The effects colonial regimes have on health has emerged as an important focus in bioarchaeological research. This study contributes to our understanding of this phenomenon by assessing the impact Roman colonization had on health in Corinth, Greece. Using previously published bioarchaeological data, frequencies of cribra orbitalia, porotic hyperostosis, linear enamel hypoplasia, and carious lesions were compared between pre-Roman (7th century B.C-146 BC) and Roman period (44 BC- 4th century AD) populations from three cemeteries in Corinth: the North Cemetery, the Northern Cemetery, and Anaploga Cemetery. Results indicate a statistically significant decrease in the frequency of nonspecific indicators of physiological stress and carious lesion...
1. Introduction Bioarchaeology, the study of human remains from archaeological contexts, can yield a...
In late antiquity, a series of historically documented invasions and natural and economic crises can...
In late antiquity, a series of historically documented invasions and natural and economic crises can...
Children represent the most vulnerable members of society, and as such provide valuable insight into...
In 2019 a post-12th century C.E. cemetery was identified at Ancient Corinth, Greece, in the area nor...
This thesis analyzes human skeletal trauma in a large well-preserved sample (n =268) from the Roman ...
This thesis is an osteoarchaeological analysis of adult and juvenile human skeletal remains (more sp...
In 733 B.C., Archias (a Corinthian) founded the city of Syracuse in Sicily. This began Syracuse’ his...
Rescue excavations between 2014 and 2015 in Klenia, Corinthia, Greece uncovered an assemblage of hum...
The osteological material under study consists of 510 skeletal remains dating from the Early Neolit...
This research examines the health experiences of early eighteenth-century European immigrants to the...
The central Mediterranean during the 4th-3rd millennia BC is traditionally considered a period of ec...
Roman Macedonia has been largely neglected by bioarcheological research. As a result, little is know...
Roman Macedonia has been largely neglected by bioarcheological research. As a result, little is know...
Roman Macedonia has been largely neglected by bioarcheological research. As a result, little is know...
1. Introduction Bioarchaeology, the study of human remains from archaeological contexts, can yield a...
In late antiquity, a series of historically documented invasions and natural and economic crises can...
In late antiquity, a series of historically documented invasions and natural and economic crises can...
Children represent the most vulnerable members of society, and as such provide valuable insight into...
In 2019 a post-12th century C.E. cemetery was identified at Ancient Corinth, Greece, in the area nor...
This thesis analyzes human skeletal trauma in a large well-preserved sample (n =268) from the Roman ...
This thesis is an osteoarchaeological analysis of adult and juvenile human skeletal remains (more sp...
In 733 B.C., Archias (a Corinthian) founded the city of Syracuse in Sicily. This began Syracuse’ his...
Rescue excavations between 2014 and 2015 in Klenia, Corinthia, Greece uncovered an assemblage of hum...
The osteological material under study consists of 510 skeletal remains dating from the Early Neolit...
This research examines the health experiences of early eighteenth-century European immigrants to the...
The central Mediterranean during the 4th-3rd millennia BC is traditionally considered a period of ec...
Roman Macedonia has been largely neglected by bioarcheological research. As a result, little is know...
Roman Macedonia has been largely neglected by bioarcheological research. As a result, little is know...
Roman Macedonia has been largely neglected by bioarcheological research. As a result, little is know...
1. Introduction Bioarchaeology, the study of human remains from archaeological contexts, can yield a...
In late antiquity, a series of historically documented invasions and natural and economic crises can...
In late antiquity, a series of historically documented invasions and natural and economic crises can...