Skip to content
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025
Theme by ThemeinProgress
Proudly powered by WordPress
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
AllThatHistory
  • You are here :
  • Home
  • Archaeology & Discoveries
  • Ancient Iberian Rock Tombs were Mostly for Women
The Panoria necropolis contains far more women than men. Source: Female sex bias in Iberian megalithic societies through bioarchaeology, aDNA and proteomics.
Archaeology & Discoveries

Ancient Iberian Rock Tombs were Mostly for Women

Allthathistory October 4, 2024

In Panoria, in the province of Granada in Spain lies a rock necropolis that is truly ancient. At 5,600 years old, it was constructed well before the Egyptians got started with their pyramids.

There are many questions still unanswered about the complex, the people who built it and their society, but now we have one more question to add to the pile: why are there so many women?

Recent research by a team led by groups from the University of Tübingen and the University of Granada has revealed that twice as many women as men were buried at the site. For children the disparity is even more pronounced, with only one male child entombed for every ten girls.

The findings, published via Researchgate, suggests the necropolis is very different from other contemporary sites in the region. Such places typically favor male burials, so what makes this place different?

  • The Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trimegistus
  • Ichor, Life Blood of the Immortals
Read moreThe Cave of Hebron: Tomb of the Patriarchs?

The research team are hesitant to draw conclusions from the data at this point, but they do tentatively offer several suggestions. This could simply be an outlier, possibly a family or interrelated group who lived in the area and just happened to be mainly female.

The sample size might allow for this, with only 44 individuals recovered. However other aspects of the site suggest otherwise: individual tombs vary, some being richer and some poorer, but the disparity in the sex of the occupants seems to remain consistent regardless of social status.

This leaves the intriguing possibility that there may have been a matriarchal society in Spain during the last moments of the Iberian Neolithic. It is believed that further research into the necropolis and its surrounding area may reveal further traces of this society, and perhaps offer an insight into life in this female-led tribe who lived and died more than five millennia ago.

Header Image: The Panoria necropolis contains far more women than men. Source: Female sex bias in Iberian megalithic societies through bioarchaeology, aDNA and proteomics.

You may also like

Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions

Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection

Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years

Were Wolves Kept and Nursed by Ancient Seal Hunters?

Ancient Peruvians Survived Climate Catastrophe Through Adaptation, Not War

Peru’s Mysterious “Band of Holes” May Have Been Ancient Marketplace and Accounting System

Allthathistory
Written by Allthathistory

Tags: grave, Iberia, matriarchy, Neolithic, Spain, tomb

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions
    Archaeologists have identified a panel containing approximately 30 ancient rock carvings in Santiago de Méndez canton, Morona Santiago province, marking
  • Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection
    Archaeologists at Pompeii have identified the original location of a looted fresco fragment depicting the infant Hercules strangling serpents, solving
  • Maya Medical Systems Used Living Organisms as Precision Surgical Tools
    Maya medical systems deployed living organisms as precision surgical tools centuries before germ theory existed. Recent archaeological evidence shows these
  • Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years
    Hunter-gatherers in what is now southwestern Texas and northern Mexico created rock art for more than 4,000 years, maintaining consistent
  • The Thermal Engineering Behind Tiwanaku’s Agricultural Success
    At nearly 3,850 meters above sea level, frost arrives almost nightly on Bolivia’s Altiplano. Modern visitors struggle to breathe. Yet
The Gnostic Gospels
Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People
Substack Articles

Latest from AllThatHistory Weekly

A Fragment of the Iliad Found Inside a Mummy Rethinks How Greeks Were Used in Egyptian Burial Magic

A Fragment of the Iliad Found Inside a Mummy Rethinks How Greeks Were Used in Egyptian Burial Magic

A papyrus piece of Homer's Iliad discovered inside a Saqqara mummy reveals how ancient Greeks were used in Egyptian funerary magic.

Read More →
Troy Was Real. Here Is What the Archaeology Actually Shows.

Troy Was Real. Here Is What the Archaeology Actually Shows.

The debate over whether the Trojan War happened has run for centuries.

Read More →
550-Million-Year-Old Soft-Bodied Sponge Fossil Fills Critical Gap in Animal Evolutionary Record

550-Million-Year-Old Soft-Bodied Sponge Fossil Fills Critical Gap in Animal Evolutionary Record

A Precambrian sponge lacking hard skeletal structures suggests the 'missing years' of early animal evolution reflect a preservation gap, not an absence of life.

Read More →
What Sank to the Bottom of a Swiss Lake 2,000 Years Ago

What Sank to the Bottom of a Swiss Lake 2,000 Years Ago

In November 2024, the Cantonal Office of Archaeology of Neuchatel was conducting routine aerial monitoring of the lakebed when a photograph revealed something that did not belong there.

Read More →
13,000 Years Ago, Someone Painted a Bison in the Dark. We Just Found Out When.

13,000 Years Ago, Someone Painted a Bison in the Dark. We Just Found Out When.

The Font-de-Gaume cave sits in a limestone hillside near the town of Les Eyzies in the Dordogne region of southwestern France.

Read More →
The War Horn That Made Roman Soldiers Flinch

The War Horn That Made Roman Soldiers Flinch

In the summer of 2025, during a routine archaeological excavation ahead of a housing development in West Norfolk, England, a construction site turned up something unexpected.

Read More →
❮
❯

Subscribe to receive our newest archaeology articles, long-form investigations, and historical insights directly in your inbox.

© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025