Medieval Christian burials in Denmark were likely more influenced by money than supposed outward markers of sin, according to new research.
In medieval Denmark, death could double as a display of status. The closer your grave lay to a church wall or inside a ...
In A Nutshell Medieval Danish cemeteries show no spatial segregation of leprosy or TB sufferers: diseased individuals were buried alongside healthy neighbors Burial location was determined by social ...
An international team of archaeologists used graveyards in Denmark to investigate social exclusion based on illness.
Medieval Christians in Denmark showed off their wealth in death by buying prestigious graves: the closer to the church, the higher the price ...
Learn how medieval Denmark’s burial practices reveal that leprosy and tuberculosis patients were not excluded from ...
Falling ill with leprosy or tuberculosis wasn’t a death sentence for your social status in medieval Denmark, researchers have ...