Researchers now believe they have identified the remains of a Norwegian story written more than 800 years ago that depicts a dead man being thrown into a castle well.
The Sverris Saga is a 182-section Old Norse document that records the exploits of King Sverre Sigurdsson, who came to power in the late 12th century. In one section, it is said that rival clans who attacked Sveresborg Castle near Trondheim, Norway, “took the dead, threw them into a well, and buried them with stones.”
The well was located within the castle walls and was the only permanent source of water for the area. It has been speculated that the man thrown into the well in this story may have been suffering from a disease, and that throwing him into the well may have been an early act of biological warfare.
In 1938, part of a medieval well in the ruins of Sveresborg Castle was drained, and a skeleton was discovered beneath the rubble and rocks at the bottom. The skeleton, known as “Wellman,” was widely believed to be the remains of the person mentioned in the story, but it was impossible to confirm that at the time.
now, Anna Petersen Researchers at the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research in Oslo used radiocarbon dating and DNA analysis of the remains’ teeth to show that the range of dates in which the man was alive is consistent with the castle raid. . Although it’s not conclusive proof that the man is the person mentioned in the story, “circumstantial evidence is consistent with this conclusion,” Pellersen said.
Additionally, the team was able to further enrich the story. “The investigation we conducted uncovered many details about both the incident and the person that were not mentioned in the story episode,” Petersen said.
For example, DNA suggests he likely had blue eyes and blonde or light brown hair. Researchers also believe, based on comparisons with modern and ancient Norwegian DNA, that his ancestors were from Vest Agder County, in what is now the southernmost tip of Norway.
What they couldn’t find was any evidence that the men were thrown into the well because they were sick or to make drinking water unavailable, but no evidence to the contrary. can’t be found, and the question remains unanswered.
michael martin The researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim say their approach of matching historical documents with DNA evidence will help build the family tree of long-deceased royal families, as well as “physically reveal life stories such as athletics.” He states that it may also be applicable to “describing and drawing schematically.” Between geographical areas of otherwise anonymous people whose remains were recovered from archaeological excavations.
“To my knowledge, this is the earliest instance in which genomic information has been recovered from a specific person, or even a specific person, described in an ancient text,” Martin said.
He says generating genomic information from ancient skeletons can provide new details about a person. “These details are not in the original text, so genetic data enriches the story and provides a way to separate fact from fiction,” Martin says.
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