Luttra Woman

Luttra Woman
The Luttra Woman's skull with a perforation below the left eye socket, likely resulting from a chronic bone infection
Died3928–3651 BC:101
Present-day Mönarpa mossar near Luttra, Sweden
Body discovered20 May 1943
58°06′48″N 13°31′14″E / 58.11333°N 13.52056°E / 58.11333; 13.52056
Resting placeFalbygden Museum, Falköping, Sweden
Other namesHallonflickan (lit.'Raspberry Girl')
EraEarly Neolithic:101

The Luttra Woman is a skeletonised bog body discovered in a peat bog in Falbygden near Luttra, Sweden. The remains were found on 20 May 1943 by a peat cutter. The skull was well-preserved, but some bones of the skeleton, particularly many between the skull and the pelvis, were absent. Osteological assessment identified the remains as those of a young female. The presence of raspberry seeds in her stomach contents, coupled with an estimated age of early to mid-twenties at death, led to her being nicknamed Hallonflickan (Swedish: [ˈhalɔnflɪkːˌan] ; lit.'Raspberry Girl'). Radiocarbon-dated to 3928–3651 BC, she was, as of 2015, the earliest known Neolithic individual from Western Sweden. Her estimated height of 145 cm (4 ft 9 in) was deemed short for a Stone Age woman of the region.

Multiple anthropological studies revealed no evidence of injuries or fatal diseases on her remains. She appeared to have been bound and placed in shallow water at, or shortly after, her death. Axel Bagge, an archaeologist who collaborated on the initial examination of her remains, hypothesised that she had been deliberately drowned, either as a human sacrifice or as the victim of a witch execution. Since 1994, her skeleton has been part of the permanent exhibition Forntid på Falbygden ('Prehistory in Falbygden') at the Falbygden Museum in Falköping, Sweden. In June 2011, a forensic reconstruction of her bust was incorporated to augment the display.