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Rowdyboy

(22,057 posts)
Wed Feb 5, 2014, 11:05 PM Feb 2014

Scientists have likely found Charlemagne's skeleton



http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2014/02/05/newser-scientists-charlemagne-skeleton/5223971/


The German researchers say the 94 bones and bone fragments are from a tall, thin, older man, and their dimensions match descriptions of Charlemagne, who was unusually tall for the period at 6 feet, but also thin. (PhysOrg notes another oddity: His father, Pepin the Short, measured only about five feet.) The researchers also found evidence of injury to the kneecap and heel bones, which is consistent with claims that Charlemagne walked with a limp in his later years.

Researchers first secretly opened what was said to be the emperor's sarcophagus in 1988; he died in 814.

Most of the bones were found in his tomb, with some found in a bust depicting him and one found in a ceremonial container used to hold remains. As for the rest of his bones, they were likely given away as relics.

"Thanks to the results from 1988 up until today, we can say with great likelihood that we are dealing with the skeleton of Charlemagne," says one of the scientists. What they didn't determine: any new details about his health or cause of death.







USA NOW



29 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Scientists have likely found Charlemagne's skeleton (Original Post) Rowdyboy Feb 2014 OP
History is so cool. nt BootinUp Feb 2014 #1
Excellent news, my dear Rowdyboy! CaliforniaPeggy Feb 2014 #2
Grandpa, they found you! Zen Democrat Feb 2014 #3
Including a friend of mine I'll see tomorrow.... Rowdyboy Feb 2014 #4
Yup, Sherman A1 Feb 2014 #10
Think you are correct unc70 Feb 2014 #11
I would say so. I believe I am. nt silvershadow Feb 2014 #12
Certainly everyone with any Caucasian blood probably is GeoWilliam750 Feb 2014 #21
So, at least part of Charlemagne was buried in Charlemagne's tomb HereSince1628 Feb 2014 #5
Here's the only explanation I can find..... Rowdyboy Feb 2014 #7
Thanks. HereSince1628 Feb 2014 #8
Charles the Magnificent. Now there's a nickname to envy. tclambert Feb 2014 #6
I had a flash back.... AnneD Feb 2014 #13
I kept thinking of that, too. tclambert Feb 2014 #16
There's a T.C. Boyle story thucythucy Feb 2014 #19
There was an honest to God Viking beserker called Ivar the Boneless.... Rowdyboy Feb 2014 #20
That's pretty amazing! thucythucy Feb 2014 #22
my friend is named Zoltifar the Magnificent and Untamed. BlancheSplanchnik Feb 2014 #15
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #24
heeeeeeeee! BlancheSplanchnik Dec 2014 #27
Ever read any T. C. Boyle? thucythucy Mar 2018 #29
My kind of king packman Feb 2014 #9
Huh? not mine *killed all non christians to create a christian kingdom lunasun Feb 2014 #17
Looking at Middle Age packman Feb 2014 #18
Our modern popular image of Medieval monarchs pretty much comes from him. Odin2005 Nov 2014 #23
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #25
Bender was the first thing to pop into my head... Lawlbringer Feb 2014 #14
This message was self-deleted by its author Sweeney Dec 2014 #26
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2016 #28

unc70

(6,325 posts)
11. Think you are correct
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 10:13 PM
Feb 2014

Most everyone I know has him in their line. I've got him multiple ways!

BTE My brother looks a lot like all the pictures of Charlemagne.

GeoWilliam750

(2,540 posts)
21. Certainly everyone with any Caucasian blood probably is
Sat Feb 8, 2014, 08:06 PM
Feb 2014

Then again, on average, at 1,200 years in the past, the average individual living today is likely to have had on the order of a trillion ancestors (can make an argument for somewhat more). There may be a few duplicates amongst those trillion.

We are all far more closely related than one might imagine.

Then again, as the saying goes, you can choose your friends.

HereSince1628

(36,063 posts)
5. So, at least part of Charlemagne was buried in Charlemagne's tomb
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 02:18 PM
Feb 2014

What is/was the story of why there was doubt?

Rowdyboy

(22,057 posts)
7. Here's the only explanation I can find.....
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 03:50 PM
Feb 2014
http://in.news.yahoo.com/1200-old-bones-father-europe-charlemagne-unearthed-germany-055630570.html

Frank Ruhli, Head of the Center for Evolutionary Medicine at the University of Zurich in Switzerland, said that it might appear as an obvious conclusion but it isn't, as Charlemagne was exhumed and reburied many times with parts of his body given away as relics, so identifying his skeleton is not an easy task, Discovery News reported.

Ruhli, who announced the results of the study last week, 1,200 years after Charlemagne's death, said the bones appear to belong to a single individual, an old and rather tall man. This matches contemporary descriptions of Charlemagne.

tclambert

(11,134 posts)
6. Charles the Magnificent. Now there's a nickname to envy.
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 03:05 PM
Feb 2014

As opposed to, say, the magician at the Renaissance Fair who goes by Zoltan the Adequate (Latin: Zoltanus Adaequatus).

AnneD

(15,774 posts)
13. I had a flash back....
Fri Feb 7, 2014, 10:02 AM
Feb 2014

to Monty Python's Life of Brian. All the Roman soldiers that slept with women in Jerusalem told the women their names were Naughtius Maximus or Biggus Dickus.

tclambert

(11,134 posts)
16. I kept thinking of that, too.
Fri Feb 7, 2014, 11:45 PM
Feb 2014

And Michael Palin (Pilate) insisted he had a friend in Rome whose name really was Biggus Dickus. And he had a wife, Incontinentia Buttocks.

thucythucy

(8,742 posts)
19. There's a T.C. Boyle story
Sat Feb 8, 2014, 04:51 PM
Feb 2014

about Vikings where one of the main characters is Thorkell the Misaligned.

Always loved that.

Rowdyboy

(22,057 posts)
20. There was an honest to God Viking beserker called Ivar the Boneless....
Sat Feb 8, 2014, 06:50 PM
Feb 2014
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivar_the_Boneless

There is some disagreement as to the meaning of Ivar's epithet "the Boneless" (inn Beinlausi) in the sagas. Some have suggested it was a euphemism for impotence or even a snake metaphor (he had a brother named Snake-in-the-Eye). It may have referred to an incredible physical flexibility; Ivar was a renowned warrior, and perhaps this limberness gave rise to the popular notion that he was "boneless". The poem "Háttalykill inn forni" describes Ivar as being "without any bones at all".

Alternatively, the English word "bone" is cognate with the German word "Bein", meaning "leg". Scandinavian sources mention Ivar the Boneless as being borne on a shield by his warriors. Some have speculated that this was because he could not walk and perhaps his epithet simply meant "legless"—perhaps literally or perhaps simply because he was lame. Other sources from this period, however, mention chieftains being carried on the shields of enemies after victory, not because of any infirmity.

“ Of historical personages the author knows of only one of whom we have a vague suspicion that he suffered from osteogenesis imperfecta, namely Ivar Benløs, eldest son of the Danish legendary king Regnar Lodbrog. He is reported to have had legs as soft as cartilage ('he lacked bones'), so that he was unable to walk and had to be carried about on a shield.[9] ”

There are less extreme forms of this disease where the person affected can lack use of their legs but otherwise be unaffected, as may have been the case for Ivar the Boneless. In 2003 Nabil Shaban, a disability rights advocate with osteogenesis imperfecta, made the documentary The Strangest Viking for Channel 4's Secret History, in which he explored the possibility that Ivar the Boneless may have had the same condition as himself. It also demonstrated that someone with the condition was quite capable of using a longbow, such that Ivar could have taken part in battle, as Viking society would have expected a leader to do.


Response to BlancheSplanchnik (Reply #15)

thucythucy

(8,742 posts)
29. Ever read any T. C. Boyle?
Fri Mar 30, 2018, 03:05 PM
Mar 2018

He has a short story called "We Are Norsemen" and one of the main characters is "Thorkell the Misaligned."

 

packman

(16,296 posts)
9. My kind of king
Thu Feb 6, 2014, 05:50 PM
Feb 2014

A warrior/scholar who loved learning (even thou he reportedly couldn't write) and brought about a mini-renaissance in France and Germany. Head of the Holy Roman Empire, which my teachers liked to point out wasn't really an empire, nor Roman, and certainly not Holy.

lunasun

(21,646 posts)
17. Huh? not mine *killed all non christians to create a christian kingdom
Sat Feb 8, 2014, 10:10 AM
Feb 2014

First non-white Muslims then
he launched a bloody war of extermination against the Saxon and other pagan German tribes under his control.
So after killing thousands of pagans, Charlemagne did manage to create a virtually uniform Christian kingdom

Head of the Holy Roman Empire by death and destruction
If you can't convert them kill them ? no not my kind of king but each to his own

 

packman

(16,296 posts)
18. Looking at Middle Age
Sat Feb 8, 2014, 11:59 AM
Feb 2014

dynamics with 21st Century morality - a morality that was shaped by that death and destruction. Hard to believe any-ANY- early Middle Age person, especially a leader of a country would be anything but aggressive to the point of our perceived brutality in establishing order and their idea of civilization. Our judgment of death and destruction - their clear conscience of order and civilization. An argument for the times.

Odin2005

(53,521 posts)
23. Our modern popular image of Medieval monarchs pretty much comes from him.
Sat Nov 15, 2014, 01:47 AM
Nov 2014

Sitting on a throne with an orb and scepter with a big bejeweled gold crown and wearing a fine fur robe.

Response to packman (Reply #9)

Response to Lawlbringer (Reply #14)

Response to Rowdyboy (Original post)

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