Archaeological conservationist Brynjar Sandvoll and his co-worker Ragnar Lochen (R) study the bones of a Viking queen buried together with another women in Oslo September 11, 2007. Tests of the bones of two Viking women found in a buried longboat have dispelled 100-year-old suspicions that one was a maid sacrificed to accompany her queen into the afterlife, experts said on Friday. (Heiko Junge/Scanpix Norway/Reuters)
By Alister Doyle
OSLO (Reuters) - Tests of the bones of two Viking women found in a buried longboat have dispelled 1000-year-old suspicions that one was a maid sacrificed to accompany her queen into the afterlife, experts said on Friday.
The bones indicated that a broken collarbone on the younger woman had been healing for several weeks -- meaning the break was not part of a ritual execution as suspected since the 22-metre (72 ft) long Oseberg ship was found in 1904.
"We have no reason to think violence was the cause of death," Per Holck, professor of anatomy at Oslo University, told Reuters after studying the two women who died in 834 aged about 80 and 50.
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Friday, April 25, 2008