An iron sword discovered beside the remains of a child at an Iron Age settlement in central France is providing archaeologists with rare insight into the social and ritual practices of the Gauls more than 2,400 years ago.
The weapon was uncovered during excavations carried out by the French National Institute for Preventive Archaeological Research (Inrap) at the Bois Médor site in Pithiviers, Loiret, where archaeologists investigated a large Gaulish settlement dating to the fifth and fourth centuries BC.
The excavation, conducted in 2010 ahead of a road bypass project, revealed a series of large storage silos that had later been repurposed as rubbish pits. Among them, archaeologists found the remains of six individuals buried in four separate deposits across three silos, many displaying unusual positions and evidence that their bodies had been deliberately manipulated.
One silo contained a multiple burial of three individuals, two of whom had been placed face down. Another held the body of a man whose hands and feet had been bound together, with his head separated from the rest of the skeleton.
The most remarkable discovery came from a third silo dating to the end of the fifth century BC. There, archaeologists uncovered the remains of a child, believed to have been younger than 15, curled against the edge of the pit. The burial included a fibula, possible fragments of a shield and an iron sword enclosed within its scabbard.
The sword had been placed beside the child's legs rather than worn, prompting researchers to question its significance. They suggest the burial may represent a very young warrior or a child destined for that role.
Although the sword is of a standard form and size, it is among the oldest examples discovered in the Loiret department. Its undecorated scabbard is particularly unusual, as sword scabbards from the early Late Iron Age were typically ornamented.
The find has raised several unanswered questions. Archaeologists are investigating whether the plain scabbard and the absence of other weapons reflect the child's young age and an incomplete martial education, or whether the sword served a symbolic rather than practical purpose.
Burials of young individuals accompanied by weapons are exceptionally rare, even in formal Iron Age cemeteries. The combination of a child's remains, military equipment and an unconventional burial within a former storage silo makes the Pithiviers discovery one of the most unusual examples known from the period.
The discovery forms part of Inrap's scientific and cultural season dedicated to Iron Age Gaul, highlighting archaeological finds that continue to reshape understanding of Celtic societies in pre-Roman France.
Header Image Credit : R. Bernadet, Inrap
Sources : Inrap


