Disability and Care in Late Medieval Lund, Sweden : An Analysis of Trauma and Intersecting Identities, Aided by Photogrammetric Digitization and Visualization
(2025) In Open Archaeology 11(1).- Abstract
- This article is a Bioarchaeology of Care and Disability focused analysis of an individual who suffered a severe fracture of the left knee in Late Medieval Lund, Scania (1300–1536 CE). We question the degree to which written sources from the period represent the reality of the disability experience, and to that end how identities intersect in the Medieval urban landscape. Following an index of care model methodology, we provide an interpretation of the pathological evidence within the archaeological and historical context of Medieval Lund. In this case, the individual received both short and long-term care, which included treatment of pain and inflammation, assistance with hygiene and nutrition, and the management of disability as a result... (More)
- This article is a Bioarchaeology of Care and Disability focused analysis of an individual who suffered a severe fracture of the left knee in Late Medieval Lund, Scania (1300–1536 CE). We question the degree to which written sources from the period represent the reality of the disability experience, and to that end how identities intersect in the Medieval urban landscape. Following an index of care model methodology, we provide an interpretation of the pathological evidence within the archaeological and historical context of Medieval Lund. In this case, the individual received both short and long-term care, which included treatment of pain and inflammation, assistance with hygiene and nutrition, and the management of disability as a result of physical impairment for the remainder of the individual’s life. Their treatment in death with a prominent burial position close to the church, a symbol of upper social status during the Medieval period, demonstrates that the identity of disability in the past is a much more complex process than can be gleaned from the written sources. Our analysis also employed 3D online visualization and annotation solutions to aid in the analysis and dissemination of our results, making data more accessible to readers and researchers alike. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/9557188e-4c37-4adc-a990-b159a5156a1b
- author
- Nolan, Blair
LU
; Tornberg Fritz, Sandra LU ; Derudas, Paola LU
; Dininno, Domenica and Tornberg, Anna LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2025-04-10
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Open Archaeology
- volume
- 11
- issue
- 1
- article number
- 20250043
- pages
- 18 pages
- publisher
- De Gruyter
- ISSN
- 2300-6560
- DOI
- 10.1515/opar-2025-0043
- project
- A Bioarchaeological Perspective on Urbanization in Medieval Denmark: Lund from 990 AD to 1536 AD
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 9557188e-4c37-4adc-a990-b159a5156a1b
- date added to LUP
- 2025-04-11 08:55:41
- date last changed
- 2025-04-30 10:43:20
@article{9557188e-4c37-4adc-a990-b159a5156a1b, abstract = {{This article is a Bioarchaeology of Care and Disability focused analysis of an individual who suffered a severe fracture of the left knee in Late Medieval Lund, Scania (1300–1536 CE). We question the degree to which written sources from the period represent the reality of the disability experience, and to that end how identities intersect in the Medieval urban landscape. Following an index of care model methodology, we provide an interpretation of the pathological evidence within the archaeological and historical context of Medieval Lund. In this case, the individual received both short and long-term care, which included treatment of pain and inflammation, assistance with hygiene and nutrition, and the management of disability as a result of physical impairment for the remainder of the individual’s life. Their treatment in death with a prominent burial position close to the church, a symbol of upper social status during the Medieval period, demonstrates that the identity of disability in the past is a much more complex process than can be gleaned from the written sources. Our analysis also employed 3D online visualization and annotation solutions to aid in the analysis and dissemination of our results, making data more accessible to readers and researchers alike.}}, author = {{Nolan, Blair and Tornberg Fritz, Sandra and Derudas, Paola and Dininno, Domenica and Tornberg, Anna}}, issn = {{2300-6560}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{04}}, number = {{1}}, publisher = {{De Gruyter}}, series = {{Open Archaeology}}, title = {{Disability and Care in Late Medieval Lund, Sweden : An Analysis of Trauma and Intersecting Identities, Aided by Photogrammetric Digitization and Visualization}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/opar-2025-0043}}, doi = {{10.1515/opar-2025-0043}}, volume = {{11}}, year = {{2025}}, }