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Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz
ISSN: 1678-8060 EISSN: 1678-8060
Vol. 101, Num. s2, 2006, pp. 129-132
Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz - Vol.101(Suppl. II) December 2006

Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Vol. 101,Suppl. II, October ,2006, pp.129-132

Symbolic trephinations and population structure

László Szathmáry+, Antónia Marcsik*

Department of Evolutionary Zoology and Human Biology, University of Debrecen, P.O.B. 3, Debrecen, H-4010 Hungary *Department of Anthropology, University of Szeged, Hungary
+Corresponding author: szathmary@tigris.klte.hu

Financial support: Széchenyi Terv no. 5/081

Received 20 July 2006
Accepted 16 October 2006

Code Number: oc06238

The sample examined consists of 19 skulls with symbolic trephinations and 86 skulls without trepanations dated from the X century. Skulls were all excavated in the Great Hungarian Plain in the Carpathian Basin, which was occupied by the Hungarian conquerors at the end of the IX century. The variations of 12 cranial dimensions of the trephined skulls were investigated and compared to the skulls without trepanations after performing a discriminant analysis. The classification results evince that the variability of non-trephined skulls shows a more homogeneous and a more characteristic picture of their own group than the trephined samples, which corresponds to the notion, formed by archaeological evidence and written historical sources, of a both ethnically and socially differing population of the Hungarian conquerors. According to historical research, a part of the population was of Finno-Ugric origin, while the military leading layer of society can be brought into connection with Turkic ethnic groups. All the same, individuals dug up with rich grave furniture and supposed to belong to this upper stratum of society are primarily characterized by the custom of symbolic trephination, and, as our results demonstrate, craniologically they seem to be more heterogeneous.

Key words: symbolic trephinations - exogamy - early Hungarians - Carpathian Basin

Archaeological evidence and written historical sources equally refer to an obvious ethnical and social differentiation in the Hungarian conquerors' population at the time when they migrated from the Eastern-European steppes into the Carpathian Basin in Central-Europe in 895 A.D. A part of the population was of Finno-Ugric origin, however, the military leading layer of society has most frequently been brought into connection with Turkic ethnic groups by historical research. Primarily the individuals who are supposed to belong to this upper stratum of society and were found with rich grave furniture are characterized by the custom of symbolic trephination (Dienes 1972) (Figs 1,2, 3, 4, 5).

The authors analyzed the variations of 12 cranial dimensions of all the skulls with symbolic trephinations excavated in the Great Hungarian Plain, an area that was occupied by the Hungarian conquerors at the earliest date, and afterwards they made a comparison of the skulls with symbolic trepanations and those without trephinations.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The sample examined came from the Great Hungarian Plain in the Carpathian Basin and consisted of the cranial finds of more than 600 individuals altogether. The number of skulls which could be reconstructed biometrically was 52 without and 14 with trephinations in the case of males, whereas in the case of females, these numbers were 34 and 5, respectively. That is, we were able to analyze 86 skulls without trephinations and 19 skulls with trephinations (Table I).

Adult skulls (23-x year) were examined according to 12 measurements:

(Key - v: variable; M: Martin's number; Martin 1928)
v1 maximum cranial length (Martin 1)
v2 nasion-basion length (M5)
v3 maximum cranial breadth (M8)
v4 minimum frontal breadth (M9)
v5 basio-bregmatic height (M17)
v6 porion-bregmatic height (M20)
v7 bizygomatic breadth (M45)
v8 upper facial height (M48)
v9 orbital breadth (M51)
v10 orbital height (M52)
v11 nasal breadth (M54)
v12 nasal height (M55).

On reconstructing the missing values (Dear 1959) the skulls with symbolic trephinations and the skulls without trephinations were compared by using a univariate U-test and a discriminant analysis in the SPSS PC+ programme.

RESULTS

On the basis of the univariate U-statistics, the difference between the two groups was remarkable. In the case of males the two extracted brain case dimensions of the skulls without trephinations were significantly greater than those of the skulls trephined symbolically (Table II).

In the case of females it was also the extracted variables (v3, v8, v2) that might be significantly discriminant (Table III).

The classification results of the discriminant analyses (Table IV) pointed out that the variability of the non-trephined skulls showed a more homogeneous and a more characteristic picture of their group than the trephined samples. Thus we can assume that the basic population may have been characterized by endogamy, while exogamy may have tended to gain ground among trephined individuals to a higher degree.

DISCUSSION

Different original variables were responsible for the segregation in either sex: the male skulls without trephinations measured longer and higher than the trephined skulls while the female non-trephined skulls were narrower with a lower face and with a shorter basicranium than the skulls with trephinations. On calculating the averages of the classification results of the two sexes, we could find that the identity of both groups was surprisingly high: 85% with the non-trephined skulls and 72% with the trephined ones. At the same time the frequency of overlapping between the groups was low: 15% with the non-trephined skulls and 28% with the trephined skulls.

These unexpected results refer to the fact that this special surgical custom may have functioned as a significant segregational factor either socially or ethnically in the population of X century Hungarians (c.f. Szathmáry 1980), and the custom of symbolic trepanation can be considered relevant to the extent of endogamy or exogamy.

In the XI century, when the population of the examined region were converted to Christianity, this tendency could not be observed as clearly as in the previous century (Szathmáry 1978, 1990). Thus, we can draw the conclusions that the interethnic connections between the various ethnic components of the early Hungarian population became intensive in the first century of Christianity in Hungary (i.e. in the XI century) as well as the custom of trephination was pushed into the background by Christianity for religious reasons.

REFERENCES

  • Dear RE 1959. Principal component missing data method for multiple regression models system. Development Corporation, Tech Rep SP.86.
  • Dienes I 1972. The Hungarians cross the Carpathians, Corvina, Budapest.
  • Martin R 1928. Lehrbuch der Anthropologie. 2. Band, 2. Auflage, Fischer, Jena.
  • Szathmáry L 1978. Population-dynamische Untersuchungen der Population in Ungarn im 6-12 Jh. Ann Mus Debre-ceniensis de Friderico Déri Nom 1977: 143-165.
  • Szathmáry L 1980. The anthropological aspects of the relations of the Hungarians and the Bolgar-Turks in the 9-11th century Carpathian Basin. Congr Quintus Internat Fenno-Ugristarum. Turku 2: 343.
  • Szathmáry L 1990. Demo-sociological change between the Pagan and the Early Christian Hungarians in the Upper Tisza region /NE Hungary. Congr Sept Internat Fenno-Ugristarum, Debrecen, Sess. Sect., D/I: 274-279.

Copyright 2006 Instituto Oswaldo Cruz - Fiocruz


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