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Some 325 bodies in a combination of individual, multiple and mass graves were discovered [Credit: University of Bristol] |
Part of the cemetery was investigated between 2006 and 2008 in advance of a new road that had to pass through Rupert's Valley to provide access to the proposed airport project. Some 325 bodies in a combination of individual, multiple and mass graves were discovered. Only five individuals were buried in coffins: one adolescent and four still- or newborn babies. The remainder had been placed (or thrown) directly into shallow graves, before being hastily covered. In some cases mothers were buried with their presumed children, or sometimes the bodies were so close that there might have been a familial relationship.
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Only five individuals were buried in coffins [Credit: University of Bristol] |
Osteological analysis shows that 83 per cent of the bodies were those of children, teenagers or young adults -- prime material for the slave traders who sought victims with a long potential working life. In most cases the actual cause of death is not clear, but this is unsurprising because the main killers aboard a slave ship (such as dehydration, dysentery and smallpox) leave no pathological trace. Nevertheless, scurvy was widespread on the skeletons; several showed indications of violence and two older children appear to have been shot.
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A large number of beads were found [Credit: University of Bristol] |
In addition to the large number of beads, burial conditions allowed for the survival of textiles, including ribbons. A number of metal tags were also found on the bodies that would have identified the slaves by name or number.
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A few slaves managed to retain items of jewellery, such as this copper bracelet, despite the physical ‘stripping process’ that took place after their capture [Credit: University of Bristol] |
Professor Mark Horton said: "Here we have the victims of the Middle Passage -- one of the greatest crimes against humanity -- not just as numbers, but as human beings. These remains are certainly some of the most moving that I have ever seen in my archaeological career."
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A number of metal tags that would have identified the slaves by name or number were also found on the bodies [Credit: University of Bristol] |
The research was supported by the Department for International Development (DFID) and the Leverhulme Trust.
The monograph detailing the excavations is published by the Council for British Archaeology: Pearson, Jeffs, Witkin and MacQuarrie, 2011, Infernal Traffic. Excavation of a Liberated African Graveyard in Rupert’s Valley, St Helena. CBA Research Report 169.
Source: University of Bristol [March 08, 2012]