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.
Saccheri, P., Borzacconi, A., Giostra, C., She was not spared: Evidence of interpersonal violence on a Langobard female from the Ferrovia necropolis in Cividale, NE Italy (6th–7th century CE), <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PALEOPATHOLOGY>>, 2026; (53): 92-100. [doi:10.1016/j.ijpp.2026.04.008] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/341241]
She was not spared: Evidence of interpersonal violence on a Langobard female from the Ferrovia necropolis in Cividale, NE Italy (6th–7th century CE)
Giostra, Caterina
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.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



