The churchyard of St George-the-Martyr was in use for more than six centuries throughout the post-medieval period.
For many years it was a burial place for prisoners who died in Marshalsea and King's Bench Prison for debtors. Charles Dickens's father was famously incarcerated in Marshalsea in 1824.
Individuals
51
Males
30
Females
12
Subadults
1
Indeterminates
8
Origins of the collection
The collection is a series of crania from the graveyard of St George-the-Martyr, probably dating to the latter part of the post-medieval period.
Church of St George-the-Martyr
The first record of the Church of St George-the-Martyr (also known as St George's-in-the-Borough) is from 1122, when it became part of Bermondsey Abbey.
The church was rebuilt in the fourteenth century, enlarged in 1629 and again rebuilt in 1734-36 into the building that exists today.
The burial ground was situated on the north side of the church and was in use for more than six centuries. It eventually closed in the 1850s and was made into a garden in 1882.
Unearthing the remains
The attached index cards document that they were discovered during the widening of the roadway.
There have been two such occurrences:
- part of the south side of the graveyard was shorn off in 1902-04 for the widening of Long Lane
- in 1905 London County Council acquired part of the churchyard to construct a new road in between Tabard Street and Borough High Street.
The remains were transferred from the Royal College of Surgeons to the Natural History Museum in the late 1940s.
Individuals of note
Metabolic disease
PA SK 1367
Cranium of adult female exhibiting pathological changes from nutritional defects or metabolic disease.
This manifested as cribra orbitalia (coalescing porosity in both orbital roofs) and low-density pinpoint porosity on the greater wing of the sphenoid and the inferior-anterior temporal bones.
Poor dental health is also evident as there is a large perforation into the maxillary sinus at the upper left second molar which was caused by an abscess.
PA SK 1406
Cranium of a child aged around nine (+/- three) years old exhibiting pathological changes from poor nutrition or metabolic disease. This cranium exhibits a severe case of healed cribra orbitalia in both orbital roofs in the form of coalesced porosity displaying a trabecular structure, as well as porosity on the endocranial surface of the frontal bone.
Dental disease
PA SK 1372
Cranium of an adult male with dental disease. This individual probably had very poor dental hygiene, and as a consequence lost all their teeth during life (ante-mortem).
There are traces of infection throughout the mouth. There was also associated loss of alveolar bone and they also had multiple dental abscesses. One of these abscesses drained into maxillary sinus.
PA SK 1382
Cranium and mandible of adult of indeterminate (ambiguous) sex with metopic suture and poor dental health.
Multiple teeth were lost ante-mortem, with some sockets fully resorbed and others in the process of resorbing.
There is much alveolar recession from dental disease and the crown of the upper left second molar has been nearly completely destroyed by a carious lesion.
There is also a large amount of dental calculus on the lower teeth, particularly on the left occlusal (chewing) and lingual (tongue-side) surfaces.
Trauma
PA SK 1376
Cranium of an adult male with nasal fracture.
The trauma occurred ante-mortem and had since healed. It runs diagonally from the superior left to the inferior right nasal bone. Consequentially the nose would have likely slanted to the left-hand side.
There is also a small amount of textile adhered to left side of the anterior aspect of the frontal, and a copper stain medially, probably from the funerary shroud and shroud pin.
PA SK 1385
Cranium of an adult male with blunt-force facial fractures on the zygomatic process of the left maxilla and on the temporal process of the left zygomatic bone.
The trauma cracked through the maxillary sinus, displacing the zygomatic bone posteriorly. Malunion of the fracture has occurred between the maxilla and zygomatic bones.
The zygomaticotemporal joint has also displaced posteriorly, creating an indentation in the zygomatic bone. The offsetting of the nasal bones might have occurred at the same time.
These traumas occurred many years before death given the degree of healing.
In addition this individual suffered from dental disease. This is evident from ante-mortem tooth loss, the presence of at least seven abscesses in the mouth and destruction of the crown of the only tooth present (upper right second premolar) by a carious lesion.
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Read more
- Debtors, Dickens and Dorrit at St George the Martyr, Southwark
- Trauma in London
- Filling in the gap: dental disease in past populations
- Don’t feel old? Your bones might disagree
- Darlington, I (1955). Survey of London: Volume 25, St George's Fields (The Parishes of St. George the Martyr Southwark and St. Mary Newington). London: London County Council.
- Bashford, R (2003). St George the Martyr, London Borough of Southwark. Project Report. Oxford Archaeological Unit Ltd. (Unpublished)
- London Metropolitan Archives. Saint George-the-Martyr: Borough High Street, Southwark (reference code: p92/geo)
- The Church of St George the Martyr
- The Gaols Committee of 1729
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