Human skeletal remains from Roman Britain are abundant and provide a rich repository of social as well as biological information concerning health, migration, diet and body/society interactions. At present, skeletal remains tend to be marginalised in studies of Roman trade, the military, economy, urbanisation and the like, yet they have huge potential to contribute to current debates. This article aims to highlight the potential of bioarchaeological analysis for understanding aspects of social identity in Roman Britain through the use of a more integrated, theoretical approach towards embodied interactions. It encourages future collaborative scholarship between bioarchaeologists, archaeologists and historians. The social determinants of hea...
The Iron Age and Roman periods are often defined against each other through the establishment of dua...
There is a lack of detailed research into the attitudes of the public in Britain to the Roman past. ...
Spanning a period of over two thousand years, the Bronze Age of the Levant (c.3600–1200 BC) is chara...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The Romano-British to Anglo-Saxon transition in Britain is one of the most striking transitions seen...
This brief update introduces the framework of a newly funded research project entitled ‘Iron Age and...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...
Historical evidence has provided a rich source of information concerning the structure and experienc...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Migration continues to be a central theme in archaeology, and bioarchaeology has made significant co...
Migration within the Roman Empire occurred at multiple scales and was engaged in both voluntarily an...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
This study investigated the ancestry, childhood residency and diet of 22 individuals buried at an A....
Recent excavations at Musselburgh, East Lothian (Scotland) revealed twelve skeletons, radiocarbon da...
Modern methods of analysis applied to cemeteries have often been used in our pages to suggest genera...
The Iron Age and Roman periods are often defined against each other through the establishment of dua...
There is a lack of detailed research into the attitudes of the public in Britain to the Roman past. ...
Spanning a period of over two thousand years, the Bronze Age of the Levant (c.3600–1200 BC) is chara...
The study of cremated human remains from archaeological contexts has traditionally been viewed as le...
The Romano-British to Anglo-Saxon transition in Britain is one of the most striking transitions seen...
This brief update introduces the framework of a newly funded research project entitled ‘Iron Age and...
This paper explores the contribution bioarchaeology has made, and is making, to our understanding of...
Historical evidence has provided a rich source of information concerning the structure and experienc...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
Migration continues to be a central theme in archaeology, and bioarchaeology has made significant co...
Migration within the Roman Empire occurred at multiple scales and was engaged in both voluntarily an...
Disarticulated human remains were recovered from a first-century fort ditch at Vindolanda on the nor...
This study investigated the ancestry, childhood residency and diet of 22 individuals buried at an A....
Recent excavations at Musselburgh, East Lothian (Scotland) revealed twelve skeletons, radiocarbon da...
Modern methods of analysis applied to cemeteries have often been used in our pages to suggest genera...
The Iron Age and Roman periods are often defined against each other through the establishment of dua...
There is a lack of detailed research into the attitudes of the public in Britain to the Roman past. ...
Spanning a period of over two thousand years, the Bronze Age of the Levant (c.3600–1200 BC) is chara...