Archaeologists in England have uncovered the 2,000-year-old skeleton of a teenager lying face down in a pit—an unusual burial position that may provide clues to a murder mystery.
Researchers from Bournemouth University were excavating a Celtic site in Dorset, a county in southwest England, earlier this year when they stumbled upon this bizarre burial. The discovery occurred during the filming of *Sandi Toksvig’s Hidden Wonders*, a new TV series hosted by broadcaster and comedian Sandi Toksvig, according to a statement from Bournemouth University.
“This has the sense of a body thrown into a pit, with hands potentially tied at the wrist” in front of her body, Miles Russell, the lead archaeologist for the project, told Live Science in an email. “We think she’s a ‘she,’ although we haven’t had a chance to assess the DNA yet to confirm it.”
The teenager had no grave goods and was found face down at the bottom of an abandoned pit. Combined with evidence suggesting her hands had been bound, these clues hint that she may have been sacrificed by the Durotriges tribe—a Celtic group that lived in Britain during the Iron Age before the Roman invasion, Russell explained.
She is not the only likely murder victim discovered at the site. “The two other face-down bodies in pits we’ve recovered in the project were a teenage girl found in 2024,” Russell said, “and one from 2010 of a young adult female whose neck had been slashed.”
These unusual burials have been uncovered as part of Bournemouth University’s Durotriges Project, which focuses on pre-Roman settlements in southern Britain. The cemetery appears to date to roughly the early to mid-first century B.C., about a century before the Romans successfully invaded southern England.
Earlier this year, researchers from the project published a study using DNA analysis to show that Celtic groups such as the Durotriges were likely organized along maternal lines. This finding aligns with what Roman authors wrote about the Celts: men traveled to their wives’ villages to marry, rather than the other way around.
Given the Celts’ emphasis on maternal relationships, it is surprising that all three unusual burials may represent sacrificed women and girls. Russell suggested that these individuals may have been at the lower end of the social scale and considered more “disposable,” especially if they were not from the area or unrelated to ruling families.
While the sacrificed woman discovered in 2010 has already been analyzed, the sacrificed teenager found in 2024 and the teenager discovered this year have yet to be fully studied. Russell and his team plan to investigate both skeletons for possible signs of trauma and disease, as well as determine their diets and origins.
The discovery of multiple female sacrifices suggests the practice was much more common than previously thought, Russell said. However, “we are at a loss to know what socio-politico-environmental factors triggered the practice.”
https://www.livescience.com/archaeology/2-000-year-old-celtic-teenager-may-have-been-sacrificed-and-considered-disposable