A new paper co-authored by Peter van Dommelen, the Joukowsky Family
Professor of Archaeology and professor of anthropology, attempts to put
to rest a long-standing mystery about infant bones found in Phoenician
cemeteries in modern Tunisia and Italy. Experts have long been
conflicted over whether the bones, found packed in urns and buried under
tombstones, were the result of ritualistic sacrifices or simply
carefully buried remains of children who died before or soon after
birth. Van Dommelen's research, conducted with colleagues from several
European institutions, concludes that the Phoenicians did kill their own
infant children, burying them with sacrificed animals and ritual
inscriptions in special cemeteries to give thanks for special favors
from the gods. Published in the journal Antiquity, the
researchers used the manner in which the remains were buried and the
inscriptions on the tombstones as evidence that pointed toward the
sacrifice rather than natural death. Additionally, although hundreds of
remains were found, there were far too few to account for all of the
stillbirths and infant deaths in that area, according to the study.