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Anthropology

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Eugene

(63,069 posts)
Thu Sep 12, 2019, 05:56 PM Sep 2019

'Lovers of Modena' skeletons holding hands were both men [View all]

Source: The Guardian

'Lovers of Modena' skeletons holding hands were both men

Researchers believe pair might have been siblings, cousins or soldiers who died together

Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo
@lorenzo_tondo
Thu 12 Sep 2019 16.02 BSTLast modified on Thu 12 Sep 2019 19.50 BST

The “Lovers of Modena”, a pair of skeletons so called because they were buried hand-in-hand, were both men, researchers have found.

The bones, from between the 4th and 6th century AD, were found in a cemetery in 2009 near Modena in northern Italy.

Due to the poor state of the remains, it was not possible to establish the sex of the couple, despite successive attempts using genetic analysis techniques.

Now, a group of researchers from the University of Bologna who developed a new technique using the protein found in tooth enamel have announced that the skeletons belonged to two men. The study, which is believed to have a profound implications for understanding funeral practices, was published on Wednesday in Nature research journal.

-snip-

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/sep/12/lovers-of-modena-skeletons-holding-hands-were-both-men-study

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Related: Enamel peptides reveal the sex of the Late Antique ‘Lovers of Modena’ (Nature)


The skeletons, buried in Roman times, have been holding hands for around 1,500 years (Archeomodena)

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