Learning from human remains: Seianti's skeleton - for iPad/Mac/PC - podcast cover

Learning from human remains: Seianti's skeleton - for iPad/Mac/PC

The Open Universitywww3.open.ac.uk
How much can we learn from an entombed skeleton? This album introduces Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa, an Etruscan noblewoman whose remains, along with her magnificent painted sarcophagus and life-size model, provide us with an unequalled insight a Roman life around 150 BC. The Etruscans were the original inhabitants of Italy before the Romans, and Seianti’s sarcophagus and skeleton reveal a huge amount about their customs and society, as well as her own health, lifestyle and status. Medical artists and forensic scientists help complete the picture, by reconstructing her face, using anatomical science. This material forms part of The Open University course A219 Exploring the classical world.
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Episodes

The sarcophagus

An introduction to the most complete Etruscan skeleton in existence.

Oct 07, 20096 min

Who was Seianti?

Seianti’s clothing and jewellery give us many clues about her identity.

Oct 07, 20097 min

Seianti’s skeleton

A pathology expert builds up a fascinating picture of Seianti’s health, lifestyle, and death.

Oct 07, 200910 min

Reconstructing Seianti

A forensic-medical artist and an archaeologist reconstruct Seianti’s face using anatomical science.

Oct 07, 20099 min
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