Palaeoparasitological evidence for a possible sanitary stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium, Serbia
Abstract
The aim of this research is to determine whether palaeoparasitological analysis of mineralized concretions found
within a stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium can shed light on its past use. The ruins of Viminacium,
the capital of the Roman province of Moesia Superior, are situated 90 km southeast of the Belgrade in Serbia, and
about 12 km from the town of Kostolac in the vicinity of villages Stari Kostolac and Drmno. It was established as a
military camp in the first century CE with a legion permanently stationed there. The stone vessel was discovered
during systematic archaeological excavations of the public bath complex with a public toilet near the amphitheater
in Viminacium. The finding is dated by relative chronology in the second half of the third century. The
vessel is topologically defined as a mortarium according to shape and size. Mineralized deposits were preserved
inside the vessel rim, sides, and base. Microscopic analysis of the mineralized deposit reve...aled eggs of intestinal
nematode roundworms (most likely Ascaris sp., but possibly Pterygodermatites sp.) from the sides and base of the
vessel. This is the first time that parasite eggs have been identified from concretions inside a Roman stone vessel,
and have strong parallels with a previous finding of parasite eggs in mineralized deposits from a ceramic
chamber pot from late antique Sicily. The finding suggests the possible use, or secondary use, and function of the
stone vessel as a sanitary item (such as storing wiping implements) for personal hygiene in the public bath of
Viminacium. Further paleoparasitological research requires a systematic analysis of calcified deposits from
Roman period stone vessels for more clear insights into their function, use and reuse.
Keywords:
Ascaris sp. / Paleoparasitology / Roman public bath / Roundworm / Stone vessel / ViminaciumSource:
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2024, 57, 104671Publisher:
- Elsevier
Collections
Institution/Community
Археолошки институт / Institute of ArchaeologyTY - JOUR AU - Marković, Немања AU - Raičković Savić, Angelina AU - Mitić, Ana AU - Mitchell D, Piers PY - 2024 UR - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1656 AB - The aim of this research is to determine whether palaeoparasitological analysis of mineralized concretions found within a stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium can shed light on its past use. The ruins of Viminacium, the capital of the Roman province of Moesia Superior, are situated 90 km southeast of the Belgrade in Serbia, and about 12 km from the town of Kostolac in the vicinity of villages Stari Kostolac and Drmno. It was established as a military camp in the first century CE with a legion permanently stationed there. The stone vessel was discovered during systematic archaeological excavations of the public bath complex with a public toilet near the amphitheater in Viminacium. The finding is dated by relative chronology in the second half of the third century. The vessel is topologically defined as a mortarium according to shape and size. Mineralized deposits were preserved inside the vessel rim, sides, and base. Microscopic analysis of the mineralized deposit revealed eggs of intestinal nematode roundworms (most likely Ascaris sp., but possibly Pterygodermatites sp.) from the sides and base of the vessel. This is the first time that parasite eggs have been identified from concretions inside a Roman stone vessel, and have strong parallels with a previous finding of parasite eggs in mineralized deposits from a ceramic chamber pot from late antique Sicily. The finding suggests the possible use, or secondary use, and function of the stone vessel as a sanitary item (such as storing wiping implements) for personal hygiene in the public bath of Viminacium. Further paleoparasitological research requires a systematic analysis of calcified deposits from Roman period stone vessels for more clear insights into their function, use and reuse. PB - Elsevier T2 - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports T1 - Palaeoparasitological evidence for a possible sanitary stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium, Serbia IS - 104671 VL - 57 DO - 10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104671 ER -
@article{ author = "Marković, Немања and Raičković Savić, Angelina and Mitić, Ana and Mitchell D, Piers", year = "2024", abstract = "The aim of this research is to determine whether palaeoparasitological analysis of mineralized concretions found within a stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium can shed light on its past use. The ruins of Viminacium, the capital of the Roman province of Moesia Superior, are situated 90 km southeast of the Belgrade in Serbia, and about 12 km from the town of Kostolac in the vicinity of villages Stari Kostolac and Drmno. It was established as a military camp in the first century CE with a legion permanently stationed there. The stone vessel was discovered during systematic archaeological excavations of the public bath complex with a public toilet near the amphitheater in Viminacium. The finding is dated by relative chronology in the second half of the third century. The vessel is topologically defined as a mortarium according to shape and size. Mineralized deposits were preserved inside the vessel rim, sides, and base. Microscopic analysis of the mineralized deposit revealed eggs of intestinal nematode roundworms (most likely Ascaris sp., but possibly Pterygodermatites sp.) from the sides and base of the vessel. This is the first time that parasite eggs have been identified from concretions inside a Roman stone vessel, and have strong parallels with a previous finding of parasite eggs in mineralized deposits from a ceramic chamber pot from late antique Sicily. The finding suggests the possible use, or secondary use, and function of the stone vessel as a sanitary item (such as storing wiping implements) for personal hygiene in the public bath of Viminacium. Further paleoparasitological research requires a systematic analysis of calcified deposits from Roman period stone vessels for more clear insights into their function, use and reuse.", publisher = "Elsevier", journal = "Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports", title = "Palaeoparasitological evidence for a possible sanitary stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium, Serbia", number = "104671", volume = "57", doi = "10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104671" }
Marković, Н., Raičković Savić, A., Mitić, A.,& Mitchell D, P.. (2024). Palaeoparasitological evidence for a possible sanitary stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium, Serbia. in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports Elsevier., 57(104671). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104671
Marković Н, Raičković Savić A, Mitić A, Mitchell D P. Palaeoparasitological evidence for a possible sanitary stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium, Serbia. in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 2024;57(104671). doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104671 .
Marković, Немања, Raičković Savić, Angelina, Mitić, Ana, Mitchell D, Piers, "Palaeoparasitological evidence for a possible sanitary stone vessel from the Roman city of Viminacium, Serbia" in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 57, no. 104671 (2024), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104671 . .