Zürcher Nachrichten - Society centred around women in UK during Iron Age: scientists

EUR -
AED 4.333943
AFN 77.886842
ALL 96.792942
AMD 447.296501
ANG 2.112488
AOA 1082.159122
ARS 1713.458937
AUD 1.696407
AWG 2.124194
AZN 1.996602
BAM 1.947356
BBD 2.379383
BDT 144.483519
BGN 1.981838
BHD 0.444943
BIF 3498.430304
BMD 1.180108
BND 1.500606
BOB 8.192823
BRL 6.20808
BSD 1.181378
BTN 108.03203
BWP 15.549237
BYN 3.382732
BYR 23130.117712
BZD 2.375908
CAD 1.613538
CDF 2543.133159
CHF 0.919263
CLF 0.025867
CLP 1021.391854
CNY 8.197621
CNH 8.187991
COP 4274.41035
CRC 586.16336
CUC 1.180108
CUP 31.272863
CVE 110.782636
CZK 24.314731
DJF 209.728756
DKK 7.46822
DOP 74.287605
DZD 153.336689
EGP 55.568333
ERN 17.701621
ETB 183.211244
FJD 2.604026
FKP 0.861189
GBP 0.863178
GEL 3.180407
GGP 0.861189
GHS 12.928055
GIP 0.861189
GMD 86.725765
GNF 10327.125434
GTQ 9.064695
GYD 247.168748
HKD 9.216882
HNL 31.213903
HRK 7.536877
HTG 154.830622
HUF 380.943748
IDR 19785.927529
ILS 3.659326
IMP 0.861189
INR 106.761956
IQD 1546.531595
IRR 49712.051645
ISK 145.200535
JEP 0.861189
JMD 185.488081
JOD 0.836727
JPY 183.523283
KES 152.387676
KGS 103.200652
KHR 4750.534523
KMF 493.285478
KPW 1062.097242
KRW 1711.664242
KWD 0.362458
KYD 0.984473
KZT 596.578289
LAK 25366.422407
LBP 100958.242999
LKR 365.838373
LRD 219.499673
LSL 19.011247
LTL 3.484552
LVL 0.713836
LYD 7.458173
MAD 10.808314
MDL 20.001122
MGA 5251.480408
MKD 61.658671
MMK 2478.210923
MNT 4206.642931
MOP 9.503692
MRU 47.121434
MUR 53.872178
MVR 18.232606
MWK 2049.847706
MXN 20.52202
MYR 4.671456
MZN 75.231947
NAD 19.011085
NGN 1641.53047
NIO 43.30141
NOK 11.441467
NPR 172.851978
NZD 1.962741
OMR 0.453763
PAB 1.181383
PEN 3.972238
PGK 5.001318
PHP 69.531845
PKR 330.135697
PLN 4.221949
PYG 7854.940943
QAR 4.297069
RON 5.095943
RSD 117.395934
RUB 90.220397
RWF 1714.696992
SAR 4.425624
SBD 9.50943
SCR 16.816716
SDG 709.838278
SEK 10.571614
SGD 1.500395
SHP 0.885387
SLE 28.883091
SLL 24746.274816
SOS 674.433345
SRD 44.873592
STD 24425.853934
STN 25.077296
SVC 10.337309
SYP 13051.493324
SZL 19.011467
THB 37.149753
TJS 11.033804
TMT 4.142179
TND 3.36036
TOP 2.841417
TRY 51.311217
TTD 7.998387
TWD 37.281027
TZS 3054.698637
UAH 50.877442
UGX 4219.703348
USD 1.180108
UYU 45.831275
UZS 14456.323222
VES 436.394019
VND 30706.41137
VUV 140.617793
WST 3.199014
XAF 653.152601
XAG 0.014267
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.189301
XCG 2.129068
XDR 0.810988
XOF 650.832122
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.308231
ZAR 18.963758
ZMK 10622.392479
ZMW 23.184454
ZWL 379.994309
  • RIO

    1.4900

    92.52

    +1.61%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.6600

    84.61

    -0.78%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.75

    -0.04%

  • BTI

    0.3100

    60.99

    +0.51%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    16.7

    +4.19%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.08

    +0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    25.83

    -0.12%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    52.47

    +1.66%

  • BCC

    0.9400

    81.75

    +1.15%

  • BP

    -0.1800

    37.7

    -0.48%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    35.53

    -0.76%

  • AZN

    1.3100

    188.41

    +0.7%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.15

    +0.53%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    14.91

    +1.74%

Society centred around women in UK during Iron Age: scientists
Society centred around women in UK during Iron Age: scientists / Photo: BEN STANSALL - AFP/File

Society centred around women in UK during Iron Age: scientists

Scientists analysing 2,000-year-old DNA have revealed that a Celtic society in the southern UK during the Iron Age was centred around women, backing up accounts from Roman historians, a study said Wednesday.

Text size:

When historians such as Tacitus and Cassius wrote about Rome conquering Britain from around AD 44 to 84, they described women holding positions of power.

These include the famous warrior queen Boudica, who started an uprising against Roman occupation, sacking and burning several cities including Londinium -- which would one day become London. There was also Cartimandua, the 1st-century queen of the Brigantes people in northern England.

Julius Caesar, in his account of the Gallic Wars written more than more than century earlier, also described Celtic women participating in public affairs, exercising political influence -- and having more than one husband.

"When the Romans arrived, they were astonished to find women occupying positions of power," said Miles Russell, an archaeologist at Bournemouth University and co-author of the new study in Nature.

Some had doubted these accounts, suggesting "that the Romans exaggerated the liberties of British women to paint a picture of an untamed society," he told AFP.

"But archaeology, and now genetics, implies women were influential in many spheres of Iron Age life," he said.

"Indeed, it is possible that maternal ancestry was the primary shaper of group identities."

- Men moved on, women stayed put -

For the study, the team of researchers analysed more than 50 genomes extracted from burial sites in the village of Winterborne Kingston in southern England's Dorset county, which was populated before and after the Roman conquest.

Iron Age cemeteries with well-preserved burial sites are rare in Britain, perhaps because the dead were often cremated, stripped of their flesh and organs, or simply "deposited in wetlands", the researchers wrote.

However the Durotriges tribe, which occupied the southern central coastal region of England between 100 BC and AD 100 -- and gave their name to Dorset -- were an exception, burying their dead in cemeteries.

Excavations carried out at these sites since 2009 had already yielded some clues about the high social status women held in the tribe.

The "well-appointed graves across the Dorset Iron Age" containing drinking vessels, mirrors, beads and other goods were all female -- except for one that included a sword, said Russell, who led the excavations.

The DNA analysis showed that most of the people buried at the site were related through their maternal line, going "back to a single woman, who would have lived centuries before", said lead study author Lara Cassidy of Trinity College Dublin.

However there were almost no connections down the paternal line.

"This tells us that husbands moved to join their wives' communities upon marriage, with land potentially passed down through the female line," Cassidy said in a statement.

Societies centred around women -- which ethnographers call a "matrilocality" -- are rare throughout this period of history.

Yet the researchers trawled through previous research and "found signatures of matrilocality in a number of cemeteries across Britain dating to the Middle and Late Iron Age," from around 400 BC onwards, Cassidy said.

"However, it is quite possible this system was also common in the early Iron Age or perhaps even earlier."

R.Bernasconi--NZN