Salad

Babies weren’t supposed to be mourned in the Roman Empire. These rare liquid-gypsum burials prove otherwise.

The mysterious Roman-era burial rite of pouring liquid gypsum over the dead wasn’t limited to elite adults as previously thought; it was also performed on children, including babies as young as 1 month old, researchers have found.

The finding contradicts Roman-era legal sources who wrote that infants under 12 months old were not supposed to be mourned at all, according to two blog posts published by the Seeing the Dead project, a collaboration between the University of York and the York Museums Trust. Their team is investigating the discovery of children among the rare “gypsum burials” found in York, in northern England.

Related posts

Bead net funerary shroud: A 2,500-year-old beaded veil from Egypt depicting the deceased’s transformation into Osiris

sys.admin

China banned fishing in its biggest river, and species are starting to recover

sys.admin

How hot is Earth’s core?

sys.admin

Leave a Comment