Abstract
Modern methods of analysis applied to cemeteries have often been used in our pages to suggest generalities about mobility and diet. But these same techniques applied to a single individual, together with the grave goods and burial rite, can open a special kind of personal window on the past. Here, the authors of a multidisciplinary project use a combination of scientific techniques to illuminate Roman York, and later Roman history in general, with their image of a glamorous mixed-race woman, in touch with Africa, Christianity, Rome and Yorkshire.
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Leach, S., Eckardt, H., Chenery, C., MÜldner, G., & Lewis, M. (2010). A lady of york: Migration, ethnicity and identity in Roman Britain. Antiquity, 84(323), 131–145. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00099816
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