Filipek-Ogden, K.L.; Roberts, Charlotte; Montgomery, Janet; Evans, Jane; Gowland, Rebecca; Tucker, Katie. 2016 Keeping up with the kids: mobility patterns of young individuals from the St. Mary Magdalen Leprosy Hospital (Winchester). American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 159. 143. 10.1002/ajpa.22955
Abstract
Leprosy is one of the few specific
infectious diseases that can be studied in
bioarchaeology due to its characteristic
debilitating and disfiguring skeletal changes.
Leprosy has been, and continues to be, one of the
most socially stigmatising diseases in history,
over-riding all other aspects of social identity for
the sufferers and frequently resulting in social
exclusion. This study examines the stable
isotopic evidence of mobility patterns of
children, adolescents, and young adult
individuals with the lepromatous form of leprosy
in Medieval England (10
th
–12
th
centuries AD) to
assess whether the individuals buried with the
disease were non-locals, possibly from further
afield. Enamel samples from 19 individuals from
the St. Mary Magdalen Leprosy Hospital,
Winchester (UK) were selected for strontium
(
87
Sr/
86
6U DQG R[\JHQ į
18
O) stable isotope
analysis based on age at death (<30 years), the
presence of bone changes associated with
lepromatous leprosy, and the underlying geology
of their burial locations. The results from these
data indicate that the St. Mary Magdalen Leprosy
Hospital received an almost equal mixture of
local and non-local individuals from further
afield, including early pilgrims. At present, the
St. Mary Magdalen Leprosy Hospital is the
earliest dedicated leprosaria found within Britain
and mobility studies such as these can help
elucidate and test some of the broader historical
notions and identities associated with the
movements of those infected with the disease in
Medieval England.
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