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Archaeologists find Muromian burial ground in Muroma

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Archaeologists from the Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, working on behalf of the Volga Expedition, have uncovered a Muromian burial ground on the left bank of the Oka River in the city of Muroma.

The Muromians are generally described as a Volga-Finnic people that lived in the Oka River basin in Russia’s present day Vladimir Oblast. The Muromians paid tribute to the Rus’ princes and, like the neighbouring Merya tribe, were assimilated by the East Slavs in the 11th to 12th century AD as their territory was incorporated into the lands of the Rus’.

Excavations have uncovered the remain of 13 individuals, most of which are predominantly male inhumation burials oriented to the north. Among the male burials are associated grave goods consisting of weapons such as spears, axes and ice picks, in addition to coins (dirhams) and 5 lead weights.

In one notable burial are high status items such as an axe, a spear, a knife, a cauldron made of non-ferrous metal, four bronze bracelets and two silver rings. Also in the burial is a belt plaque made of white metal covered in gilding and a beaver tail bag containing two dirhams. According to the researchers, the find is comparable to Hungarian-type belts found over a wide area from the Perm Kama region to the Carpathian basin.

Image Credit : Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences

A closer study of the dirhams (an Islamic currency), places the coins to the beginning of the 10th century AD when dirhams were commonly used in Europe and are found in areas with Viking connections, such as Viking York and Dublin.

Deposited to the left of the burial are items of women’s jewelry, including pendants from a headdress, Muromian temporal rings, a Glazov-type torc, bracelets, and an openwork belt buckle.

Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Header Image Credit : Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences

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Maya tomb with funerary offerings found during hotel construction

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A tomb with funerary offerings has been uncovered during the construction of the Tren Maya Hotel, in Palenque, Mexico.

Archaeologists from the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) conducted rescue excavations following the discovery, revealing skeletal remains associated with the Maya city of Palenque.

Palenque, also known as Lakamha in the Itza Language (meaning “Flat-Place-River”), is located near the Usumacinta River in the Mexican state of Chiapas.

The city dates from 226 BC to AD 799, with most of the major construction works representing a rebuilding effort in response to attacks by the city of Calakmul and its client states in AD 599 and AD 611.

The population declined during the 8th century AD, instead becoming an agricultural population that led to the abandonment of the city zone. By 1520 following the Spanish conquest, contemporary Spanish accounts record the entire region being sparsely populated.

Excavations uncovered a stone lined funerary space sealed with limestone slabs, in which the researchers found the remains of a high-status individual who likely lived in the periphery of Palenque in a small settlement.

The burial is located at a depth of four metres, and also contained ceramic vessels and beads deposited as funerary offerings.

“The individual was placed face up with his legs extended and his head facing north,” said Diego Prieto Hernández from INAH.

The discovery was announced in a press conference reporting on the progress of the Program for the Improvement of Archaeological Zones (Promeza) in Palenque, Moral-Reforma and El Tigre, the three heritage sites that are served within Section 1 of the Mayan Train Project.

INAH

Header Image Credit : INAH

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Archaeologists unearth possible birthplace of King Henry VII at Pembroke Castle

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Archaeologists from the Dyfed Archaeological Trust may have discovered the possible birthplace of King Henry VII at Pembroke Castle in Pembrokeshire, Wales.

Pembroke Castle was founded during the 11th century by Roger de Montgomerie, the 1st Earl of Shrewsbury.

In 1452, Jasper Tudor was presented both the castle and the earldom by his half-brother, King Henry VI. In 1457, Henry VII was born at the castle, the only child of Lady Margaret Beaufort and Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond.

Following Edward IV’s ascension to the throne in 1471, Henry VII endured 14 years of exile in Brittany. He eventually claimed the throne after his forces, with backing from France, Scotland, and Wales, emerged victorious over Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field, marking the climax of the Wars of the Roses.

Henry VII’s reign is credited with many administrative, economic, and tax reforms, having ruled for nearly 24 years until his death in 1509 at the age of 52. Henry VII was succeed by his second son, Henry, Duke of York, who ascended to the crown as Henry VIII.

Historians have long assumed that a 13th century tower on the outer ward (known today as Henry VII Tower) was the birth place of Henry VII. However, a recent study by the Dyfed Archaeological Trust has uncovered evidence of a late-medieval winged hall-house, broadly dating to the 15th century.

The walls of the structure extend to around 25 metres, with comparisons being drawn to medieval buildings found in England and East Wales, such as Penallt Mansion in Kidwelly. Historically, Pembroke Castle was situated in the English-speaking portion of Pembrokeshire, often referred to as “Little England beyond Wales.”

Speaking to the Western Telegraph, Neil Ludlow, a consultant to Pembroke Castle, said: “All our indications are pointing to a late-medieval building which was clearly of high status within Pembrokeshire, and it looks as if it was at least two-storeys, which possibly makes it a better candidate for the birthplace of a king rather that the tower that currently bears his name.”

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