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Found In Farmer's Field: The 2,000-Year-Old Skeleton Of The Lost Lady Of Rome
Daily Mail ^ | 11-23-2007 | Chris Brooke

Posted on 11/23/2007 7:32:17 AM PST by blam

Found in a farmer's field: The 2,000-year-old skeleton of the lost lady of Rome

By CHRIS BROOKE
Last updated at 09:14am on 23rd November 2007

In her lifetime she was a member of a wealthy family based in a bustling British outpost of the world's mightiest empire.

The imperial glory has long faded. But, almost 2,000 years on, archaeologists have discovered a corner of an English field that is forever Rome. They have unearthed a coffin containing a remarkably well-preserved skeleton in the village of Aldborough, near Boroughbridge, North Yorkshire - once the site of a major Roman town, Isurium Brigantium.

The archaeologists, conducting a two-week excavation project, were searching for Roman artefacts with a metal detector when they found the 6ft lead coffin inside a stone chamber only 12in below the surface of a barley field.

'Exciting find': the 2,000-year-old lead coffin and skeleton are examined by Mags Felter of the York Archaeological Trust

The skeleton is believed to date from between the 2nd and 4th centuries, and is largely intact. It is over 5ft long and even has a full set of teeth. Experts have yet to scientifically age or sex the remains, but are confident it is a woman from a well-to-do family - her status reflected in the expensive coffin.

Analysis of the skeleton may yield fascinating information about her lifestyle and diet.

The expensive lead coffin signifies the person buried was of high status

Isurium was an important garrison which evolved into a prosperous imperial outpost complete with baths and a temple. The excavation was carried out by the York Archaeological Trust with funding from English Heritage.

A JCB digger was used to extract the half-ton coffin from the field.

Ian Panter, the trust's principal conservator, said:

"I've only ever worked on one other Roman lead coffin burial and that was from the South of England 20 years ago, so this is a really exciting find."

Yesterday, the British Museum revealed an extraordinary 58,290 archaeological objects had been unearthed by members of the public in the last year.

More than three quarters of them were found using metal detectors.

An Iron Age comb was recently discovered using this method by Russell Peach, a groundsman from Worcestershire.

Groundsman Russell Peach discovered this Iron Age comb using a metal detector

The copper alloy comb, which dates from AD25 to AD75 is thought to have been used for horses and has been described by the British Museum as a "phenomenal thing".

The museum encourages the portable antiquities scheme, a voluntary code to encourage metal detector owners in England and Wales to report finds to local museums.

The scheme is so successful that as many 300,000 finds were reported in its first decade.

A Roman horse and rider, discovered in Cambridgeshire


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aldborough; ancientautopsies; archaeology; boroughbridge; britain; deadmenspennies; desecration; england; farmer; finderskeepers; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; graverobbers; isuriumbrigantium; lady; northyorkshire; roman; romanempire; skeleton; unitedkingdom; yorkshire
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To: mass55th

Well bless their little socialist souls.

Of cource I’d prefer scientific methods be used to unearth all historically significant finds anywhere.


41 posted on 11/24/2007 11:20:34 AM PST by DManA
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To: blam

Do you see a difference between a comb found in the soil and a human skeleton found in a casket? Would it ever occur to you to dismember the remains of a woman found in her grave, just to satisfy your curiosity? Can you imagine your grandparents approving the violation of anyone’s final resting place, to satisfy the idle curiosity of strangers who ignore the sanctity of life and death?


42 posted on 11/24/2007 11:23:28 AM PST by LilAngel (FReeping on a cell phone is like making Christmas dinner in an Easy Bake Oven)
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To: blam
Well, well! Looks like we've had a copyright infringement on our hands all these long years!

43 posted on 11/24/2007 11:31:50 AM PST by Egg ("...and everyone did what was right in his own eyes.")
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To: LilAngel

Do you think all autopsies are immoral? How about forensic examinations of bodies for crime investigations. How about the things morticians do to bodies?


44 posted on 11/24/2007 11:47:54 AM PST by DManA
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To: LilAngel
Is it immoral for medical students to dissect human cadavers?
45 posted on 11/24/2007 12:14:10 PM PST by DManA
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To: DManA

If you can’t defend the practice we’re talking about, just try to deflect it to other completely unrelated practices.


46 posted on 11/24/2007 1:15:24 PM PST by LilAngel (FReeping on a cell phone is like making Christmas dinner in an Easy Bake Oven)
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To: LilAngel
I don’t know why a long established and respected science needs to be defended. And since the subject is the acceptable treatment of dead bodies my question about your opinion of other treatments of dead bodies is right on topic.

But apparently you have nothing to add beyond your personal opinion that archeology is icky and archaeologists are icky people. Okey dokey.

47 posted on 11/24/2007 3:33:31 PM PST by DManA
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