londiniumlundene:An Unknown Girl’s GraveIn 1995, builders were clearing the site for theconstruction
londiniumlundene:An Unknown Girl’s GraveIn 1995, builders were clearing the site for theconstruction of 30 St Mary Axe – these days better known as the Gherkin. Anarchaeological investigation unearthed the grave of a teenage girl, estimatedto be between 13 and 17 years old. Carbon dating and pottery finds dated herdeath to between 350 and 400 C.E.. Whether she was Roman, Briton, or fromelsewhere in the Empire is unknown.Whilst construction of the skyscraper continued, the girl’sremains were removed to the Museum of London. When the Gherkin was finished in2004, the developers requested that the girl be reburied at the site. In 2007,she was given a service at a nearby church, followed by a processionaccompanied by an approximation of Roman music, and laid to rest (again).Her new grave can be seen (somewhat appropriately) on BuryStreet; the marble benches that are often occupied by bankers on lunch (or atafter-work drinks) bear a small memorial. The inscription reads, in bothEnglish and Latin: “To the spirits of the dead, the unknown young girl fromRoman London lies buried here.” -- source link
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