Heights across the last 2000 years in England
Heights across the last 2000 years in England
This paper uses a dataset of heights calculated from the femurs of skeletal remains to explore the development of stature in England across the last two millennia. We find that heights increased during the Roman period and then steadily fell during the ‘Dark Ages’ in the early medieval period. At the turn of the first millennium heights grew rapidly, but after 1200 they started to decline coinciding with the agricultural depression, the Great Famine and the Black Death. Then they recovered to reach a plateau which they maintained for almost 300 years, before falling on the eve of industrialisation. The data show that average heights in England in the early nineteenth century were shorter than those in Roman times, and that average heights reported between 1400 and 1700 were similar to those of the twentieth century. The paper also discusses the ssociation of heights across time with some potential determinants and correlates (real wages, inequality, food supply, climate change and expectation of life), showing that in the long run heights change with these variables, and that in certain periods, notably the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the associations are observable over the shorter run as well. We also examine potential biases surrounding the use of skeletal remains.
Galofré-Vilà, Gregori
915bea40-9332-4cb4-a077-a927fdf4af54
Hinde, Andrew
0691a8ab-dcdb-4694-93b4-40d5e71f672d
Guntupalli, Aravinda Meera
6ab00497-f86b-4bec-b393-c35a0c1054c9
January 2017
Galofré-Vilà, Gregori
915bea40-9332-4cb4-a077-a927fdf4af54
Hinde, Andrew
0691a8ab-dcdb-4694-93b4-40d5e71f672d
Guntupalli, Aravinda Meera
6ab00497-f86b-4bec-b393-c35a0c1054c9
Galofré-Vilà, Gregori, Hinde, Andrew and Guntupalli, Aravinda Meera
(2017)
Heights across the last 2000 years in England
(Discussion Paper in Economic and Social History, 151)
University of Oxford
38pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Discussion Paper)
Abstract
This paper uses a dataset of heights calculated from the femurs of skeletal remains to explore the development of stature in England across the last two millennia. We find that heights increased during the Roman period and then steadily fell during the ‘Dark Ages’ in the early medieval period. At the turn of the first millennium heights grew rapidly, but after 1200 they started to decline coinciding with the agricultural depression, the Great Famine and the Black Death. Then they recovered to reach a plateau which they maintained for almost 300 years, before falling on the eve of industrialisation. The data show that average heights in England in the early nineteenth century were shorter than those in Roman times, and that average heights reported between 1400 and 1700 were similar to those of the twentieth century. The paper also discusses the ssociation of heights across time with some potential determinants and correlates (real wages, inequality, food supply, climate change and expectation of life), showing that in the long run heights change with these variables, and that in certain periods, notably the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the associations are observable over the shorter run as well. We also examine potential biases surrounding the use of skeletal remains.
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Published date: January 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 417268
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/417268
PURE UUID: 14390d03-8f53-44c8-a8dc-4f72edf59758
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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:44
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Author:
Gregori Galofré-Vilà
Author:
Aravinda Meera Guntupalli
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