Archeologists found the happy couple holding hands in an earthen grave during an excavation of a "lost" chapel in Leicestershire, England, researchers reported Thursday (Sept. 18).
"We have seen similar
skeletons before from Leicester where a couple has been buried together in a
single grave," Vicki Score, University of Leicester Archaeological
Services (ULAS) project manager, said in a statement.
Double graves are not that
unusual. But it's surprising that the two bodies were buried at the so-called
"lost" chapel of St Morrell, only recently discovered by a local
historian and a team of researchers, instead of at the local church.
"The main question we
find ourselves asking is why were they buried up there? There is a perfectly
good church in Hallaton," Score said. "This leads us to wonder if the
chapel could have served as some sort of special place of burial at the
time."
For example, the site may
have served as a place of pilgrimage in Hallaton, a village in east
Leicestershire, during the 14th century, the researchers said. Or, the couple
may have been buried at the Chapel of St Morrell, and not in the main church,
because they were criminals, foreigners or diseased.
ULAS archaeologists and local volunteers have
spent the past four years uncovering the lost chapel of St Morrell, near the
village of Hallaton. The team has found evidence that the use of the hillside
extends back to Roman times, more than 2,000 years ago.
For instance, a square
ditch at the site indicates that the hilltop may have once held a Roman temple.
The team also found an Iron Age shrine with thousands of coins and silver
artifacts, such as a Roman cavalry helmet.
Excavations now show the
chapel's walls and tiled floor, along with pieces of stone masonry, wall
plaster, tiles, lead from the windows and a nearby cemetery. Archaeologists
have also found money among the ruins, including several silver pennies. These
coins, which date back to between the 12th and 16th centuries, have helped
researchers determine the chapel's most active years.
Through the process of
radiocarbon dating, the archaeologists determined that 11 skeletons so far
excavated from the site date back to the 14th century. All of the skeletons
found at the chapel site were laid in an east-west orientation, per Christian
tradition at that time.
Yahoo
Yahoo
Love in heaven
ReplyDeleteROMANTICAL
ReplyDelete