Abstract

After the Battle Dunbar between English and Scottish forces in 1650, captured Scottish soldiers were imprisoned in Durham and many hundreds died there within a few weeks. The partial skeletal remains of 28 of these men were discovered in 2013. Building on previous osteological work, here we report wide-ranging scientific studies of the remains to address the following questions: Did they have comparable diet, health and disease throughout their lives? Did they have common histories of movement (or lack of movement) during their childhoods? Can we create a collective biography of these men? Strontium and oxygen isotope analysis of tooth enamel investigated childhood movement. Carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of incrementally sampled dentine addressed childhood diet and nutrition. Metaproteomic analysis of dental calculus investigated oral microbiomes and food residues; this was complemented by microscopic analysis of debris in calculus from ingested materials. Selected individuals were examined for dental microwear. The extent of hydroxylation of proline in collagen was examined as a potential biomarker for scurvy. An osteobiography for each man was created using the full range of data generated about him, and these were synthesised using an approach based on the historical method for a collective biography or prosopography. The childhood residences of the men were primarily within the Midland Valley of Scotland, though some spent parts of their childhood outside the British Isles. This is concordant with the known recruitment areas of the Scottish army in 1650. Their diets included oats, brassicas and milk but little seafood, as expected for lowland rather than highland diets of the period. Childhood periods of starvation or illness were almost ubiquitous, but not simultaneous, suggesting regionally variable food shortages in the 1620s and 1630s. It is likely there was widespread low-level scurvy, ameliorating in later years of life, which suggests historically unrecorded shortages of fruit and vegetables in the early 1640s. Almost all men were exposed to burnt plant matter, probably as inhaled soot, and this may relate to the high proportion of them with of sinusitis. Interpersonal violence causing skeletal trauma was rare. Based on commonalities in their osteobiographies, we argue that these men were drawn from the same stratum of society. This study is perhaps the most extensive to date of individuals from 17th century Scotland. Combined with a precise historical context it allows the lives of these men to be investigated and compared to the historical record with unprecedented precision. It illustrates the power of archaeological science methods to confirm, challenge and complement historical evidence.

Highlights

  • In November 2013 human remains were discovered during construction work for a cafein Palace Green Library, at the heart of the World Heritage Site in Durham, England (Fig 1)

  • We build an osteobiography for each individual using the partial evidence for that man, and synthesise this using the prosopographical approach described above

  • In this study we have been able to use a panoply of archaeological science methods to study in detail, with relatively high chronological precision, the lives of these men, and make comparisons to the historical record

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Summary

Introduction

In November 2013 human remains were discovered during construction work for a cafein Palace Green Library, at the heart of the World Heritage Site in Durham, England (Fig 1). This discovery triggered a major research project, which identified the remains as those of Scottish soldiers captured in 1650 at the Battle of Dunbar, and investigated the background and aftermath of the battle and their imprisonment in Durham [1]. Instead of offering individual case studies or generalising from widely dispersed examples, prosopography takes a well-defined population or social group, usually a group who have something in common with one another, and brings the data together in a systematic way to say something about the group, despite incomplete evidence for any one individual. The prosopographical approach has been applied to a wide range of historical groups, for example, the clergy of the Church of England 1780–1839 to examine how clergymen were educated and trained [5] and the members of the Senate in the final years of the Roman Republic, investigating how power shifted from the Senate to the Emperor Augustus [6]

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