In 1934 a grave was found in the church ruins of the Cistercian Abbey at Øm in central Jutland, Denmark (founded in 1172, demolished1561 AD). The grave contained the skeletal remains of an individual lying in a supine position with the head towards the west. Theanthropological analysis revealed that the remains belonged to a young male, aged 25-30 years at death and approximately 162.7cm tall. He had 9 perimortem sharp force lesions, five of which were cranial and four were postcranial, indicating he suffered a violentdeath in a swordfight.This paper presents a detailed analysis and description of the individual lesions and their probable effect on the soft tissue, followedby a suggestion for the most likely order of the blows which caused ...
Archaeological excavations carried out in 1972 and 2010–2011 in the University Square, Bucharest, Ro...
Contemporary accounts of battles are often incomplete or even erroneous because they reflect the-oft...
Archaeological excavations carried out in the square around the Cathedral of S. Giovanni in Turin br...
Battle-related mass burials are considered the most unequivocal evidence of past violence. However, ...
The authors of the present work evaluate the trauma observed on the skeletal remains of an individua...
Aim: the purpose of this study is to investigate the ante-mortem cranial traumas in the skeletal rem...
skeleton was excavated in Leicester that was identifi ed as Richard. We investigated the trauma to t...
BACKGROUND: Richard III was the last king of England to die in battle, but how he died is unknown. O...
Here we report the reconstruction of the osteobiography of an adult male buried in the Longobard cem...
Traumatic lesions are among the most important sources of data providing information associated to i...
The current study focuses on the remains of an adult male individual unearthed during archaeological...
Human skeletal remains from archaeological contexts occasionally present signs of traumatic injuries...
Archaeological excavations carried out in 1972 and 2010–2011 in the University Square, Bucharest, Ro...
Contemporary accounts of battles are often incomplete or even erroneous because they reflect the-oft...
Archaeological excavations carried out in the square around the Cathedral of S. Giovanni in Turin br...
Battle-related mass burials are considered the most unequivocal evidence of past violence. However, ...
The authors of the present work evaluate the trauma observed on the skeletal remains of an individua...
Aim: the purpose of this study is to investigate the ante-mortem cranial traumas in the skeletal rem...
skeleton was excavated in Leicester that was identifi ed as Richard. We investigated the trauma to t...
BACKGROUND: Richard III was the last king of England to die in battle, but how he died is unknown. O...
Here we report the reconstruction of the osteobiography of an adult male buried in the Longobard cem...
Traumatic lesions are among the most important sources of data providing information associated to i...
The current study focuses on the remains of an adult male individual unearthed during archaeological...
Human skeletal remains from archaeological contexts occasionally present signs of traumatic injuries...
Archaeological excavations carried out in 1972 and 2010–2011 in the University Square, Bucharest, Ro...
Contemporary accounts of battles are often incomplete or even erroneous because they reflect the-oft...
Archaeological excavations carried out in the square around the Cathedral of S. Giovanni in Turin br...