The Economist has a recent piece about salvage archaeology of a mass grave resulting from the Battle of Towton. Popular coverage of archaeology is typically embarrassingly poor in that the journalist either clearly doesn’t understand the topic and/or writes down to the audience, but this write-up isn’t so bad despite centering on forensics (I personally find the post-CSI glut of forensic procedurals and their popularity unnerving; there’s something both desensitizing and pornographic about their treatment of violence in my eyes). LINK for those interested.
If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed. – Mark Twain (attributed)
A scrimmage in a Border Station
A canter down some dark defile
Two thousand pounds of education
Drops to a ten-rupee jezail
http://i.imgur.com/IPT1uLH.jpg
If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed. – Mark Twain (attributed)
Well Matt, in your defense, Towton has been dead for quite some time
The description of blows to the head and forensics sounds like writer was a cop. Fantastic details !
At least you only slipped a year without much noticeMany Britons have never heard of it: school history tends to skip the 400-or-so years between 1066 and the start of the Tudor era.
If you want to blend in, take the bus
Ganulv,
Excellent find. It is a period of English history that I have never looked at in depth, but this passage struck me as important:One in ten on one day. Has that level of participation been seen on any other battlefield?perhaps 10% of the country’s fighting-age population, took the field that day.
davidbfpo
Paleopathologists can be a little, umm, quirky, but they can do some interesting stuff. For her dissertation research my friend Carlina analyzed a skeletal collection representing the remains of late 19th and early 20th century male laborers and found substantive differences in trauma along ethnic lines (Euro-American remains in the collection showed a higher incidence of fractures than did African American remains and African American remains showed a higher incidence of weapon–related trauma than did Euro-American remains).
That’s an interesting question. I can think of instances involving American Indian groups—the Mohican lost such a large portion of their adult male population in one engagement during the Revolutionary War that they were subsequently released from service—all relatively small groups in terms of total population. Nothing immediately comes to mind regarding larger polities. The Paraguayan War resulted in massive population loss in terms of percentage but I don’t know anything about particular events over its course.
If you don’t read the newspaper, you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed. – Mark Twain (attributed)
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