Being rich in Middle Ages led to unhealthy life

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Press Trust of India Berlin
Last Updated : Oct 21 2015 | 3:57 PM IST
Being wealthy in the Middle Ages led to an unhealthy life as rich people were more exposed to the toxic heavy metal lead than the poor, a new study suggests.
In the Middle Ages only wealthy town people could afford to eat and drink from beautiful, coloured glazed cups and plates. But the glazing was made of lead, which found its way into the body if someone ate acidic foods.
"Lead poisoning can be the consequence when ingesting lead, which is a heavy metal. In the Middle Ages you could almost not avoid ingesting lead, if you were wealthy or living in an urban environment," said Associate Professor Kaare Lund Rasmussen, Department of Physics and Chemistry, University of Southern Denmark (SDU).
Rasmussen and colleagues have published a series of chemical and anthropological analyses of 207 skeletons from six cemeteries in northern Germany and Denmark.
"There really is a big difference in how much lead, the individuals from the cemeteries had in their bodies. This depended on whether they lived in the country or in a town," said Rasmussen.
"We see almost no lead in the bones from rural individuals, while the levels of this toxic metal were high in urban individuals," said Rasmussen.
In the Middle Ages wealthy Danes and Germans mainly lived in towns, while the rural population was generally poorer and more isolated. The wealthy could afford to eat and drink of glazed pottery, and this was the main source of lead poisoning.
"In those days lead oxide was used to glaze pottery. It was practical to clean the plates and looked beautiful, so it was understandably in high demand. But when they kept salty and acidic foods in glazed pots, the surface of the glaze would dissolve and the lead would leak into the food," said Rasmussen.
In the country, glazed pottery was seemingly used more rarely. And even if you had the money, it would have been more difficult to get by. Instead, the country people used unglazed pottery and thus unknowingly saved themselves from exposure to the toxic lead.
Glazed pottery was not the only source of lead in the towns. Lead was also present in coins, stained glass windows and lead tiles on the roofs of important buildings. Drinking water was often collected from the roof, and this may also have been an important source of lead.
The research team also tested the skeletons for their content of mercury. Mercury was used to prepare the colour cinnabar, for gilding and as medicine against leprosy and syphilis.
The results of the measurements show that the urban population was more exposed to mercury than the rural population. Mercury was administered to treat especially leprosy, which almost half of the individuals in the study suffered from.
The study is published in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports.
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First Published: Oct 21 2015 | 3:57 PM IST

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