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The horrifying archaeology of the first wars

The earliest wars weren't chaotic skirmishes — they were organized, ideological conflicts. Stefan Milo makes this case using evidence from Spanish cave paintings and burial sites that most people have never seen.

The Art of War

Deep in a rock shelter on Spain's Mediterranean coast, a prehistoric painting captures something unmistakable: at least 29 figures on two sides launching arrows at each other. Their legs outstretched, leaping into combat. Someone leaps backward, firing their bow. It's dramatic — perhaps the most dramatic day of their entire lives.

The horrifying archaeology of the first wars

This is Les Dog in the Castillion region of Spain. The paintings were made during the Iberian Neolithic period, roughly 8,000 to 4,500 years ago. They hang beneath a rock overhang high above the valley floor, virtually invisible after thousands of years of exposure to the elements — but still visible today thanks to modern scanning technology.

The artwork from this region is called Levantine art (which simply means "eastern" art). The battle scenes are remarkable. In one painting at Quaver Mela, fighters leap into action with such intensity that archaeologists describe it as feeling like you can see into the past. This scene became so famous it was printed on a Spanish stamp.

Another panel shows what archaeologists interpret as an ambush — smaller figures surrounding larger ones in the middle. A larger figure may represent a chief or big man, similar to how Terra Cotta warriors depicted rank: higher status meant larger depiction.

Most macabre is a painting of 11 people standing with a lone individual on the ground, arrows sticking out of him. What did he do? What taboo did he break? These are questions that can never be answered, but the event clearly demanded commemoration — perhaps marking the final moment of a battle or execution.

Other panels show figures marching together, bows raised, possibly in formation or ceremony. One hunting scene depicts people leaping around a boar with an arrow sticking out of it, another possibly dead on the floor. The composition captures chaos and fear: the boar charging, humans running away.

Bodies in the Cave

The paintings alone would be remarkable. But archaeologists found something far more visceral at San Juan anti-orium latinum — a rock shelter in northern Spain where remains of at least 338 individuals were unearthed, jumbled together so deeply that it's impossible to identify all remains accurately.

Of those that could be identified, 70% were males or young males — the demographic participating in warfare. Among them: 52 flint arrowheads, 64 blades, two polished stone axes, three pebbles, five bones, and personal ornaments. These weren't grave goods; these were weapons that killed people.

The arrowheads all show impact damage. But here's what haunts researchers: 59 of 107 cranial injuries were healed. Many of these people had been in conflict before — this was not their first battle.

"81% of the healed wounds were on male bodies, showing a real gender divide between who is participating in this conflict."

Truly organized war seems to have emerged during the Neolithic period — but wars impact all of society. Among the remains, archaeologists identified at least 34 women and 64 children.

The broader societal impacts are visible in the bones themselves. Thirty-six percent of people showed cribra orbitalia — a condition that becomes porous from trauma, particularly starvation and food insecurity. Of 64 children, 39 had it. This was a community in trouble for a very long time. People lived hard lives.

Weapons of the Neolithic

Archaeologists found remarkably preserved weapons at another site: 6,000-year-old arrows made of reeds and olivewood — lightweight, straight, abundant resources. Arrowheads were tied to shafts using birch tar. Three fragments of twisted fiber believed to be bow strings were found, made from the sinews of goats, deer, and pigs.

No bow was recovered at this site, but one was found in Catalonia: approximately 1 meter long and made of yew — the same wood that English longbows used in the medieval period.

Why War Changes Everything

Why does warfare increase during the Neolithic? The logic isn't difficult. Farming ties people very closely to a specific piece of land. There's no more roaming the landscape freely. You're on a specific piece for at least an entire year, and this encourages people to feel protective of that land — real ownership.

Creating resources in one place also incentivizes raiding. If you don't have enough food, your neighboring village has food too. And with sedentary farming societies, inequality arises easily through unequal access to land, grain, and animals.

This seems to have led to the creation of true wars — organized conflicts driven by ideology rather than just individual squabbles.

Counterpoints

Critics might note that interpreting art as evidence of organized warfare requires assumptions about what the paintings represent. Some archaeologists argue battle scenes could be hunting rituals, ceremonial performances, or symbolic narratives rather than literal documentation. The physical remains at San Juan are ambiguous — 338 people buried together could reflect disease, ritual sacrifice, or conflict, but it's difficult to distinguish between these explanations with certainty.

Bottom Line

The strongest part of Milo's argument is the combination of visual evidence (paintings showing clear battle scenes) and physical evidence (weapons that killed people, skeletal remains showing healed injuries). This suggests organized warfare was real. The biggest vulnerability: the interpretation relies on circumstantial links rather than definitive proof — we cannot confirm these paintings depict actual events or that all the burial sites represent war casualties. But the pattern across both art and archaeology is compelling. If you're interested in how humans became who they are, this is where it started.

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The horrifying archaeology of the first wars

by Stefan Milo · Stefan Milo · Watch video

I want to show you this truly incredible prehistoric painting. This is a prehistoric battle scene. There's no other way to say it. It's obviously a genuine battle.

At least 29 people in two sides launching arrow after arrow at each other. It's such a dramatic scene. You can you can so easily see the energy in it. Their legs outstretched as they leap into combat.

Someone up here leaping backwards, firing their bow. It's dramatic. This was probably the most dramatic day of their entire lives. It's from Les Dog in the Spanish region of Castillion on Spain's Mediterranean coast.

A beautiful region, rolling hills, picturesque villages. Definitely a bit Scorchio too, probably. >> Scorchio >> looks absolutely roasting. They were painted under the overhang of this rock shelter high above the valley floor.

Today they're practically invisible after being, exposed to the elements for thousands of years. Fortunately, we live at the perfect time. They haven't quite faded. And we've also invented the camera and scanning technology to really bring out this forgotten battle, bring out all the details.

This painting dates to the Iberian Neolithic period. So about 8,000 years ago to 4 5,000 years ago, something like that. A time of huge societal change. Farming had been introduced.

Now that people were more tied to the land, other things started happening like huge communal monuments were being built, some to house your family, others to track the movements of the stars and provide a stage for all your rituals and beliefs. And if this artwork is anything to go by, the first wars, true wars were being waged. I know war might feel like a bit of a clickbait term because, it's more than just a scuffle, right? A kathuffle.

It's it implies organization. There's ideological motives behind it. Things like that. It's it's it's organized, isn't it?

But in this region of Spain at this time, I believe we absolutely have evidence of that. Today, we're going to look at all of that from the paintings, the preserved remains of bows, the aftermath of these battles, and what it says about society at this time. It's truly the evidence here is like nowhere else in the world. I think YouTube moderators, of course, no graphic footage will be shown.

This is all educational. All stuff derived from academic resources. And yeah, it's absolutely crazy. Super ...