The site in Bellaghy, Co Londonderry, where human remains
were found in October 2023
Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
Irish bog bodies are in the news again with the discovery in October 2023 of ancient human remains in a Co Derry bog. It was found by workers at a peat extraction company at Newferry, near Bellaghy. The remains have been dated to around 343 BC to 1 BC, during the Iron Age.
Originally believed to be male, it
is now thought the remains are those of a woman aged between 17 and 22 years
old who has been given the name Ballymacombs More Woman. The individual had an
estimated height of around 1.7m (5' 6").
The study, led by National
Museums NI, has involved collaboration with organisations across Ireland, the
UK and Europe, including the Police Service of Northern Ireland, National
Museum of Ireland, Queen's University Belfast, Trinity College Dublin, University
College Dublin, University of Copenhagen, University of Glasgow, and University
of Bradford.
This discovery has caused considerable excitement among archaeologists and is even more significant given that most of the bog preserved individuals that have been found from this period are male.
The PSNI’s body recovery team at the site in Bellaghy
Photograph: Police Service of Northern Ireland/PA Wire |
Bog Bodies
The term “Bog Bodies” is used to
describe human remains which have been naturally preserved by the chemistry of
Northern Europe’s bogs. Hundreds of bog bodies have been discovered in the
boglands of Europe over the last few centuries, of which about 130 have been
found in Ireland. Some of the human remains discovered show signs of torture
and execution, with evidence of hanging, strangulation, stabbing and
bludgeoning.
The Ballymacombs More Woman has been hailed as ‘one of the
most important archaeological discoveries on the island of Ireland’ Photograph:
The oldest known bog body is the Koelbjerg Woman from Denmark, who has been dated to 8000 BC, during the Mesolithic period or Middle Stone Age. Most bog bodies – including famous examples such as Tollund Man, Grauballe Man and Lindow Man – date from the Iron Age and have been found in Northern Europe, particularly Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Ireland. The newest bog bodies are those of soldiers killed in the Russian wetlands during the Second World War.
In 1950, Tollund Man’s discoverers “found a face so fresh
they could only suppose they had stumbled on a recent murder.” Photograph:
Many bog bodies have been found
in marginal areas such as ancient boundaries and wetlands. While most of
Northern Europe lay under a thick canopy of forest, bogs did not and were open
to the sky. In a sense, they were borderlands to what lay beyond. Radiocarbon
dating shows that most bog bodies date from the Iron Age, between 500 B.C. and
A.D. 100.
Other Irish Bog Bodies
In Ireland, Cashel Man was
unearthed in 2011 in Cul na Mona bog in Cashel, County Tipperary.
In 2003, peat cutters found Oldcroghan
Man and Clonycavan Man in two different bogs in Ireland. Both had lived between
400 and 175 B.C., and both had their nipples mutilated. The best-preserved
bodies were all found in raised bogs, which contain few minerals and very
little oxygen.
Kingship
Experts believe that many of the
Irish Iron Age bog bodies are the remains of former kings who were sacrificed.
The scarcity of such finds suggests that the sacrificial killings were only
undertaken when a king’s reign had proven unsuccessful because of defeat in
war, or due to famine or pestilence.
In ancient Ireland, sucking a
king’s nipples was a gesture of submission and a means of placing oneself under
the protection of the king. Archaeologists believe that the cutting of the
nipples was part of the ritual in which he was ‘decommissioned’ from the role
of king.
The archaeologist, Eamon Kelly,
Keeper of Antiquities at the National Museum of Ireland, points out that a key
aspect of kingship was to ensure the annual success of the harvest, to safeguard
crops and livestock from disease, and to prevent inclement weather, warfare,
and theft.
Important discovery
Niamh Baker, Curator of
Archaeology at National Museums NI, described the Ballymacombs More Woman as
one of the most important archaeological discoveries on the island of
Ireland".
"This important discovery
gives us a glimpse into the lives of the people of our ancient past and offers
insights into how they lived, interacted with their environment, and developed
their cultures," she said.
Professor of Archaeology at the
School of Natural and Built Environment at Queen's University, Eileen Murphy, who
conducted the osteological assessment which provided a biological profile for
the individual and ascertained the cause of their death said:
“As is the case for so many
Iron Age bog bodies, the young woman suffered a highly violent death which
involved the flow of blood from her throat followed by decapitation.
The head was taken away, but
the body was left where it fell only to be discovered by machine workers some
2,000 years later."
Conclusion
Ballymacombs More Woman from
County Derry has been dated to 343 BC to 1 BC, during the Iron Age. The
discovery is particularly significant given that most of the bog preserved
individuals that have been found from this period are male. Cut marks on her
neck vertebrae indicate the cause of death as decapitation, possibly as part of
a ritual and sacrifice.
Other recent bog bodies from
Ireland include Cashel Man, Oldcroghan Man and Clonycavan Man. Famous examples
such as Tollund Man, Grauballe Man and Lindow Man, all dating from the Iron Age,
have been found in Northern Europe, particularly Denmark, Germany, the
Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Ireland.