Craig Cessford’s research while affiliated with University of Cambridge and other places

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Publications (60)


Bone adhered soil as a source of target and environmental DNA and proteins
  • Preprint
  • File available

September 2024

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142 Reads

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2 Citations

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Rémi Barbieri

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In recent years, sediments from cave environments have provided invaluable insights into ancient hominids, as well as past fauna and flora. Unfortunately, locations with favourable conditions for ancient DNA (aDNA) preservation in sediments are scarce. In this study we analysed a set of samples obtained from soil adhered to different human skeletal elements, originating from Neolithic to Medieval sites in England, and performed metagenomics and metaproteomics analysis. From them, we were able to recover aDNA sequences matching the genomes of endogenous gut and oral microbiome bacteria. We also found the presence of genetic data corresponding to animals and plants. In particular we managed to retrieve the partial genome and proteome of a Black Rat (Rattus rattus), sharing close genetic affinities to other medieval Rattus rattus. Furthermore, we have also been able to reconstruct a partial human genome. The genetic profile of those human sequences matches the one recovered from the original skeletal element. Our results demonstrate that material usually discarded, as it is soil adhering to human remains, can be used to get a glimpse of the environmental conditions at the time of the death of an individual, even in contexts where due to harsh environmental conditions, the skeletal remains themselves are not preserved.

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Low Genetic Impact of the Roman Occupation of Britain in Rural Communities

September 2024

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114 Reads

Molecular Biology and Evolution

The Roman period saw the empire expand across Europe and the Mediterranean, including much of what is today Great Britain. While there is written evidence of high mobility into and out of Britain for administrators, traders, and the military, the impact of imperialism on local, rural population structure, kinship, and mobility is invisible in the textual record. The extent of genetic change that occurred in Britain during the Roman military occupation remains underexplored. Here, using genome-wide data from 52 ancient individuals from eight sites in Cambridgeshire covering the period of Roman occupation, we show low levels of genetic ancestry differentiation between Romano-British sites and indications of larger populations than in the Bronze Age and Neolithic. We find no evidence of long-distance migration from elsewhere in the Empire, though we do find one case of possible temporary mobility within a family unit during the Late Romano-British period. We also show that the present-day patterns of genetic ancestry composition in Britain emerged after the Roman period.


Health inequality in medieval Cambridge, 1200-1500 CE

August 2024

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90 Reads

American Journal of Biological Anthropology

Health inequality is not only a major problem today; it left its mark upon past societies too. For much of the past, health inequality has been poorly studied, mostly because bioarchaeologists have concentrated upon single sites rather than a broader social landscape. This article compares 476 adults in multiple locations of medieval Cambridge (UK). Samples include ordinary townspeople (All Saints), people living in a charitable institution (the Hospital of St. John), and members of a religious order (the Augustinian Friary). These groups shared many conditions of life, such as a similar range of diseases, risk of injury, and vertebral disk degeneration. However, people living on charity had more indicators of poor childhood health and diet, lower adult stature , and a younger age at death, reflecting the health effects of poverty. In contrast, the Augustinian friars were members of a prosperous, well-endowed religious house. Compared with other groups, they were taller (perhaps a result of a richer diet during their adolescent growth period); their adult carbon and nitrogen isotope values are higher, suggesting a diet higher in terrestrial and/or marine animal protein; and they had the highest prevalence of foot problems related to fashionable late medieval footwear. As this illustrates, health inequality will take particular forms depending upon the specificities of a social landscape; except in unusual circumstances where a site and its skeletal samples represent a real cross-section of society, inequality is best investigated by comparison across sites.


Fig. 1. Map showing location of the cemeteries of All Saints parish church (1) and the Augustinian friary (2) in Cambridge. Image credit: modified from an original figure produced by Vicki Herring for the After the Plague project.
Fig. 2. Examples of the eggs of intestinal parasitic worms recovered during the study. A) decorticated roundworm egg (dimensions 58 ×44 µm); B) whipworm egg (dimensions 52 ×24 µm). Black scale bars indicate 20 µm. Images: Tianyi Wang.
Fig. 3. Example of cribra orbitalia in burial SK1866.F106 from the cemetery of the Augustinian friary. Female aged 7-12 years, positive for roundworm infection. Black arrows highlight the lesions. Image: Jenna Dittmar.
Data for Parasite Infection and Cribra Orbitalia in the Population.
Investigating the association between intestinal parasite infection and cribra orbitalia in the medieval population of Cambridge, UK

March 2024

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599 Reads

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2 Citations

International Journal of Paleopathology

Objective: Cribra orbitalia is believed to be a skeletal indicator of chronic anaemia, scurvy, rickets or related metabolic diseases. It has been suggested that it may be used as a proxy indicator for intestinal parasite infection, as parasites often cause anaemia today. Our aim is to investigate this association in the medieval population of Cambridge, UK. Materials: Individuals excavated from the cemeteries of the Augustinian friary and All Saints by the Castle parish church, and aged from 7 to adulthood. Methods: We undertook parasite analysis of the pelvic sediment and control samples of 46 burials with intact orbital roofs. Results: Human roundworm (Ascaris lumbricoides) and/or whipworm (Trichuris trichiura) were identified in the pelvic sediment of 22 individuals, and cribra orbitalia noted in 11 individuals. Barnards test showed no association between parasite infection and cribra orbitalia (p = .882). Conclusion: We found no association between infection and cribra orbitalia infection in this medieval adult population, calling into question this hypothesis, at least for adults. Significance: High or low cribra orbitalia prevalence in adults should not be used to infer rates of intestinal parasite infection. Limitations: The individuals in the study were over the age of 7, with no younger children. It is possible that only parasites which cause marked anaemia (such as hookworm, schistosomiasis or malaria) may cause cribra orbitalia, while less marked anaemia from roundworm and whipworm may not do so. Suggestions for Further Research: Repeating this study in younger children, when most cribra orbitalia appears to form.


Genetic history of Cambridgeshire before and after the Black Death

January 2024

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110 Reads

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13 Citations

Science Advances

The extent of the devastation of the Black Death pandemic (1346–1353) on European populations is known from documentary sources and its bacterial source illuminated by studies of ancient pathogen DNA. What has remained less understood is the effect of the pandemic on human mobility and genetic diversity at the local scale. Here, we report 275 ancient genomes, including 109 with coverage >0.1×, from later medieval and postmedieval Cambridgeshire of individuals buried before and after the Black Death. Consistent with the function of the institutions, we found a lack of close relatives among the friars and the inmates of the hospital in contrast to their abundance in general urban and rural parish communities. While we detect long-term shifts in local genetic ancestry in Cambridgeshire, we find no evidence of major changes in genetic ancestry nor higher differentiation of immune loci between cohorts living before and after the Black Death.


Figure 1. Location of The Hospital of St John the Evangelist and other sites studied (map by V. Herring).
Figure 2. Reconstructed plan of the Hospital of St John the Evangelist. Left: general layout. Right: detail of excavated area of cemetery (plans by V. Herring after Cessford et al. 2015: figs 1 & 7).
Figure 3. Dentine collagen δ 15 N (‰, horizontal axis) against ‰ change in δ 15 N between dentine collagen and rib collagen (vertical axis). Red box highlights individuals with a rib δ 15 N value substantially lower than their dentine value, indicating a decrease in dietary quality towards the end of their lives (figure by the authors).
Figure 6. The Hospital of St John the Evangelist, Cambridge: a conceptual map. Skeletons indicate the kinds of individuals identified in this study; italics indicate groups attested in documentary records but not identified skeletally; parentheses indicate groups which may have been present but which are not attested textually (figure by the authors).
Pathways to the medieval hospital: collective osteobiographies of poverty and charity

December 2023

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208 Reads

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4 Citations

Antiquity

Medieval hospitals were founded to provide charity, but poverty and infirmity were broad and socially determined categories and little is known about the residents of these institutions and the pathways that led them there. Combining skeletal, isotopic and genetic data, the authors weave a collective biography of individuals buried at the Hospital of St John the Evangelist, Cambridge. By starting with the physical remains, rather than historical expectations, they demonstrate the varied life courses of those who were ultimately buried in the hospital's cemetery, illustrating the diverse faces of medieval poverty and institutional notions of charity. The findings highlight the value of collective osteobiography when reconstructing the social landscapes of the past.


Fig. 1. a) Subperiosteal new bone formation on the visceral surfaces of the right ribs of an adult female (PSN 339) that lived after the Black Death and b) lumbar vertebrae with destructive and proliferative lesions caused by tuberculosis in an adult individual (PSN 190) that lived prior to the Black Death. Both individuals were buried at the Hospital of St John the Evangelist, Cambridge, England.
Fig. 2. a) Superior view of second thoracic vertebra and b) plain X-ray (lateral view) showing the destruction of the second thoracic vertebral body (Pott's spine) of an adult female (PSN 90) that lived after the Black Death plague pandemic who was buried at the Hospital of St John the Evangelist, Cambridge, England.
Demographic distribution of individuals with skeletal evidence that is diagnostic or strongly diagnostic of skeletal tuberculosis from the detached burial ground of the Hospital of St John the Evangelist, Cambridge, England.
Tuberculosis before and after the Black Death (1346–1353 CE) in the Hospital of St John the Evangelist in Cambridge, England

November 2023

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239 Reads

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1 Citation

Tuberculosis

This research explores how the prevalence of tuberculosis (TB) in a medieval hospital was affected by the demographic and social changes that following the Black Death (1346-1353 CE), the initial years of the Second Plague Pandemic. To do this, skeletal remains of individuals buried at the Hospital of St John the Evangelist in Cambridge, England, that could be dated to living before (n = 77) or after (n = 55) the Black Death were assessed for evidence of TB (indicated by destructive lesions of the spine, ribs, large joints, and other recognised criteria). Overall, the odds of females having skeletal lesions caused by TB were over four times higher than males. No significant difference was detected in the prevalence rates in those who lived before and after the Black Death (7.8%, 6/77 before and 11.0%, 6/55 after). However, the odds of females having skeletal evidence of TB were over five times greater after the Black Death than they were before. These findings indicate that women may have been 1) more susceptible to TB, 2) surviving longer post-infection than men, and/or 3) that women with TB were more likely to be admitted to the Hospital especially following the Black Death. It is also possible that impairment due to TB infection may have been a contributing factor for entry into the Hospital for women but not men.


THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE AUGUSTINIAN FRIARY, CAMBRIDGE

August 2023

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55 Reads

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3 Citations

The Antiquaries Journal

The Augustinian friary in Cambridge, England, was founded in the 1280s and dissolved in 1538. Investigations in 1908–9 and 2016–19 have revealed much of the friary cloister, with evidence for an initial late thirteenth–mid-fourteenth-century phase, a major phase of construction in the mid–late fourteenth century and some fifteenth-century construction. This paper will primarily consider what can be reconstructed of the claustral buildings, complemented by what is known of the rest of the friary site. The friary will also be contextualised in terms of mendicant beliefs and anti-fraternal criticisms.


Local population structure in Cambridgeshire during the Roman occupation

August 2023

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455 Reads

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3 Citations

The Roman period saw the empire expand across Europe and the Mediterranean, including much of what is today the United Kingdom. While there is written evidence of high mobility into and out of Britain for administrators, traders and the military, the impact of imperialism on local population structure is invisible in the textual record. The extent of genetic change that occurred in Britain before the Early Medieval Period and how closely linked by genetic kinship the local populations were, remains underexplored. Here, using genome-wide data from 52 ancient individuals from Cambridgeshire, we show low levels of genetic ancestry differentiation between Romano-British sites and lower levels of runs of homozygosity over 4 centimorgans (cM than in the Bronze Age and Neolithic. We find fourteen cases of genetic relatedness within and one between sites without evidence of patrilineal dominance and one case of temporary mobility within a family unit during the Late Romano-British period. We also show that the modern patterns of genetic ancestry composition in Modern Britain emerged after the Roman period.


Fig. 2: A: Schematic tree of Y. pestis genomes of the Second Pandemic. Newly sequenced genomes are highlighted in bold. Ancient genomes reconstructed from non-UDG data only are highlighted in italics. Branch lengths are shown in italics and correspond to Table S6; internal nodes are numbered from N01-N29. B: Maximum likelihood tree generated with IQTree with 1000 bootstraps based on a 95% partial deletion SNP alignment (3524 positions) of 56 ancient Y. pestis genomes, 208 modern Y. pestis genomes, and Y. pseudotuberculosis IP32953 as outgroup. For the corresponding SNP table see Table S5; for an expanded tree Fig. S19.
Fig. 3: Modelled radiocarbon dates of skeletal remains of 45 individuals associated with the Second Pandemic through palaeogenomic evidence. Probability distributions without ΔR are colored in red; prior probability distributions of the model with ΔR (30, 20) are colored in blue; posterior probability distributions are shown in dark grey. Brackets correspond to 1σ (upper) and 2σ (lower) intervals; "+" indicate the medians of the respective distributions. The OxCal code can be found under Code S2; the unmodified OxCal plots in Fig. S45 (individually calibrated dates) and Fig. S46 (model); the corresponding table can be found under Table S11.
A Refined Phylochronology of the Second Plague Pandemic in Western Eurasia

July 2023

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299 Reads

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5 Citations

Although dozens of ancient Yersinia pestis genomes and a vast corpus of documentary data are available, the origin and spread of consecutive outbreaks of the Second Plague Pandemic in Europe (14th-18th c.) are still poorly understood. For the majority of ancient genomes, only radiocarbon dates spanning several decades are available, hampering an association with historically recorded plague outbreaks. Here, we present new genomic evidence of the Second Pandemic from 11 sites in England, Estonia, the Netherlands, Russia, and Switzerland yielding 11 Y. pestis genomes with >4-fold mean coverage dating to between 1349 and 1710. In addition, we present a novel approach for integrating the chronological information retrieved from phylogenetic analysis with their respective radiocarbon dates, based on a novel methodology offering more precise dating intervals. Together with a fine-grained analysis of documentarily recorded plague outbreaks, this allows us to tentatively associate all available Y. pestis genomes of the Second Pandemic with historically documented plague outbreaks. Through these combined multidisciplinary analytical efforts, our newly sequenced genomes can be attributed to the Black Death in Cambridge (England), the pestis tertia or pestis quarta in the late 14th century (Estonia), previously unknown branches emerging in the 15th century (Estonia, the Netherlands and England), and a widespread pandemic in Eastern Europe around 1500 (western Russia), which all seem to have originated from one or multiple reservoirs located in Central Europe. While the latter continued to harbour a major Y. pestis lineage at least until the 1630s, represented by new genomes of the Thirty Years' War plague (Switzerland), another lineage consecutively spread into Europe between the 17th and 18th century from the Ottoman Empire, as evidenced by a genome associated with the Great Northern War plague (Estonia). By combining phylogenetic analysis with a systematic historical reconstruction based on textual sources and an innovative phylogenetically informed radiocarbon modelling (PhIRM), we offer a new groundbreaking interdisciplinary approach that solves several fundamental methodological challenges associated with phylogenetic and spatio-temporal reconstruction of historical pandemics.


Citations (36)


... Higher E-scores denote a higher distribution of the matching hits along the reference genome, and thus, the higher the probability that the hit is genuine. Data for Source Tracker analysis was curated as described in 99 . We have considered valid microbial species with a minimum E-score of 7. ...

Reference:

Ancient DNA and protein preservation and transfer in concretions covering human remains
Bone adhered soil as a source of target and environmental DNA and proteins

... A special case is sample CHRY038B, which yielded a human genome at a depth of roughly 0.01× (3% of endogenous DNA). Genetic sex and mitochondrial haplotype match those of the original petrous bone (XX, U5b3e) 50 (Supplementary Table S9B). The pseudohaploid-called nuclear genome contained enough sequences to recover 8,580 SNPs from the Human Origins dataset 52 . ...

Genetic history of Cambridgeshire before and after the Black Death
  • Citing Article
  • January 2024

Science Advances

... This study includes 337 adults from the hospital. Osteobiographical study shows that these included university scholars, poor people, and a few nonresidents (Inskip et al., 2023;Robb et al., 2019). Like other hospitals (Dyer, 2009;Rawcliffe, 1999), it contained both the lifelong "structural poor" and people experiencing "life-cycle poverty", for instance becoming indigent when unable to work in old age (Inskip et al., 2023). ...

Pathways to the medieval hospital: collective osteobiographies of poverty and charity

Antiquity

... . These changes likely occur as a result of bone marrow hyperplasia, which can be associated with various conditions, such as acquired or genetic anemia, bone marrow malignancy, infections, and metabolic disorders (Blom et al., 2005;Brickley, 2018;Brickley et al., 2020;Djuric et al., 2008;Naveed et al., 2012;Wang et al., 2024). ...

Investigating the association between intestinal parasite infection and cribra orbitalia in the medieval population of Cambridge, UK

International Journal of Paleopathology

... Traditionally, this has been done with major infections, like plague [55][56][57][58][59][60], smallpox [61], tuberculosis [62][63][64], and influenza [65,66], but the approach extends to noncommunicable diseases as well, like malignancies [67,68], sleep disorders [69][70][71][72][73], or chronic cardiovascular [74][75][76] and neurodegenerative diseases [77,78], adopting multidisciplinary techniques and methodologies that synthesize the diverse sources of information available. ...

Tuberculosis before and after the Black Death (1346–1353 CE) in the Hospital of St John the Evangelist in Cambridge, England

Tuberculosis

... 64-5, 143-44). The Augustinian friary was founded in the 1280s and the cemetery was in use until its dissolution in 1538 (Cessford, 2017;Cessford and Samuel, 2023;Roth, 1966, vol. 2 pp. 2 250-3). Those buried in the friary were both Augustinian friars, identifiable at excavation by their metal belt buckles, and prosperous lay individuals who chose to pay to be buried at the friary . ...

THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE AUGUSTINIAN FRIARY, CAMBRIDGE

The Antiquaries Journal

... The presence of a mulberry molar is suggestive of congenital syphilis [23,24], although aDNA analysis failed to isolate Treponema pallidum in this sample. One instance of the co-occurrence of plague and treponemal disease has been recorded for fifteenth century Lithuania [25], another in early 18 th century Estonia [26], with this potentially being the first case known for Britain. ...

A Refined Phylochronology of the Second Plague Pandemic in Western Eurasia

... This study reported an overall enrichment of allele frequency differentiation in immune genes as well as a handful of potential targets under positive selection. However, serious skepticism has been raised towards the findings due to technical concerns [42], and other studies adopting similar designs (though with smaller sample sizes) failed to replicate the selection signals at immune genes overall or at individual candidates [43,44]. These results suggest the selection effects of historical pandemics at individual genomic loci are relatively modest, necessitating expansive sample sizes for detection. ...

Medieval social landscape through the genetic history of Cambridgeshire before and after the Black Death

... Tere must have been considerable care aforded to such an individual to minimize the morbidities associated with nonoperative care of such a fracture. Tis has been recently noted in a medieval case of an obturator fracture dislocation of the hip [47] as well as other fractures [54] from the medieval period. Dittmar et al. [54] described three individuals from medieval Cambridge, England, with multiple fractures. ...

Caring for the injured: Exploring the immediate and long-term consequences of injury in medieval Cambridge, England

International Journal of Paleopathology