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Danish archaeologists recently unearthed dozens ofmedieval graves, shedding light on how disease and hardship shaped life in early Christian Denmark.
Officials from the Moesgaard Museum in Beder, Denmark, announced the discovery in a recent news release.
The skeletons were found in nearby Aarhus, in St.Oluf’s Cemetery, which existed from the 1100s until 1813.It was named after St.Olaf, a Norwegian Viking king renowned for spreading Christianity across Scandinavia.
ANCIENT CHRISTIAN FIGURINES DISCOVERED IN 1,500-YEAR-OLD DESERT GRAVES
“The remains are believed to be up to 900 years old, belonging to a churchyard from the 12th century, near the old Viking town of Aros,” the museum said in a statement.The discoveries came during a city project to upgrade waste facilities.
Mads Ravn, head of the Moesgaard Museum�

An excavation in Aarhus uncovered dozens of medieval Christian graves at St.Oluf’s Cemetery near the old Viking town.(Moesgaard Museum)
“[It was] much more than expected and very dense,” he said.
The graves didn’t belong to Denmark’s earliest Christian converts, Ravn noted.The religion first spread in the 9th and 10th centuries.Around 965, Harald Bluetooth completed Denmark’s conversion to Christianity, as commemorated on theJelling rune stone.
The faith appears to have become firmly established in Aarhus by the 12th century;the cemetery represents graves that were firmly rooted in Christianity, rather than transitioning to it.

Researchers from Moesgaard Museum examined skeletal remains from a Christian cemetery used between the 1100s and 1813.(Moesgaard Museum)
Few of the remains were buried with grave goods, but Ravn noted that one early modern grave featured a curious artifact.
“One from 1626 was buried with a coin in the mouth, suggesting that local folklore, and especially a tradition among sailors, seems to have prevailed,” the archaeologist observed.
The real surprise of the excavation, said Ravn, was how much it revealed about the poor Christians of Aarhus, as opposed to the rich.

The graveyard near old Aros allowed archaeologists to compare the lives of poorer Christians with those buried at the cathedral.(Moesgaard Museum)
“[It] opens a door to understanding everyday life, and from other cemeteries we know that life was hard, with an average life expectancy around 37 years, often revealing many diseases,” the archaeologist said.
“One find revealed three children buried on top of each other, as if they were buried after an infection, plague or another deadly disease,” Ravn continued.
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“Further analyses may reveal the cause of death and the age and sex of the skeletons in more detail.”
The team’s main takeaways from the dig were disease-related, as leprosy, plague, waterborne illness and syphilis and other ailments were all common causes of death in olden days.
“[It] opens a door to understanding everyday life.”
“One could argue that this was the reason that they could bring all the new diseases to the New World, where it took a hard turn on the Native Americans,” Ravn noted.
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“Further analysis may reveal which diseases dominated.”
“Life was hard and short [back then], with many women dying in childbirth,” he added.“When people ask me if I, asan archaeologist,wish to have lived in the past — the answer is negative.”
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