Bones from a Roman cemetery in Colchester have for the first time had their DNA analysed to confirm there were family burial sites in the town in the fourth century AD.
Butt Road Roman cemetery excavation [Credit: Colchester Archaeological Trust] |
Previous research had suggested the existence of family plots in the Christian level, although proving this definitively has proved a major difficulty. The new study, published in Frontiers in Genetics, is the first time the existence of family groupings in a Roman cemetery has been scientifically proved.
Led by Professor Nelson Fernández, the team from Essex extracted DNA from the femur bones of 29 skeletons, mostly from a large cluster of graves centred on two timber burial vaults.
Reconstruction of the church ca 350 AD [Credit: Peter Froste] |
The results also throw some light on Christian funeral practices in Roman Britain. Most of the sampled graves which were arranged around the pair of vaults are interpreted as ‘focal graves’. The results indicate that family burials could be an important focal burial characteristic, with the associated family groupings perhaps representing people of privilege within the community.
Burials at Butt Road cemetery excavated in 2012 [Credit: Dr Tim Dennis] |
As Britain’s oldest recorded town, during the Roman period Colchester had a number of areas that were clearly used solely as cemeteries. The Butt Road Roman cemetery is one of the largest excavated Romano-British cemeteries and is associated with a church building, probably the earliest known in Britain.
Source: University of Essex [May 03, 2018]