Objective: This study aims to document and contextualize cranial trauma attributable to interpersonal violence in one Langobard individual from the Ferrovia necropolis in Cividale del Friuli (NE Italy). Materials: The study examines one human skeleton: a middle-aged female dated between 590 and 630 CE. Methods: Osteological and palaeopathological analyses were conducted to assess trauma, age-at-death, and activity-related markers. Sex estimation was confirmed through amelogenin analysis. Results: The individual presents healed antemortem cranial lesions consistent with interpersonal violence: one sharp-force and one blunt-force. Conclusions: This case represents documented paleopathological evidence of interpersonal violence affecting a Langobard female. Significance: The finding challenges assumptions regarding the exclusively male nature of interpersonal violence in Langobard society and provides a rare bioarchaeological correlate to legal and historical sources acknowledging female involvement in violent contexts. Limitations: The identification of interpersonal violence is constrained by preservation biases and the limited visibility of soft-tissue injuries in the skeletal record. Moreover, the interpretation of interpersonal violence from the cranium only is limiting. Suggestions for further research: Future studies integrating palaeopathological, biomolecular, and contextual archaeological data across larger samples are needed to refine interpretations of violence and gender roles in Langobard populations.
She was not spared: Evidence of interpersonal violence on a Langobard female from the Ferrovia necropolis in Cividale, NE Italy (6th–7th century CE) / Saccheri, P., Martinoia, V., Lugli, F., Bernardini, S., Borzacconi, A., Travan, L., Giostra, C.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PALEOPATHOLOGY. - ISSN 1879-9817. - 53:(2026), pp. 92-100. [10.1016/j.ijpp.2026.04.008]
She was not spared: Evidence of interpersonal violence on a Langobard female from the Ferrovia necropolis in Cividale, NE Italy (6th–7th century CE)
Lugli, Federico;Bernardini, Sara;
2026
Abstract
Objective: This study aims to document and contextualize cranial trauma attributable to interpersonal violence in one Langobard individual from the Ferrovia necropolis in Cividale del Friuli (NE Italy). Materials: The study examines one human skeleton: a middle-aged female dated between 590 and 630 CE. Methods: Osteological and palaeopathological analyses were conducted to assess trauma, age-at-death, and activity-related markers. Sex estimation was confirmed through amelogenin analysis. Results: The individual presents healed antemortem cranial lesions consistent with interpersonal violence: one sharp-force and one blunt-force. Conclusions: This case represents documented paleopathological evidence of interpersonal violence affecting a Langobard female. Significance: The finding challenges assumptions regarding the exclusively male nature of interpersonal violence in Langobard society and provides a rare bioarchaeological correlate to legal and historical sources acknowledging female involvement in violent contexts. Limitations: The identification of interpersonal violence is constrained by preservation biases and the limited visibility of soft-tissue injuries in the skeletal record. Moreover, the interpretation of interpersonal violence from the cranium only is limiting. Suggestions for further research: Future studies integrating palaeopathological, biomolecular, and contextual archaeological data across larger samples are needed to refine interpretations of violence and gender roles in Langobard populations.Pubblicazioni consigliate

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