The 1,600-year-old
remains of a middle-age man buried alongside an ornate belt decorated with
images of dolphins and dogs have been found in a grave in Leicester, England,
archaeologists report.
The belt's style
suggests that its owner worked as a solider or civil servant during the Late
Roman period, during the second half of the fourth century A.D or the early
fifth century A.D., the archaeologists, from the University of Leicester
Archaeological Services (ULAS), said on July 7.
The team made the
discovery during an excavation in which they dug up 83 skeletons from a Late
Roman cemetery in Leicester's West End. One of the graves, a simple one dug
into mudstone by the bank of the River Soar, held the middle-age man's remains,
as well as the extraordinary belt. [In Photos: The Ancient Roman Baths of Bath, England]
Rare find
The cemetery is
located southwest of an ancient Roman town and close to what was once a major
Roman road known as Fosse Way. But despite Rome's extensive settlements in
England, it's rare to find such an ornate belt that has most of its parts,
including the buckle, belt plate and strap end, ULAS researchers said.
"The survival
of the delicate thin-sheet bronze belt plate is remarkable," Nick Cooper,
the post-excavation manager at ULAS, said in a statement. "It is cast in the so-called
'chip-carved' style decorated with interlocking spirals and would have been
riveted to a wide leather belt or girdle, with a thinner securing strap running
through the buckle and ending with the strap end."
The buckle is
decorated with images of dolphin heads, and the strap end has images of
crouching dogs on either side of its tapered end, he added.
Belts like this one
— which have been found in other Late Roman cemeteries in London, Dorchester on
Thames and Winchester in England, as well as in Belgium — may have been worn as
a symbol of authority, the archaeologists said.
Roman soldiers wore these belts across northeastern
France, Belgium and along the eastern border of the Roman Empire, research
shows. Evidence suggests that civilian elite also wore these belts in Late
Roman times, ULAS said.
A soldier's life
An analysis of the
newfound belt's owner suggests that he was between 36 and 45 years old when he
died. The man had poor health during his childhood but led a relatively healthy
life as an adult, they said.
However, the man's
remains revealed that he sustained several injuries throughout his life,
including a fracture in his left forearm that healed but left him with a
weakened wrist. This type of injury is called a "parry fracture,"
which is typically caused by raising the arm to ward off a blow or a falling
object, the archaeologists said.
In addition, the man
had damaged muscles in his upper right arm and shoulder, possibly caused by
overuse, such as by overextending the muscles when throwing or lifting an
object, the researchers said. It's difficult to say exactly how the man got
hurt, but the belt suggests that he served as a solider and then perhaps became
a local civil servant in his later years, the researchers
said.
Original article on Live Science.
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