“…Lovejoy and Heiple, 1981;Grauer and Roberts, 1996;Lovell, 1997;Judd and Roberts, 1998;Alvrus, 1999;Jurmain, 1999;Neves et al, 1999;Domett and Tayles, 2006;Djuric et al, 2006;Mitchell, 2006) but the majority of them are the result of a traumatic episode and do not reflect any frailty intrinsic to the bone itself (Dequeker et al, 1997). Fragility fractures, specifically hip fractures, are regarded as unusual occurrences in archaeological skeletal material (Ortner, 2003;Agarwal et al, 2004). A few years ago, Brickley (2002) stated that there were only two published cases of hip fracture in archaeologically derived bone, one from Roman Britain (Roberts and Manchester, 1995) and another from 12th dynasty Egypt (Dequeker et al, 1997), but evidence of fracture of the proximal femur in the archaeological record is growing (e.g.…”