Women of the Conversion Period: a biomolecular investigation of mobility in early medieval England

Hamerow H, Leggett S, Tinguely C, Le Roux P

Exogamous marriage alliances involving royal women played a prominent role in the conversion of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms to Christianity in the seventh century AD. Yet the large number of well-furnished female burials from this period suggests a broader change in the role of women. The authors present the results of isotopic analysis of seventh-century burials, comparing male and female mobility and the mobility of females from well-furnished versus poorly/unfurnished burials. Results suggest increased mobility during the Conversion Period that is, paradoxically, most noticeable among women buried in poorly furnished graves; their well-furnished contemporaries were more likely to have grown up near to their place of burial.

Keywords:

burials

,

mobility

,

isotope analysis

,

exogamy

,

gender

,

Conversion period

,

Anglo-Saxon England