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Título
Care in Late Antiquity: Applying the bioarchaeology of care method in the case of an unprecedented pathology in an individual from Herrera de Pisuerga, northern Spain
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Bioarchaeology of care
Historical bioarchaeology
Late Antiquity
Trauma
Monteggia fracture-dislocation
Clasificación UNESCO
5504.05 Prehistoria
72 Filosofía
Fecha de publicación
2024-11-11
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Sáez, R., Edén Fernández Suárez, M., David Candela, G., Andrea Barrio Fioresta, P., León-Cristóbal, A., Romero, J., & Velayos Castelo, C. (2024). Care in Late Antiquity: Applying the bioarchaeology of care method in the case of an unprecedented pathology in an individual from Herrera de Pisuerga, northern Spain. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 60. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JASREP.2024.104867
Resumen
[EN] Although the study of past health-related caregiving has become an increasingly rewarding focus for bioarchaeologists seeking deeper insights into aspects of social relations in pre-modern cultures, to date there has been no bioarchaeological research into caregiving practices in the early historic periods of the Iberian Peninsula. This work remedies this deficiency. The well-preserved remains of Burial 16, an adult male recovered from the Late Antiquity cemetery of Herrera de Pisuerga (northern Spain) in 2016, display evidence of a severe trauma which is unusual in the osteoarchaeological record: a Monteggia dislocation fracture of the left forearm, which healed with radioulnar synostosis affecting the use of the left upper limb. The ramifications of this pathology for Burial 16′s ability to function independently within the community are analyzed using the bioarchaeology of care method, and results suggest the individual received long-term care in response to permanent limitation of the arm function, initially as direct support, then as “accommodation” from the group. Additionally, osteological evidence for significant dental pathology, associated, inter alia, with the loss of teeth and compromised masticatory function, are discussed in relation to possible requirements for further provision of health-related care. Employing a transdisciplinary approach, the moral aspects of caregiving and its motivations are also briefly discussed. This work provides a platform for future bioarchaeological research into caregiving during Late Antiquity, and contributes to the limited body of knowledge regarding the application of bioarchaeology of care in this period. We intend to extend bioarchaeology of care analysis to other burials in this cemetery, as well as to those from other communities, allowing a population-level analysis.
URI
ISSN
2352-409X
DOI
10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104867
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