The suffering of burial 631
[image: Excavations in progress in 1994 in part of the cemetery of St Dochdwy's monastery.]
Excavations in progress in 1994 in part of the cemetery of St Dochdwy's monastery.
[image: Burial 631]
Burial 631 as discovered.
[image: Detail of the iron belts around the waist of burial 631.]
Detail of the iron belts around the waist of burial 631.
[image: The iron belts during conservation work undertaken by a team at Amgueddfa Cymru]
The iron belts during conservation work undertaken by a team at Amgueddfa Cymru.
In 1994 archaeologists excavated the largest collection of early medieval burials yet found in Wales, as well as evidence for an unusual burial practice.
Ideal Homes Wales Ltd had contracted archaeologists from Cotswold Archaeology to excavate land earmarked for a new housing development in Llandough (Vale of Glamorgan).
The site was situated just outside the churchyard of the present parish church - reputedly the site of the early medieval monastery of St Dochdwy - the excavation discovered over 800 burials dating from the 4th- to the 11th-century AD.
Careful study of the skeletons has shed fresh light on the population of Wales at this time. One grave in particular was exceptional.
Burial 631
Burial 631 lay in the middle of the cemetery. The skeleton was that of a young man, aged between 25 and 35, and about 1.75m tall (5.75 feet). Radiocarbon dating of the bone suggested that he died between AD340-660. However, it was not his antiquity that made him special, but rather the two iron straps he wore around his waist.
The ends of these straps were secured behind his back. The tapered iron ends passed through lugs and were hammered over by a second person, making it impossible for the wearer to remove the straps unaided. Clearly this was more than a fashion accessory, but what other functions could it have served?
It has been suggested that the straps may have been worn as an act of penitence - a fitting purpose in the context of a monastic community. Similar cases are certainly known in the Middle Ages. For example, there was a visionary monk at the monastery of Much Wenlock (Shropshire) in the early 8th century called Begga, who wore 'an iron girdle about his loins for the love of God'.
An alternative explanation is that the iron bands served as a hernia belt. Roman texts first record the use of hernia belts on the Continent. Examples have also been excavated from 6th- and 7th- century burials in France, Germany, Switzerland and Spain.
So which interpretation is correct - penitent's belt or hernia truss? The answer is likely to be a little of both. During the early medieval period the endurance of suffering was seen as a path to heaven. So enduring the pain of a hernia may in itself have been in part an act of penitence from which the wearer of these two belts hoped to reap a reward in the afterlife.
Background Reading
'Llandough' by A. Thomas and N. Holbrook. In Current Archaeology, vol. 146, p73-7 (1996).
'An early-medieval girdle from burial 631', by M. Redknap. In N. Holbrook and A Thomas 'An early-medieval monastic cemetary at Llandough, Glamorgan: excavations in 1994', Medieval Archaeology 49 (2005), 53-64.
Article Date: 2 May 2007
2 comments
Ceri Harris on 10 December 2009, 10:40
Sion, you must be my cousin. Uncle Billy was my mothers brother. If you ever want to get in touch, it would be lovely to hear from you. [please email rhagor@museumwales.ac.uk for my contact details]
Ceri
Nice Move on 3 November 2008, 12:14
The Buckler family who lived here, were forced out of their farm by the local council and a BP Property Investment group after 7 years of court so this excavation could take place. (A story of local farmer versus Big Corporation. No chance, the court tricks they pulled on him were relentless)
William Buckler, former owner of Great House Farm has an entrepreneurial son, Sion Buckler who is attempting to raise enough funds to generously purchase every property on the land (around 22 houses) and turn the land into private modern Buckler family houses for the next generation of the family including renaming the Street (currently Church View) to 'Great-House Farm Rd'. He is only 23 years old and already has retired from his career in the military, owns property and is the co-director of Media Receive Ltd (UK).
Anyone wishing to support Sions cause can get in touch with him through his company 'Media Receive ltd'.
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