Crossrail excavations have unearthed an ancient London
burial ground, reports The Guardian.
The victims of several plague outbreaks were also buried
there, and as it filled, there were appeals for more top soil to keep the
bodies decently covered; by the time it closed in 1714 it is said to have held
a two-metre layer solid with corpses.
A walled, two-acre burial ground which was opened in the
mid-17th century by order of the mayor of London has been discovered. It was
the first built away from the city's parish churches and their overfilled
graveyards, and was usually known as Bedlam because it was on land formerly occupied
by the mental hospital.
Because the bodies came from all over London, those buried
there are unusually socially diverse. There are no surviving burial records for
the cemetery, and instead names are scattered through thousands of records in
the parishes where those buried there lived or died. The tunnelling project's
chief archaeologist says up to 4,000 bodies of plague victims and inmates of
Bedlam may yet be discovered.
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