Babies were not meant to be mourned in the Roman Empire. These rare liquid plaster burials prove otherwise.


The mysterious Roman burial ritual of pouring liquid plaster over the dead was not limited to elite adults as previously thought; it was also performed on children, including babies as young as 1 month old, researchers have found.

The finding contradicts Roman legal sources which wrote that infants under 12 months were not meant to be mourned at all, according to two blog posts published by To see the dead project, a collaboration between the University of York and York Museums Trust. Their team investigates the discovery of children among the rare “plaster burials” found in York, in the north of England.

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