How did human societies succeed in reducing interpersonal violence, a precondition to achieve security and prosperity? Given that homicide records are only available for the more recent period, much of human history remains virtually outside our purview. To fill this gap, a literature intersecting economics, archaeology, and anthropology has devised reliable methods for studying traumas deliberately inflicted in human skeletal remains. In this paper we reconstruct the early history of conflict by exploiting a novel dataset on weapon-related wounds from skeletons excavated across the Middle East, spanning the whole pre-Classical period (ca. 8,000-400 BCE). By documenting when and how ancient Middle Eastern populations managed to reduce inter...
Since the emergence of nomadic pastoralism in Eastern Eurasia, warfare became a cultural char-acteri...
There is an ongoing debate concerning the nature of warfare and violence in the Iron Age of Britain....
The transition from the Late Antique (2nd–5th century AD) to the Medieval period (6th – 11th century...
Thsi archive provides all data generated and analysed and the custom codes produced for the study wh...
Violence and warfare in prehistory have been intensely discussed in various disciplines recently. Es...
The bioarchaeological record has an abundance of scientific evidence based on skeletal indicators of...
Whether man is predisposed to lethal violence, ranging from homicide to warfare, and how that may ha...
International audienceThe remains of 61 individuals buried in the cemetery of Jebel Sahaba (site 117...
Persistent interethnic violence has affected some global regions for centuries. Recent research reve...
The first in a four-volume set, The Cambridge World History of Violence, volume I provides a compreh...
Whether man is predisposed to lethal violence, ranging from homicide to warfare, and how that may ha...
With little published work on the subject of gender targeting in violence from archaeological skelet...
Since the emergence of nomadic pastoralism in Eastern Eurasia, warfare became a cultural char-acteri...
There is an ongoing debate concerning the nature of warfare and violence in the Iron Age of Britain....
The transition from the Late Antique (2nd–5th century AD) to the Medieval period (6th – 11th century...
Thsi archive provides all data generated and analysed and the custom codes produced for the study wh...
Violence and warfare in prehistory have been intensely discussed in various disciplines recently. Es...
The bioarchaeological record has an abundance of scientific evidence based on skeletal indicators of...
Whether man is predisposed to lethal violence, ranging from homicide to warfare, and how that may ha...
International audienceThe remains of 61 individuals buried in the cemetery of Jebel Sahaba (site 117...
Persistent interethnic violence has affected some global regions for centuries. Recent research reve...
The first in a four-volume set, The Cambridge World History of Violence, volume I provides a compreh...
Whether man is predisposed to lethal violence, ranging from homicide to warfare, and how that may ha...
With little published work on the subject of gender targeting in violence from archaeological skelet...
Since the emergence of nomadic pastoralism in Eastern Eurasia, warfare became a cultural char-acteri...
There is an ongoing debate concerning the nature of warfare and violence in the Iron Age of Britain....
The transition from the Late Antique (2nd–5th century AD) to the Medieval period (6th – 11th century...