Archaeological excavations carried out in the square around the Cathedral of S. Giovanni in Turin brought to light burials referable to the medieval and Renaissance periods. The anthropological examination of the skeletal remains allowed to identify two skeletons from the medieval period (10th–11th centuries) and four skeletons from the Renaissance age (15th century) showing weapon-related cranial injuries. These peri mortem lesions are indicators of interpersonal aggression and in particular of armed conflicts. The two individuals from the early medieval period presented three traumas consisting in sharp force lesions caused by bladed weapons. As regards the Renaissance sample, themajority of the nine peri mortem injuries were sharp fo...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The Samnites are an Iron Age protohistoric people from the central region of Italy. The skeletal rem...
Forensic and archaeological examinations of human skeletons can provide us with evidence of violence...
Aim: the purpose of this study is to investigate the ante-mortem cranial traumas in the skeletal rem...
Traumatic lesions are among the most important sources of data providing information associated to i...
This paper analyses the skeletal remains with signs of violence coming from some archaeological sit...
none15siHuman skeletal remains from archaeological contexts occasionally present signs of traumatic ...
In this paper we present the study of a skull belonging to a young male from the Italian Bronze Age ...
Archaeological excavations carried out in 1972 and 2010–2011 in the University Square, Bucharest, Ro...
Interpersonal violence reveals implications in behaviour, mobility, lifestyle and health of past hum...
The authors of the present work evaluate the trauma observed on the skeletal remains of an individua...
The crania from a mass grave associated to the Battle of Good Friday (1520) in Uppsala were re-exami...
This is the medical history of three skeletons from archaeological sites in the province of Varese t...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The Samnites are an Iron Age protohistoric people from the central region of Italy. The skeletal rem...
Forensic and archaeological examinations of human skeletons can provide us with evidence of violence...
Aim: the purpose of this study is to investigate the ante-mortem cranial traumas in the skeletal rem...
Traumatic lesions are among the most important sources of data providing information associated to i...
This paper analyses the skeletal remains with signs of violence coming from some archaeological sit...
none15siHuman skeletal remains from archaeological contexts occasionally present signs of traumatic ...
In this paper we present the study of a skull belonging to a young male from the Italian Bronze Age ...
Archaeological excavations carried out in 1972 and 2010–2011 in the University Square, Bucharest, Ro...
Interpersonal violence reveals implications in behaviour, mobility, lifestyle and health of past hum...
The authors of the present work evaluate the trauma observed on the skeletal remains of an individua...
The crania from a mass grave associated to the Battle of Good Friday (1520) in Uppsala were re-exami...
This is the medical history of three skeletons from archaeological sites in the province of Varese t...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The Samnites are an Iron Age protohistoric people from the central region of Italy. The skeletal rem...
Forensic and archaeological examinations of human skeletons can provide us with evidence of violence...