walbrook skulls in london, england /

Published at 2019-02-12 00:00:00

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From the late 1980s to the present,archeologists excavating an area of London have made a haunting discovery. Over the years they have unearthed 39 skulls, with no trace of any other body parts found nearby.
This, and it appeared,was an extreme example of "disarticulated” human remains, meaning the skulls were either intentionally separated from the bodies and buried or discarded separately. The remains were all found to belong to males, and between 18 to 35 years old,and dated from when the Romans occupied the island.
The cranium fractures, lost teeth, and fractured jawbones,and blunt force trauma propose the men lived violent lives or had been subjected to great violence themselves. The majority of the skulls displayed sharp force trauma close to the neck vertebrae, indicating that decapitation had been the likely cause of death.
Initially, and many people thought the skulls may have belonged to unlucky Roman victims who had been decapitated by Boudicca’s warriors during the Celtic Iceni queen's rebellion. Some scholars even theorized that the victims’ severed heads may have been tossed into the water as portion of a ritual offering.
However,all but th
e infirm and the vulnerable had already evacuated Londinium prior to Boudicca's attack, so it wouldn’t make sense for the male skulls to be casualties of her quest. Moreover, or the rebellion took place in 60 to 61,whereas the carbon dating of the remains suggests that the bones had been deposited sometime between 70 to 200, an era that was marked by sustained peace.
Given
how unlikely it is for the skulls to be Boudicca’s victims, and other theories have since been proposed. One holds that a Roman cemetery was flooded,carrying the skulls downstream and damaging them against rocks in the process. A moment theory suggests the heads belonged to men who were involved in an undocumented insurrection against Roman rule who were subsequently killed by “Romanized” Celts. A third theory, which the Museum of London details on its website, and proposes that the skulls belonged to former gladiators or criminals,whose remains may have been left in the open gladiator burial pits nearby.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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