Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve 13 (1968) (Pécs, 1971)

Régészet - K. Zoffmann, Zs.: An Anthropological Study of the Neolithic Cemetery at Villánykövesd (Lengyel Culture), Hungary

ANTHROPOLOGICAL STUDY 31 Among the anatomical variations observed in the studied material, the frequent occurrence of the crowdedness and the resultant rotation of teeth is rather striking: establishable in 6 cases out of the 8 suitable for such investiga­tion. The 4.55 per cent caries-intensity should be yet mentioned in connection with the teeth; caries occured in every case on the neck of the molars. By a comparison of the metric and morpho­logical data, it can be established that the osteological material of Villánykövesd is rather homogenous, except for some smaller individual deviations (the skeleton of grave 24. may rep­resent such an exception). All the skulls are dolichocranial, orthohypsicranial, imetrio-acro­cranial. The low forehead, the elongately and flatly curving vertex, the lambdoid flatness, and the curvoccipital occiput are invariably well observable. The shape of the skulls in norma verticalis is a narrower to wider penta­gonoid, in norma occipitalis they are house­shaped. The face is narrow, medium high, and rather angular owing to the comparatively slight bizygomatic breadth and the expressed­ness of the angulus mandibulae. The orbita are low, the nose wide. The position of the faciès malaris is in every case temporal, and a smaller to greater rate of alveolar prognathism san be observed on every skull. The skeletal bones are rather robust in both sexes; the average stature of the males is about 164 cm (n = 8, M = 163.88, s = 3.40, V = 157—167), that of the females 148 cm (n = 3, M = 148.33). The above characteristics agree with those of the »gerontomorphous Mediterraneans« des­cribed by J. L. ANGEL (1951, 6—7). The more robust gerontomorphous Mediterra­nean type (whose more or less diverging va­rieties are listed in literature as Atlanto-Medi­terranean, Proto-Mediterranean, Palaeo-Medi­terranean, Megalith type, Basic White, Eurafri­can type), sharply delimitable from the gracile Mediterranean, occurred regularly in the early period south-east of the Northwest Anatolia and Mesopotamia, but finds deriving from the Neo­lithic — Aeneolithic periods, relegable to the Atlanto-, and Proto-Mediterranean types, res­pectively appeared in the Carpathian Basin and the neighbouring areas too. The temporal as well as spatial, nearest occurence of this type to Villánykövesd is in the osteological material from the site Lengyel (Hungary) also belonging to the Lengyel culture (VIRCHOW 1890; MA­LÁN 1929; NEMESKÉRI 1961). According to NEMESKÉRI (1961, 42) the Atlanto-Mediterra­nean type occurred also in the eastern half of the Carpathian Basin, at Tiszapolgár—Basata­nya, belonging to the Tiszolpolgár culture from the Early Copper Age. The Atlanto-Mediterra­nean type predominates in the Neolithic Ha­mangia culture in Dobruj a, Rumania (NECRA­SOV — CRISTESCU 1965, 134—136); which culture, according to the archeological investi­gations, is — similarly to the Lengyel culture — of a southern origin. 2 There is a single significant deviation in the homogeneous material from Villánykövesd, in the case of grave 24. If the diagnosis of hydro­cephaly is accepted, then, on the basis of both the morphological characteristics and the length and hight measurements, also this skull can be relegated to the originally dolichocranial, ge­rontomorphous Mediterranean group. Otherwise — acting on the brachycrany caused by the extraordinary breadth of the skull — an inter­mingling of the basically Mediterranean with some brachycranial type is to be inferred. The Central European occurrence of the brachycra­nial element in the Neolith — Aeneolith Periods is comparatively frequent (NECRASOV — CRISTESCU 1959; GHQCHOL 1964; NEMES­KÉRI 1951), and thus its appearance in the anthropologically hardly invenstigated early pe­riods of Transdanubia is also possible. At the same time, and according to certain other theo­ries, brachycephalisation might have been brought about also by Cro Magnonian influen­ces (KURTH 1958); in this case, the effects of the Cro Magnonian type population of the Li­near Pottery culture (NEMESKÉRI 1961,. 40— 41), autochtonous in the Neolithic Age of the Transdanubia, are to be assumed. * * * As a summary, it may be established that the osteological material, deriving from the ceme­tery at Villánykövesd relegable to the Neo­lithic Lengyel culture of a southern origin, dis­plays relationships of a southern orientation with the gerontomorphous Mediterranean type. The anthropological material obtained from the other site of the Lengyel culture (Lengyel) ex­hibits similar characteristics. The very fragmen­tary materials of the two localities are, owing to the merely partially excavated cemeteries, devoid of any representative character and so their more or less homogeneous state is still 2 Extensive morphological similarity can be es­tablished also in the case of some Neolithic­Aeneolithic skulls published from Bohemia by CHOCHOL 1964. CHOCHOL refrained from, a closer relegation of these Mediterranean-type skulls within the Mediterranean taxon, but infers on the other hand, some Cro Magnonian effects (e. g. Libice, Grave 2/24, Praha Nr. 2788— CHOCHOL 1964, 280.)

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