Archaeologists working in western Slovakia did not expect the perimeter ditch of an early farming settlement to become one of Europe’s most unsettling burial puzzles. But as excavation layers were removed from the Neolithic site near modern-day Vráble, what emerged was not a typical cemetery. It was a boundary feature filled with disarticulated, headless human skeletons, at least 77 individuals so far, clustered in patterns that do not match conventional burial practices.
The ditch belonged to a settlement occupied between roughly 5250 and 4950 BC, part of the Linear Pottery cultural horizon that spread across Central Europe. At first glance, the remains suggest coordinated decapitation and disposal. However, the details complicate that interpretation. Cut marks appear on upper cervical vertebrae, not random trauma zones. Lower jaws are missing. In several cases, bodies appear placed carefully along ditch walls rather than dumped.
How 77 headless skeletons are distributed across the Neolithic ditch
The study published in Cambridge University Journals, titled ‘
Neolithic Bodies in Vráble – 7000 year-old Headless Human Skeletons in an Enclosed LBK Settlement in South–West Slovakia’, reveals the excavation at Vráble has been underway since 2022 along a roughly 1.3-kilometre perimeter feature that once enclosed one of three Neolithic neighbourhoods in the settlement. Within this boundary system, archaeologists have documented:
- At least 77 headless skeletons in one section of the ditch
- Four paired burials where two bodies were placed together
- One child's skeleton retained a skull, while nearby adults did not
- Clusters of remains are arranged in spatial groupings rather than random deposition
Bodies are not evenly scattered across the ditch. Instead, they appear in structured clusters, suggesting repeated acts governed by shared cultural rules rather than one-off violence.
Radiocarbon dating places the activity firmly in the early Neolithic farming period, when Europe was undergoing major shifts in settlement structure, land use, and social organisation.
Forensic evidence suggests post-mortem head removal
One of the most significant technical findings comes from osteological analysis of the cervical vertebrae. Researchers identified clean-cut marks consistent with sharp tools, likely stone blades typical of the period. However, there is no accompanying evidence of chaotic trauma, such as defensive injuries or widespread perimortem fractures.
In forensic archaeology, execution sites and ritual deposition sites leave very different signatures. Here, the absence of violence markers combined with careful disarticulation suggests post-mortem manipulation rather than killing at the ditch itself. In simpler terms, the heads were likely removed after death.
Why Neolithic communities focus on the head
The most striking feature of the Vráble remains is not only that heads are missing, but that they are archaeologically absent. No corresponding skull concentration has been identified nearby, which raises the possibility that they were transported, curated, or deposited elsewhere.
This pattern echoes other Neolithic sites where the skull was treated as distinct from the body. In some communities, skulls were plastered and painted. In others, they were handled repeatedly or displayed over time. What complicates the Vráble case is scale. Instead of a small number of curated skulls, the ditch contains dozens of systematically headless bodies. That suggests a community-wide practice rather than selective treatment of elite individuals.