TY - JOUR
T1 - A large mass grave from the Early Iron Age indicates selective violence towards women and children in the Carpathian Basin
AU - Fibiger, Linda
AU - Iraeta-Orbegozo, Miren
AU - Koledin, Jovan
AU - Laffoon, Jason E.
AU - Makarewicz, Cheryl A.
AU - Mylopotamitaki, Dorothea
AU - Bruyere, Caroline
AU - Booth, Thomas
AU - Ramsey, Christopher Bronk
AU - Layfield, Robert
AU - Anchieri, Lucas
AU - Huang, Yuejiao
AU - Knudsen, Anna Kjær
AU - Niemann, Jonas
AU - Radmanović, Darko
AU - Oldham, Neil J.
AU - Shaw, Barry
AU - Tracy, Saoirse
AU - Nylund, Sara
AU - Daly, J. Stephen
AU - Winter-Schuh, Christine
AU - van Acken, David
AU - Ringbauer, Harald
AU - Mittnik, Alissa
AU - Ramos-Madrigal, Jazmin
AU - Schroeder, Hannes
AU - Molloy, Barry
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2026.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Narratives about the motivations and conditions for mass violence as a persistent feature of conflict throughout human history have evolved in complexity and materiality. Victims of these events are key for understanding the evolution and transformative power of violent behaviour as it developed from simple intergroup conflict to more strategic mass violence. Here we present the results of a bioarchaeological study of 77 and biomolecular analysis of 25 individuals from a ninth-century BCE mass grave from Gomolava in the Carpathian Basin, Southeast Europe. The site is located at the interface of complex sociospatial relations, divergent cultural traditions and values, and competing ideologies of landscape use. We show that excessive lethal violence enacted mostly on women and children suggests a selective demographic bias. The people buried together shared few, even distant, genetic relationships, and so their killing presents striking evidence for an episode of cross-regional conflict and an underlying aggressive shift in power, violence and gender relations in the region. Gomolava provides evidence consistent with deliberate annihilation of select sections of a regional population as a motivation for mass violence behaviour in later prehistoric Europe. It also shines new light on the socioeconomic agency and importance of women and young individuals in later European prehistory.
AB - Narratives about the motivations and conditions for mass violence as a persistent feature of conflict throughout human history have evolved in complexity and materiality. Victims of these events are key for understanding the evolution and transformative power of violent behaviour as it developed from simple intergroup conflict to more strategic mass violence. Here we present the results of a bioarchaeological study of 77 and biomolecular analysis of 25 individuals from a ninth-century BCE mass grave from Gomolava in the Carpathian Basin, Southeast Europe. The site is located at the interface of complex sociospatial relations, divergent cultural traditions and values, and competing ideologies of landscape use. We show that excessive lethal violence enacted mostly on women and children suggests a selective demographic bias. The people buried together shared few, even distant, genetic relationships, and so their killing presents striking evidence for an episode of cross-regional conflict and an underlying aggressive shift in power, violence and gender relations in the region. Gomolava provides evidence consistent with deliberate annihilation of select sections of a regional population as a motivation for mass violence behaviour in later prehistoric Europe. It also shines new light on the socioeconomic agency and importance of women and young individuals in later European prehistory.
U2 - 10.1038/s41562-025-02399-9
DO - 10.1038/s41562-025-02399-9
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 41731074
AN - SCOPUS:105030982835
SN - 2397-3374
VL - 10
SP - 656
EP - 668
JO - Nature Human Behaviour
JF - Nature Human Behaviour
IS - 4
ER -