November 2024
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25 Reads
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November 2024
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25 Reads
September 2024
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106 Reads
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3 Citations
This study challenges historical paradigms using a large-scale integrated bioarchaeological approach, focusing on the female experience over the last 2,000 years in Milan, Italy. Specifically, 492 skeletons from the osteological collection of Milan were used to elucidate female survivorship and mortality by integrating bioarchaeological and paleopathological data, paleoepidemiological analyses, and historical contextualization. Findings revealed changes in female longevity, with a notable increase from Roman to contemporary eras, albeit plateauing in the Middle Ages/modern period. Significant sex-specific differences in mortality risk and survivorship were observed: females had higher mortality risk and lower survivorship in the Roman (first-fifth century AD) and Modern (16th-18th century AD) eras, but this trend reversed in the contemporary period (19th-20th century AD). Cultural and social factors negatively impacted female mortality in Roman and modern Milan, while others buffered it during the Middle Ages (sixth-15th century AD). This study underscored the importance of bioarchaeological inquiries in reconstructing the past, providing answers that may challenge historical assumptions and shedding light on how the interplay of cultural, social, and biological factors shaped the female experience across millennia.
February 2023
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183 Reads
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8 Citations
Stature is a biological trait directly determined by the interaction of genetic and environmental components. As such, it is often evaluated as an indicator for the reconstruction of skeletal biological profiles, past health, and social dynamics of human populations. Based on the analysis of 549 skeletons from the CAL (Collezione Antropologica LABANOF), a study of the diachronic trend of male and female adult stature in Milan (Italy) is being proposed here, covering a time span of about 2000 years, ranging from the Roman era to present-days. The skeletons, from necropolises dedicated to the less wealthy classes of Milanese society, were assigned to one of following five historical periods: Roman Era (first–fifth centuries AD), Early Middle Ages (sixth–tenth centuries AD), Late Middle Ages (eleventh–fifteenth centuries AD), Modern Era (sixteenth–eighteenth centuries AD) and Contemporary Era (nineteenth–twentieth centuries AD), and their stature was estimated according to the regression formulae of Trotter (1970). The collected data were then subjected to statistical analyses with ANOVA using R software. Although stature values showed an ample standard deviation in all periods, statistical analyses showed that stature did not significantly vary across historical periods in Milan for both sexes. This is one of the rare studies showing no diachronic changes in the trend of stature in Europe.
... The CAL is a large osteological collection constituted of over 7,000 skeletons, including about 5,000 from archaeological sites in Lombardy and in particular the urban center of Milan, and 2,127 unclaimed contemporary skeletal remains from the CAL Milano Cemetery Skeletal Collection available for research and didactic purposes in accordance with Italian law (Cattaneo et al., 2018;Viero et al., 2021). The study sample is part of an ongoing research project aiming to reconstruct the lifestyle of the inhabitants of Milan over the last 2,000 years (Biehler-Gomez et al., 2024, 2023b, 2023aGiordano et al., 2023;Mattia et al., 2021) and were selected from the collection based on several criteria: fusion of the coxal bones for a reliable estimation of sex, equal distribution among the five historical periods established for the study (50 skeletons per period) and same number of male and female individuals (125 females and 125 males). As a result, the sample is composed of 50 skeletons per historical period (25 females and 25 males), defined as follows: Roman era (2nd-5th century CE) from the necropolis below the Università Cattolica (dated 3rd-5th century CE), Early Middle Ages (6th-10th century CE) and Late Middle Ages (11th-15th century CE) from the emergency excavations of Sant'Ambrogio and Via Necchi (with stratigraphic units spanning from the 1st century CE to the 15th century CE), Modern era (16th-19th century CE) from the mass grave burials in Via Sabotino (dated to the half of the 17th century) and Contemporary era from unclaimed cemetery individuals who died in the second half of the 20th century ( Table 1). ...
September 2024
... The samples were analysed according to the guidelines outlined by the Global History of Health Project (Steckel et al., 2019). This study focused particularly on linear enamel hypoplasia (LEH), cribra orbitalia (CO), porotic hyperostosis (PO), dental caries, antemortem tooth loss (AMTL), skeletal trauma, femoral length, osteoarthritis (OA), and periosteal new bone formation (PNBF) due to their ability to inform us about levels of physiological stress (Casna & Schrader, 2022;DeWitte, 2014;Wyatt et al., 2022), dental health and diet (Bereczki et al., 2019;Caruso & Nikita, 2024), stature (Biehler-Gomez et al., 2023;Jongman et al., 2019), and violence and lifestyle patterns (Mardini et al., 2023;Redfern, 2017). Age and sex estimations for each individual were based on the original anthropological assessment for each sample (Marschler, 2013;Renhart, 2016;Scholz & Krenn, 2010). ...
February 2023