The remains of seven Romans unearthed in Cannon Street in 1861.
Males
2
Females
2
Indeterminates
11
Origins of the collection
Cannon street
Cannon Street was at the centre of Roman Londinium. Much of what we know about life at the time has been derived from archaeological remains from excavations since these individuals were found.
Buried in river soil
Three of the individuals from Cannon Street have dark reddish-brown staining that is indicative of burial in alluvial (river) soil.
The Walbrook tributary ran across Cannon Street during the Roman period and while many crania have been found associated with it, it is unlikely that these remains are related to the much talked about ‘Walbrook skulls’.
Mandibles
Three individuals consist of a cranium and mandible. The presence of the mandibles suggest that skulls had not travelled far from where they were interred. There is no evidence of decapitation.
Dental defects
All but one of these individuals have dental defects. The defect indicate the individuals teeth stopped growing during childhood as a result of disease or nutritional deficiencies.
These skulls were given to the collections of the Royal College of Surgeons during the Victorian period and were transferred to the Natural History Museum in the late 1940s.
Linear enamel hypoplasia
PA SK 172
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Further reading
- Filling in the gap: dental disease in past populations
- Don’t feel old? Your bones might disagree
- Harward, C, Powers, N and Watson, S 2015. The upper Walbrook valley cemetery of Roman London: Excavations at Finsbury Circus, City of London, 1987-2007. MOLA Monograph Series 69.
Related information
Collections on the move
Access to some collections will be affected as we prepare for the move to our new collections, science and digitisation centre.
Accessing the collections
Scientists and collections management specialists can visit the collections and borrow specimens for research.
Collections management
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