A Neolithic mass grave containing over 500 individuals shows evidence of systematic butcherings and possible ritual cannibalism — one of the most gruesome archaeological sites in Europe, and almost no one has heard of it.
The Linear Pottery Culture
The people responsible for this site belonged to the Linear Pottery Culture (LBK), a farming civilization that swept across Central Europe around 5,500 to 4,500 BCE. These were Europe's first farmers, descending from agricultural communities that had spread north from Anatolia and southern Greece.
The LBK culture stretched from northern Serbia into Germany, France, Belgium, and the Netherlands — a vast territory. But these early farmers weren't scattered randomly across the land. They concentrated along riverbanks where the soil was richest, building long timber-framed houses and villages that could grow surprisingly large. One site in Slovakia called Răbble contained 313 longhouses and was occupied for two to three centuries.
For many modern people, this conjures an image of a peaceful pastoral past — a return to simple living close to nature. But evidence suggests the reality was far more violent.
Evidence of Violence
Archaeologists have uncovered multiple LBK sites showing clear signs of conflict. The most famous is Talheim in Germany, about 70 kilometers from Herxheim. Found in 1983, it contained remains of 34 people — nine men, seven women, and sixteen children. Signs of violence were written all over the bodies.
In Austria, the village of Schlutz revealed an enclosed LBK settlement surrounded by parallel ditches. The outer ditch held the remains of at least 67 people. Of the 22 younger adults identified (ages 20 to 40), there was a striking imbalance: seventeen male remains but only five female. The bones showed no burial — they were left exposed, disturbed by animals. A DNA study revealed these individuals didn't appear to be close relatives, which raises troubling questions about who these people were and why they ended up in the pit.
Another site in Killian, Germany yielded twenty-six people from a death pit. Their long bones were deliberately broken — a pattern of violence that continues across multiple LBK sites.
Herxheim: The Worst Site
But none of these compare to Herxheim. Discovered during industrial construction work, archaeologists found an LBK village roughly 250 by 230 meters, surrounded by what they initially thought was an enclosure but later realized was a series of overlapping pits.
The human bones emerged in staggering numbers — at minimum, 500 people excavated from just under half the pits. And researchers haven't even finished excavating. The total could easily exceed 1,000 individuals.
These people were eaten. The human remains show identical treatment to animal remains — butchered in ways that allowed someone to get at their meat.
The rib bones and long bones showed careful separation. The skull caps were carefully removed — a common treatment of bodies at Herxheim. Alongside the human remains lay broken pottery fragments, some arriving from as far away as 450 kilometers based on flint studies.
What Happened Here?
The evidence points to something more complex than a simple battle aftermath. First: were conflicts in this period capable of marshaling hundreds or even a thousand people? That seems high for early farming communities.
But the most disturbing clue is that these individuals appear to have been eaten. The treatment mirrors exactly what was done to animal remains — butchered, separated, processed for consumption. This wasn't a plague pit or a burial ground. Something else was happening.
The leading hypotheses suggest either captives from war being brought back to Herxheim from long distances, or people willingly traveling there to participate in cannibalistic rituals. The evidence doesn't support one single event — the numbers accumulated over perhaps fifty years based on dating overlaps — but it also wasn't a site occupied for centuries. Something more systematic was occurring.
Why Was This Happening?
The violence appears to have intensified toward the end of the LBK period. Genetic and isotope studies reveal something crucial: in LBK villages, men were much more closely related than women. The pattern suggests men stayed put while women moved between communities.
Here's what this means: early LBK farmers could expand along rivers into sparsely populated areas. But after centuries of growth, the prime riverbank land started filling up. By the end of the period, expansion options had dried up entirely. Where do you go when every river is full?
The hypothesis suggests population pressure on limited farmland created intense competition — and possibly ritualized violence to control resources or people.
Counterpoints
Critics might argue that interpreting these sites as evidence of ritual cannibalism relies heavily on speculation about ideology and practice we can't fully verify. The evidence could equally represent post-battle treatment of captives, social customs we don't fully understand, or simply poor preservation creating misleading patterns. We can rarely settle such debates with the available evidence.
Bottom Line
The LBK culture was one of Europe's earliest farming societies — a foundational civilization that built villages and spread agriculture across the continent. But evidence from Herxheim suggests this peaceful agricultural past was shadowed by violence so systematic it involved ritualized treatment of human bodies. The most shocking claim isn't that prehistoric people fought — it's that some communities apparently processed their enemies like livestock, possibly to feed rituals or control territory. Our romanticized view of early farming life is badly in need of revision.