Roman occupation damaged health in ancient Britain

The Roman conquest of Britain in AD 43 led to a lasting decline in population health, especially in urban areas, according to a new study of ancient skeletons. Researchers found higher rates of bone abnormalities and nutritional deficiencies among people in Roman towns compared to the Iron Age. These effects persisted for generations due to diseases, social inequalities, and poor living conditions.

A study published in Antiquity reveals that the Roman occupation of Britain, beginning in AD 43, negatively impacted the health of local populations, particularly in urban centers. Rebecca Pitt at the University of Reading analyzed 646 skeletons from 24 sites across south and central England. These included 372 children under 3.5 years old and 274 adult females aged 18 to 45, spanning from four centuries before the Roman arrival to the fourth century AD, when they withdrew.

Pitt examined bones and teeth for signs of disease and malnutrition, using X-rays to detect developmental changes from vitamin C and D deficiencies. The findings showed stark differences: 81 percent of urban Roman adults had bone abnormalities, compared to 62 percent in the Iron Age. For children, the rates were 26 percent in the Iron Age, 41 percent in rural Roman settlements, and 61 percent in urban sites like Venta Belgarum (modern Winchester) and Corinium Dobunnorum (Cirencester).

Rickets, caused by insufficient vitamin D from sunlight, was especially common among urban children. Pitt attributes these issues to diseases introduced by the Romans, class divides that limited resource access, and overcrowded, polluted conditions in new infrastructure. “Environmental exposures during critical periods of early development can have lasting effects on an individual’s health,” she explained, noting how maternal health influences offspring.

Experts like Martin Millett of the University of Cambridge suggest the urban effect might reflect growing inequality between rich and poor under Roman rule, rather than just city density. Richard Madgwick of Cardiff University agrees that benefits like improved sanitation did not reach everyone equally. “The reality is that not everyone benefited and it took a little while to trickle down to the different elements of society,” he said. Pitt added a personal note: “My dad always jokes about The Life of Brian, but the Romans had quite a negative impact on our health, which affected quite a few generations.”

This research challenges the notion of Roman civilization as wholly beneficial, highlighting generational health burdens in conquered territories.

Articoli correlati

Archaeologists excavate a medieval Danish cemetery, revealing high-status graves of skeletons with leprosy and tuberculosis signs.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Study of medieval Danish cemeteries finds illness did not consistently dictate burial status

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA Verificato

Researchers examining 939 adult skeletons from five medieval Danish cemeteries found no consistent evidence that people with leprosy or tuberculosis were relegated to lower-status graves. Instead, individuals showing signs of these diseases were often buried in prominent locations, suggesting that responses to illness varied across communities rather than following a uniform pattern of exclusion.

A genetic analysis of more than a thousand ancient British genomes shows the Roman conquest left only a small mark on the island's ancestry despite major cultural shifts.

Riportato dall'IA

Genetic analysis of remains from a megalithic tomb near Bury, 50 kilometers north of Paris, reveals a complete population turnover around 3000 BC. The earlier group shared genetics with northern European farmers, while newcomers arrived from southern France and the Iberian Peninsula. Researchers link the shift to disease, environmental stress, and social changes.

Architect and urbanist Andrés Borthagaray warned that noise in big cities like Buenos Aires has become a public health issue. Drawing from a survey of over 600 cases in the City of Buenos Aires, he highlighted the severe health damages from sustained noise, supported by international norms and WHO studies.

Riportato dall'IA

A new study in Nature examines over 2,000 years of population history in Argentina's Uspallata Valley, showing local hunter-gatherers adopted farming rather than it being introduced by migrants. Later, maize-dependent groups from nearby areas migrated into the region amid climate instability, disease, and population decline. Kinship networks helped communities endure without evidence of violence.

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta