Archaeologists dig up 'oldest' African human sacrifice
SUDAN: French archaeologists in Sudan say they have uncovered the
oldest proof of human sacrifice in Africa, hailing the discovery as the
biggest Neolithic find on the continent for years.
The tomb of a 5,500-year-old man surrounded by three sacrificed
humans, two dogs and exquisite ceramics were exhumed north of Khartoum
by Neolithic expert Jacques Reinhold and his 66-year-old Austrian wife.
"This is the oldest proof of human sacrifice in Sudan, in Egypt, in
Africa," Reinhold told reporters next to the remains in El Kadada
village, a three-hour drive north of the Sudanese capital.
"I don't know of another example in Africa at this level... We don't
have anything as strong in other excavations in other countries," said
Reinhold, as villagers in traditional white robes carefully scrapped
earth into buckets.
The archaeologist, who has led the excavation for several months,
described the tomb as the most important Neolithic find in Africa since
the 1990s.
That period - which Reinhold calls the first global revolution -
marks the period when man evolved from hunter gatherers into farmers and
producers, forever changing the structure of human society.
He says the find is nearly 1,000 years older what many consider
Sudan's most spectacular discoveries of human sacrifice - scores of
bodies buried together. El Kadada, Friday, AFP |