Abstract

Contemporary accounts of battles are often incomplete or even erroneous because they reflect the—often biased—viewpoints of the authors. Battlefield archaeology faces the task of compiling an historical analysis of a battle and of gathering all the available facts. Besides cultural historical evidence and artefacts, the human remains of those who have fallen in battle also provide invaluable information. In studying mass graves from a military context, the injury types and patterns are significant. They allow us to reconstruct the circumstances surrounding the soldiers’ deaths and provide information on the hostilities that occurred on the battlefield. One such mass grave was discovered in 2011 at Lützen, Saxony-Anhalt (Germany). Based on its geographical location and on the results obtained from archaeological examinations carried out in the area, the grave could be dated to the Thirty Years War (1618–1648). Further archaeological research confirmed that the dead had been soldiers from the Battle of Lützen (1632). The mass grave was block-lifted and then comprehensively examined at the State Museum of Prehistory in Halle (Saale). As well as osteological examinations to determine age, sex, height, state of health, i.e. diseases or injuries, imaging methods were also employed and histological and isotopic analyses carried out. The focus of this study was on the injuries sustained by the soldiers both prior to and during the battle. The results revealed that the 47 deceased had been between the ages of 15 and 50 when they died. Numerous healed injuries showed that the men had often been involved in violent encounters. Approximately three in every four soldiers had injuries that could have been fatal. Wounds inflicted by handguns, particularly to the skull, were predominant. The integrative analysis of the archaeological and anthropological data allowed us to conclude that the majority had been killed during a cavalry attack.

Highlights

  • Religious schism and disputes over political power within Europe created discord which led to the Thirty Years War, sparked by the Defenestration of Prague on 23rd May 1618 [1,2]

  • Besides the usual statistical outliers (2-sigma range with a probability of 95%), this was due to a plateau in the radiocarbon curve, which did not allow for the precise dating one would otherwise expect to achieve

  • When the grave was unearthed, a small number of skeletons on the periphery were partially damaged, this barely had an impact on the examinations because such postmortem damage to the bone can very be distinguished from perimortem injuries

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Summary

Introduction

Religious schism and disputes over political power within Europe created discord which led to the Thirty Years War, sparked by the Defenestration of Prague on 23rd May 1618 [1,2]. The face of war: Trauma analysis of a mass grave castle moat by the mainly Protestant assembly members. Began the Thirty Years War. Under the pretext of religious interests, the very foundations of the Holy Roman Empire would be shaken, and this would manifest itself in numerous military campaigns until 1648. The Danish King Christian IV (1577–1648) and Gustavus II Adolphus King of Sweden

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