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UK funding (1 723 567 £) : Les rats et l’archéologie du commerce, de l’urbanisme et de la maladie dans les sociétés européennes d’autrefois Ukri01/01/2023 UK Research and Innovation, Royaume Uni
Vue d’ensemble
Texte
Les rats et l’archéologie du commerce, de l’urbanisme et de la maladie dans les sociétés européennes d’autrefois
| Abstract | The black and brown rat are among the most globally successful commensal species, and the most significant for European history. Each has spread far beyond its native range in Asia by colonising niches around human settlements, likely reaching Europe in the Iron Age and 18th C respectively. The resulting association with shifting patterns of settlements and trade makes rats potentially valuable proxies for human history-if this anthrodependency can be understood. At the same time, rats have profound impacts on human societies as food pests and agents of disease, most notoriously-if controversially-implicated in historic plague pandemics including the 14th C Black Death. RATTUS aims to chart the history of rats in Europe from late prehistoric origins to the 19th C. While fundamentally archaeological, the project also draws on genetics, textual sources, and ecological modelling to move beyond documentation of dispersal history and build an understanding of underlying processes. How has human history shaped the distribution and ecology of rats over the past 2500 years? What in turn can rat remains tell us about key debates in human history, such as the post-Roman reconfiguration of economic and settlement systems and the emergence of medieval towns and trade? And what roles can rats really have played in the First and Second Plague Pandemics? Despite a recent revolution in plague history bringing unprecedented detail on the evolution and geographic spread of the bacterium itself, knowledge of the rodent populations most widely blamed for its transmission remains superficial, holding back understanding. Addressing these issues in detail has only recently become feasible thanks to advances in bioarchaeological methods: a single rat bone can now reveal taxonomic ID, genetic affinity, disease, diet, and date. The time is thus ripe for a systematic effort to unlock the potential of these most fascinating and significant of rodents as a source for-and factor in-human history |
| Category | Research Grant |
| Reference | EP/X03058X/1 |
| Status | Active |
| Funded period start | 01/01/2023 |
| Funded period end | 31/12/2027 |
| Funded value | £1 723 567,00 |
| Source | https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=EP%2FX03058X%2F1 |
Participating Organisations
| University of York | |
| University of Turin | |
| University of Vienna | |
| Institute of Archaeology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague | |
| University of Basel | |
| Uppsala University | |
| University of Leicester | |
| National Museum of Natural History | |
| Trent University | |
| American School of Classical Studies at Athens |
Cette annonce se réfère à une date antérieure et ne reflète pas nécessairement l’état actuel. L’état actuel est présenté à la page suivante : University of York Chaplaincy Centre, York, Royaume Uni.