2019
DOI: 10.9750/issn.2056-7421.2019.86
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Abstract: In 2016, Wardell Armstrong undertook an archaeological excavation at St Mary’s (Leith) RC Primary School, Edinburgh. The archaeological excavation revealed four phases of activity; Phases 1 and 2 comprised coffined and uncoffined human burials. The lack of infectious pathognomic skeletal lesions, the dating of the finds, the dendrochronological analysis of the coffin wood and technological data, along with the known historic land-use of the area, all indicate that the burial ground relates to the 1645 outbreak… Show more

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“…In Britain, these include several sites in London: the East and West Smithfield Black Death cemeteries (Grainger et al, 2008;Pfizenmaier, 2016) and later burials at the Cistercian Abbey of St Mary Graces (Grainger & Phillpotts, 2011) and New Churchyard (Hartle, 2017) (Figure 1). Outside London, there are fourteenthcentury mass burials at Hereford Cathedral (Stone & Appleton-Fox, 1996) and Thornton Abbey (Willmott et al, 2020), and mid-seventeenth-century plague burials at Leith in Scotland (Stoakley, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Britain, these include several sites in London: the East and West Smithfield Black Death cemeteries (Grainger et al, 2008;Pfizenmaier, 2016) and later burials at the Cistercian Abbey of St Mary Graces (Grainger & Phillpotts, 2011) and New Churchyard (Hartle, 2017) (Figure 1). Outside London, there are fourteenthcentury mass burials at Hereford Cathedral (Stone & Appleton-Fox, 1996) and Thornton Abbey (Willmott et al, 2020), and mid-seventeenth-century plague burials at Leith in Scotland (Stoakley, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%