Iron Age Britain: Women Central, DNA Confirms Archaeology

A scientific study with important implications for archaeology in Britain and France was published last week. Using ancient DNA analysis and testing, a team led by Dr Lara Cassidy and Professor Daniel Bradley from Trinity College Dublin successfully demonstrated that iron age people who were buried in Dorset from 100BC to AD100 practised matrilocality.

Author

  • Rachel Pope

    Reader in European Prehistory, Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology, University of Liverpool

This is where women from a community remain with their family group, or at least are buried with them, and take a partner from an outside group. Meanwhile, the men from that same community join another group when they find a partner. An alternative pattern, practised on Early Bronze Age Orkney , is patrilocality, where the men stay put and it is women who instead move into other groups.

The new findings come from individuals buried at the late iron age cemetery of Winterborne Kingston in Dorset . It's an excellent piece of science, born from one of the UK's leading research excavations, the Durotriges project of the University of Bournemouth. The Durotriges were a late iron age group that lived in what is mostly now Dorset and parts of southern Wiltshire.

Not only did the Trinity team establish that the society in question was matrilocal, they also showed that there was matrilineal descent, which is where women stay in the community and pass their genes on to the next generation. Most of the Winterborne Kingston individuals could trace their maternal line of descent back to a single woman, who lived centuries before. However, the male lines of descent were very diverse, reflecting new, unrelated males coming into the community.

While some of the press coverage about the new research portrayed the findings as a surprise, archaeologists were far from shocked. Headlines suggesting that this was the first evidence of its kind, failed to convey the fact that female-focused social structures have previously been suggested for some iron age groups by archaeologists - and for some time.

The wider debate

In the 1860s, Swiss anthropologist Johann Bachofen theorised from the information available to him at the time that there was a move from a matriarchal, or a female-led society, to a patriarchal society only by the time of ancient Greece, meaning during the 1st millennium BC, equivalent to the iron age period in western Europe, which ran from 800BC to AD43.

In the US, anthropologist Lewis Morgan, writing in the 1870s, broadly accepted Bachofen's proposal also supporting this later development of patriarchal norms. He again placed such norms relatively late, in late iron age Germany and Rome.

By the 1880s, these ideas were rejected by what the German scholar Friedrich Engels would later call "chauvinstically inclined English anthropologists". These anthropologists preferred what Engels believed was the "completely mistaken" theory of John Ferguson McLellan - a contemporary Scottish amateur, trained in law and mathematics - who believed that patriarchy was the natural order , existing much earlier than even ancient Greece, a position that was legitimised using evolutionary theory.

In the 1970s, Lithuanian archaeologist Marija Gimbutas proposed that the social structure of the Neolithic Balkans (from around 6,300BC until about 5,000BC) was matrilineal and matriarchal, based on her analysis of the archaeology, including the high number of female figurines. Gimbutas was very heavily critiqued by English archaeology and her work is only recently being revisited.

Critically, this eastern European work contradicted the contemporary idea, formulated at the University of Cambridge, that patriarchy instead began in the Neolithic. The Cambridge idea, building out of a theoretical link suggested by Engels, was that patriarchy was tied to agricultural production. Nonetheless, recent ancient DNA work is now revealing patrilineal descent for some Neolithic groups in Britain. The error perhaps was in believing that this was a single event, in a linear, evolutionary understanding of humanity through time.

Similarly in European iron age studies, following the 1953-56 discovery of the extraordinarily high-status Vix and Hohmichele burials - early iron age women in France and Germany - European archaeologists again began to consider the possibility of matrilineal society in early iron age Europe. The first to suggest this was the German archaeologist, Ludwig Pauli, in his 1972 discussion of the early iron age burials of northern Württemberg, in south-west Germany.

Subsequently, the suggestion of matriarchal iron age society came from French archaeologist Pierre Roualet, in his 1997 discussion of the early La Tène communities, of around 450 BC, in Champagne, where very high wealth again sits with the female burials. Yet contemporary work in the UK focused on male "warrior" burials and romantic narratives of warrior society.

As archaeology moved into big data analysis in the 1990s, UCL archaeologist Roy Hodson published his seriation (analysing a group of archaeological finds) for the discoveries from the early iron age Hallstatt graves in Austria in 1990, showing that men and women had equal apex high-status. In 2004, Thomas Evans published his analysis of early La Tène burials in the Paris basin showing at least equal high social-status between men and women, as a further apex high-status woman was excavated near the Heuneberg in Germany.

In 2011, my own analysis of the middle iron age burials in Britain revealed equal treatment and access to high-status goods for men and women, with elder status more important socially than gender. At this time, the first of a series of osteological reports (the scientific study of human bone) began to suggest that some women in Britain had physically fought against Rome, interestingly enough in the late iron age of Dorset.

In 2012, Professor Melanie Giles, from the University of Manchester, published her unparalleled analysis of middle iron age Yorkshire burials , showing that some cemeteries were organised around larger, female founder burials. In 2018, I demonstrated the presence of female lineages in the early iron age record from France , as Caroline Trémeaud's big-data analysis of burials from the North Alpine region again revealed consistent high levels of female burial wealth.

Of course, we must remain clear that grave wealth may not equate to leadership, and archaeologists remain critical about that link. Yet, we do find some mention of female leadership in the classical texts.

Roman texts mention that women in Britain inherited wealth, led battles and engaged in polyandry (having more than one male partner) rather than a strict marriage system. We hear of female political leaders, Boudica and Cartimandua . Further back, the ancient Greek texts tell us of the German La Téne female leader, Onomaris. The Greek philosopher Plutarch mentions that Celtic women acted as political judiciary and the ancient Greek geographer Strabo reported that among the Celts, women's and men's tasks "have been exchanged".

However, such texts were rejected in the later 20th century as attempts by the authors to "barbarianise" and exoticise the people of western Europe, which worked well alongside the contemporary theory that patriarchy began in the Neolithic.

So, for archaeologists, the possibility of matrilocality is not shocking, and late iron age Dorset was probably not the first example of this. The archaeology of the Celts increasingly demonstrates variations in social norms, even between neighbouring regions. The science of ancient DNA can now work to test further groups, helping us to build a more complete picture of social structure in the past - perhaps returning to early scholarship, before it was set off course by evolutionary theories in amateur anthropology.

The Conversation

Rachel Pope does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

/Courtesy of The Conversation. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).