Beating ploughshares back into swords: warfare in the Linearbandkeramik.

Authors: Mark Golitko and Lawrence H. Keeley
Date: June 2007
From: Antiquity(Vol. 81, Issue 312)
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Document Type: Article
Length: 5,426 words
Abstract :

Armed with a number of powerful arguments, the authors invite us to face up to the evidence for violence in early Neolithic Europe. Linearbandkeramik (LBK) people first attacked the hunter-gatherers they encountered and then entered a period of increasingly violent warfare against each other, culminating in an intense struggle in the area of central and western Germany. The building of fortifications, physical mutilation and cannibalism, while no doubt enacted with ritual airs, nevertheless had their context and purpose in the slaughter of enemies. Keywords: Europe, Neolithic, LBK, fortification, warfare, mutilation, cannibalism
Source Citation
Golitko, Mark, and Lawrence H. Keeley. "Beating ploughshares back into swords: warfare in the Linearbandkeramik." Antiquity, vol. 81, no. 312, June 2007, pp. 332+. link.gale.com/apps/doc/A166308353/AONE?u=gale&sid=bookmark-AONE. Accessed 23 June 2026.
  

Gale Document Number: GALE|A166308353