Ian Armit. Headhunting and the body in Iron Age Europe.
Rebay-Salisbury, Katharina
Ian Armit. Headhunting and the body in Iron Age Europe. xii+260
pages, 86 illustrations, 5 tables. 2012. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press; 9780-521-87756-5 hardback 60[pounds sterling].
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Today, 'headhunting' is a term more often used in
employment recruiting than in later prehistoric archaeology. Ian
Armit's book, however, makes a convincing case that societies in
Iron Age Europe did indeed engage in practices for which
'headhunting' is an appropriate description. The opening
chapter of the book defines the vocabulary used and clarifies the
meaning of headhunting, head veneration, cosmology, religion, ideology
and ritual violence. Armit defines headhunting as "a form of
group-sanctioned, ritualised violence, in which the removal of the human
head plays a central role" (p. 11).
That Iron Age societies have emphasised the human head in art and
ritual practice is of course not news; it has traditionally been
explained in terms of a Europe-wide 'head-cult' characteristic
of the Celts. Taking Classical as well as Irish and Welsh literary
sources into account, Armit critically reviews the history of this
interpretation, contextualises the sources and explains how they relate
to each other.
Armit's digest of the anthropological literature on
headhunting with examples ranging from Amazonia to Indonesia is clearly
written by an archaeologist for archaeologists in that he considers how
the ethnographic evidence would be reflected in the archaeological
record. It is a refreshing stance, which takes old ethnographies
seriously while taking care to retain the historical trajectories from
which the practice of headhunting arises. More often than not,
headhunting happens in times of political uncertainty and change, but
rarely is headhunting just a byproduct of war: recurrent beliefs all
over the world associate the taking of heads with concerns about group
cohesion, aspects of power and fertility. A central problem of
interpreting the archaeological evidence for the curation, display,
representation and deposition of heads is the difficulty of
differentiating whether the human remains belong to the in-group or the
out-group, if they are closer to being ancestors or enemies.
Particularly interesting are examples where artistic representations of
heads come to replace "the real thing'--this is a topic that
could have been explored in greater depth.
Whilst Armit starts almost every chapter in this book with ah
example of noteworthy depositions of human remains from the British
Isles, his main evidence is located in southern France. Ritual sites
such as Roquepertuse, but also the Sculptor's Cave in Scotland and
Trou de Han in Belgium, are described in quite some detail. The author
succeeds in evoking a mystical atmosphere through drawing on sensual
aspects of the sites.
The core of the book is a detailed account of the Provencal sites
and stone monuments of Roquepertuse and Entremont. Pillars with
superimposed, carved heads from Entremont, Badasset and the sanctuary at
the source of the Seine form his main argument for a link between head
cult and fertility. The warrior statues of Entremont, sitting
cross-legged, with several severed heads on the lap, paint the most
graphic picture of what headhunting actually must have looked like.
The development of the sanctuary of Roquepertuse is tackled in
considerable detail, as it is probably the best understood in this
region. It is set in the context of the rise and fall of the Saluvii and
explained by political power struggles at the fringes of the
Graeco-Roman world. Pillars and lintels with niches to display human
heads have sparked the imagination of generations of researchers, but
this particular incarnation of the sanctuary seems to have been
surprisingly short-lived. It was not, however, the only one of its kind,
and Armit marshals the less well known evidence from the region to
strengthen his arguments.
Disappointingly Armit's Europe does not extend much further
east than France. Well-known sites like La Tene, Manching and Basel
Gasfabrik are mentioned just once (p. 196), whilst evidence further east
is ignored entirely. The pre-Roman Nesactium, Croatia, for instance,
revealed intriguing fragments of stone sculpture (including a
Janus-head) dating to the sixth century BC (Mladin 1966; Fischer 1984).
The recently excavated and not yet fully published excavations at
Frauenberg near Leibnitz and Roseldorf, both in Austria (Tiefengraber
& Grill 2008; Holzer 2008), are just two examples of late La Tene
sanctuaries in which the role of human skulls and other fragments of the
human body may be further explored. It is probably true that the
archaeology of southern France paints the clearest picture of the story
Armit wants to tell, but it remains unclear if this can be extrapolated
to the rest of Iron Age Europe, or what alternative models in other
regions could add to his interpretation.
The final chapter ventures into fashionable themes in studies of
the human body--the boundaries of humans and animals, hybridity,
fragmentation and personhood. This chapter appears to have been written
as ah afterthought, and could have been better integrated with the
examples described in this book. A lot more could have been said about
these important issues. Nevertheless Armit's book is well worth
reading. It is well written, describes the southern French examples in
detail, adds some valuable insights into other selected sites in western
Europe, and lays out the arguments without presupposing too much
knowledge. His clear, colourful writing style, supported by sufficient
black-and-white drawings and photographs, makes the book accessible to a
wide audience.
References
Fischer, J. 1984. Die vorromischen Skulpturen von Nesactium.
Hamburger Beitrage zur Archaologie 11: 9-98.
Holzer, V. 2008. Der keltische Kultbezirk in Roseldorf/Sandberg
(Niederosterreich), in E. Lauermann & P. Trebsche (ed.) Heiligtumer
der Druiden: Opfer und Rituale bei den Kelten. Aktuelle
Forschungsbeitrage zur Sonderausstellung ira Museum fur Urgeschichte des
Landes Niederosterreich in Asparn/Zaya vom 23. April bis 30. November
2008 (Katalog des Niederosterreichischen Landesmuseums N.F. 474): 32-49.
Asparn an der Zaya: Museum fur Urgeschichte des Landes Niederosterreich.
Mladin, J. 1966. Umjetnicki spomenici prahistorijskog Nezakcija.
Pula: Arheoloski muzej Istre.
Tiefengraber, G. & C. GRILL. 2008. Das keltische Heiligtum auf
den Perl-/Stadlackern am Frauenberg bei Leibnitz (Steiermark), in E.
Lauermann & P. Trebsche (ed.) Heiligtumer der Druiden: Opfer und
Rituale bei den Kelten. Aktuelle Forschungsbeitrage zur
Sonderausstellung ira Museum fur Urgeschichte des Landes
Niederosterreich in Asparn/Zaya vom 23. April bis 30. November 2008
(Katalog des Niederosterreichischen Landesmuseums N.E 474): 90-103.
Asparn an der Zaya: Museum fur Urgeschichte des Landes Niederosterreich.
Katharina Rebay-Salisbury
School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester,
UK
(Email:
[email protected])