking on
the ruler's nipples. Then his body was hacked to pieces and sown along the
border of the kingdom, his arms threaded with withies to confer protective
magic that would guard the territory.
Science can't prove
Kelly's scenario. Other researchers say, for example, that the bog rather than
the killers might be responsible for the damage to Oldcroghan Man's nipples;
his waterlogged body was as fragile as wet cardboard. And even if Kelly is
right about the royal status of Irish bog bodies, people on the Continent had a
different culture--Germanic rather than Celtic--chiefs instead of kings, and,
almost certainly, other rites of sacrifice.
Bodies still lying
undiscovered in the bogs of northern Europe will yield more clues about how and
why the bog people met their ends. But new finds are likely to be rare and
often damaged when they are ripped from the earth by peat cutters and backhoes.
Lynnerup, who has
applied the most powerful science available to the secrets of Grauballe Man and
who can call up three-dimensional images of the body's bones and muscles and
tendons on his computer, doesn't mind the lingering mysteries. "Strange
things happen in the bog. There will always be some ambiguity." Lynnerup
smiles. "I sort of like the idea that there's just some stuff we'll really
never know."
MAP: Bog bodies of the
Iron Age
PHOTO (COLOR): Hair
piled high above folds of leathery skin, Clonycavan Man is one of hundreds of
bodies from the bogs of northern Europe. The finds date from 400 B.C. to A.D.
400 in the Iron Age, a time when the region's Celtic and Germanic peoples
looked upon bogs as portals to the supernatural world.
PHOTO (COLOR): Floating
lacy green in an Irish bog, sphagnum moss releases compounds that preserve
human tissue. As the moss decays, it compacts into peat, which can be burnt for
fuel.
PHOTO (COLOR): Mutilated
by the iron rods of workers dredging peat from a Dutch hog, Yde Girl's body
offers clues to her death. The hand of fabric around the 16-year-old's throat
suggests she was strangled. She may have been chosen for sacrifice because of a
deformity revealed by a CT scan: a curvature in her spine.
PHOTO (COLOR): A
cavernous wound gapes on Grauballe Man's throat, cut with such force that the
blade nicked a vertebra in his neck. Researchers once thought other damage done
to the body meant he was tortured before execution. But recent study has shown
that his bones broke during long burial in a Danish bog.
PHOTO (COLOR): Arches
and whorls on Oldcroghan Man's fingertips are clear enough for police to take
his prints. But researchers can only speculate about the Irish body's identity.
Their best guess: He was of noble birth, perhaps a disgraced king or contender
for the throne, sacrificed when a new monarch was crowned.
PHOTO (COLOR):
Conservators sawed off Tollund Man's foot shortly after he was discovered in
1950, then soaked it in a preservative that turned his skin black. He emerged
from his grave shoeless and nearly naked, but other bog bodies have been found
with leather capes, wool leggings, and intricately cut shoes.
PHOTO (BLACK &
WHITE): In 1898, diggers slicing peat at Nederfrederiksmose in Denmark
uncovered the first bog body to be photographed as it was found.
PHOTO (COLOR)
PHOTO (COLOR)
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By Karen E. Lange,
National Geographic Staff
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