Become a Member
News

Skeletons found in 12th century well

June 30, 2011 12:14
Members of the BBC investigative team with some of the skeletons

ByRobyn Rosen, Robyn Rosen

1 min read

The remains of 17 people, believed to be Jewish and found at the bottom of a 12th century well, may change historians' accounts of past attitudes towards medieval Jews.

The skeletons were originally found in 2004 during work on a new shopping centre in Norwich. Now they have been re-examined for a BBC documentary.

Using a combination of DNA analysis, carbon-dating and bone chemical studies, forensic anthropologists at the University of Dundee have worked on the skeletons, which date back to the 12th or 13th centuries. DNA expert Dr Ian Barnes said: "The DNA data suggests the remains share a genetic lineage and common ancestry with modern-day Jews."

The results indicate that five of the bodies were members of a single Jewish family, and a total of 11 were children under the age of 15.