Today, I want to talk about a place I can never go to.
Today, it's under a bypass that runs between Aalen and Nordlingen, here in Southern Germany.
It still bears the name given to it by those who first settled there - Lauchheim.
That's how it appeared 1500 years ago.
The people who came to live there were the Alamanni - a group of tribes who broke through the Limes (the Roman border wall spanning modern Germany) from the north and settled modern-day Southern Germany, the Alsace and northern Switzerland.
Some of these tribespeople, who arrived in the late fourth and early fifth centuries, settled near modern-day Lauchheim, at a place called Mittelhofen.
There, they built a village with farms, a mill, a smith, etc - like that pictured below (a modern reconstruction, elsewhere).
There's quite a few Alamannic villages identified across Southern Germany. Even though it was an incredible boon to archaeologists, that's not what made the site special.
It was the graveyard.
The bodies of 567 males and 547 women were found, with more skeletons unable to be definitively categorised.
There were a total of around 1,300 people interred there, over roughly 200 years.
In archaeological terms, this is amazingly - it gives us a real view over time.
So what do we know about the lives of these people? Quite a bit
Skeletons can tell us a lot. A surprising amount of the bodies interred displayed signs of leprosy, tuberculosis or cancer.
Other skeletons demonstrated clear signs of malnutrition.
There were signs of wear and tear on the bodies. This woman's teeth has a notch worn into them, probably from using her teeth to hold thread when weaving.
Other skeletons showed worn, or degraded joints from intense manual labour, across both sexes.
Then there were the signs of violence.
A number of adults showed signs of trauma from bladed weapons around the head - bashing, slicing or stabbing injuries, implying that warfare was not uncommon.
This man's skull shows a blade slice that would have killed him quickly.
The picture I'm painting here, describing the physical remains, is of hard, rugged lives, spent toiling and suffering from malnutrition and disease. However, that's only half the story.
The Alamanni produced beautiful things.
With two hundred years of grave, a real transition in terms of what was deposited with the dead took place.
One style of burial that I found particularly moving, was of the 'death bed' - this one is a reconstruction of the real one kept at @ALMkonstanz.
Over time, Christian burials appeared, with shrouds in an otherwise earthen grave.
With some of the dead were interred gold crosses - among some of the first Christian symbols found in modern Germany, after the fall of Rome.
Men were buried with their swords, many of which have degraded over time, but changes in style can still be seen.
Both women and men were buried with gold and precious jewelry. Stones came from all over Europe, pearls from even further.
Even during the 'Dark Ages', the world was connected, and luxury goods moving vast distances.
Many women's graves contained 'Zierschieben', worn at the belt, or hanging from them.
Neo-Nazis have tried to adopt them as an ancient holy warrior symbol, but all the evidence says that just isn't true.
Rather than barbarians and savages, as historians of the past have depicted them, these Alamanni were a rather sophisticated people, with an eye for beauty and their own desire to both be remembered and to remember - hence their long-lived cemetery and the spectacular finds.
While many of the most amazing finds are kept at @ALMkonstanz or @LMWStuttgart, the @Alamannenmuseum in Ellwangen has a treasure trove of their own and tells the amazing story of the Alamanni of the area.
I spend a lot of my time reading about the lives of the people who made this part of Germany their home before me, but it's only when I visit places like the museum and come face to face with the artefacts that I feel a connection across the centuries - as if I'm by their graves.
Over the next few months, I'll be writing more about the Alamanni, both here and elsewhere. I hope you'll join me.
Thanks for sticking with the thread, and I hope you enjoyed it.
There are so many world's that have vanished - it's such a privilege to explore them. /FIN
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There's a special kind of ignorance that comes with anti-vaxxers or anti-lockdown types, a real misunderstanding of the world around them that leads them to frame everything as evidence of creeping totalitarianism.
Quarantine facilities have been in Oz since colonization.
Prior to 1832, vessels arriving in Sydney reporting disease would be quarantined off North Head, until a purpose built station was created in 1832.
For over one hundred years, migrant ships docked at the Sydney quarantine station and offloaded those with infectious diseases. They were confined there until they recovered, then released.
So, in my amateur explorations into the 'Dark Age' Alamanni peoples of Southern Germany, I think I've found the first metalhead in history.
No, wait, hear me out...
In 2001, during building of an underground carpark in Trossingen, on the south-eastern edge of the Black Forest, a grave was found. It dated from the sixth century and contained the body of a man, and associated grave goods.
Contained in the 'death bed' along with the body of the man, was a lyre and a wooden flask.
If there's one thing I know about, it's witch hunts. Witch hunts in Early Modern Europe were almost always predicated on a) fanciful explanations for natural phenomena and b) the settling of long-held grudges - both the realm of today's anti-vaxxers and Covidiots.
The sizable witch hunts at Trier, Fulda, Bamberg and Würzburg, in what is today Germany, took place during a century defined by not only internecine warfare and all that entails, but a significant drop in temperatures, caused by what's known as the 'Little Ice Age'.
Early Modern German society, that was dependant on agriculture at a near subsistence level, would suffer heavily from any drop in temperatures.
Sudden changes in the weather, therefore, were viewed with terror and awe.
History, it could be said, is horrible. The past is full of suffering, deprivation, and injustice. Sometimes, however, it's the telling of history that ends up somehow being more awful.
I was reminded of this, when researching German folk tales today.
Tangermünde is a 1,000 year old town on the Elbe River, in the German state of Sachsen-Anhalt.
It was a center of culture and learning as the court of the Hohenzollerns, and was a bustling trade centre as a member of the Hanseatic League.
That all changed on September 13, 1617.
On that day, September 13 1617, almost all of Tangermünde was destroyed by a fire.
Hundreds of homes, warehouses and barns went up in smoke. One of the few buildings to survive was the rectory of the church.
I'm not gonna lie, I've been struggling lately. Much of it has to do with ADD. Never let anyone tell you it's an inconvenience or fashionable diagnosis - it robs you of a lot.
I thought I'd talk about what it does to me, and how I live with it. Maybe some of you might identify.
My ADD presents in my life in four significant ways. They are:
★ Inability to follow instructions.
★ Problems w/ short-term memory.
★ Intrusive thoughts.
★ Inability to manage time.
All have been present in my life, since childhood.
An inability to follow instructions can be one of the most infuriating parts of living with ADD.
It means that in many cases, I simply cannot follow simple steps in a logical sequence, once they reach a certain cognitive threshold.