American Journal of Physical Anthropology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Early medieval stone‐lined graves in Southern Germany: analysis of an emerging noble class

Andreas Rott

State Collection for Anthropology and Palaeoanatomy, SNSB, Munich, 80333 Germany

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Nils Turner

Department Biology I, Anthropology and Environmental History, LMU Munich, Planegg‐Martinsried, 82152 Germany

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Kristin von Heyking

AnthroArch GbR, Planegg, 82152 Germany

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Franziska Immler

AnthroArch GbR, Planegg, 82152 Germany

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Joris Peters

State Collection for Anthropology and Palaeoanatomy, SNSB, Munich, 80333 Germany

LMU Munich, Department of Veterinary Sciences, Institute of Palaeoanatomy, Domestication Research and History of Veterinary Medicine, Munich, 80539 Germany

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Jochen Haberstroh

Bavarian State Department of Monuments and Sites, Munich, 80539 Germany

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Michaela Harbeck

Corresponding Author

State Collection for Anthropology and Palaeoanatomy, SNSB, Munich, 80333 Germany

Correspondence Michaela Harbeck, State Collection for Anthropology and Palaeoanatomy, Karolinenplatz 2a, D‐80333 Munich, Germany. Email: michaela.harbeck@extern.lrz-muenchen.deSearch for more papers by this author
First published: 19 January 2017
Citations: 1
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Abstract

Objectives

Stone‐lined graves, which first appear in Bavarian territory during the 7th century AD, are assumed to be tombs of emerging nobility. While previous research on stone‐lined grave goods supports their status as elite burials, an important factor defining nobility—kinship—has not been examined so far.

Materials and methods

Morphological analysis of the commingled skeletal remains of 21 individuals from three archaeological sites was carried out. Radiocarbon dating was conducted on these individuals to gain information on usage intervals of these graves. To test whether stone‐lined graves can be considered family graves, analyses of mitochondrial HVR I, Y‐chromosomal and autosomal STRs were carried out.

Results

Morphological examination revealed a surplus of males buried in stone‐lined graves and radiocarbon dating points to usage of the tombs for several generations. According to aDNA analysis, kinship can be assumed both between and within stone‐lined graves.

Discussion

Taken together, these results hint at burials of family members with high social status being inhumed at the same site, in some cases even the same grave, for several generations. They also suggest, for the first time, that an early medieval linear cemetery was structured according to biological kinship.

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