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The Archaeology of Tenderness: What Two Ancient Baby Burials Tell Us About Being Human
Description
đź“– Read the companion article
About Love, Grief, and Being Human
In northwestern Iran, at a site called Chaparabad, archaeologists recently uncovered something that rewrites not what we know about the past, but how we feel about it. Two ceramic vessels, dating back 6,500 years to the mid-5th millennium BCE, contained fetal remains preserved against impossible odds.
One jar was buried beneath a kitchen floor, alongside the bones of a sacrificed sheep. The other rested near grain storage, unadorned but deliberately positioned. These weren't royal children. There were no golden grave goods, no inscriptions, no monuments. Just clay vessels shaped like wombs, cradling what never got to be.
Through 305 precise skeletal measurements—a forensic miracle given how rarely fetal bones survive—researchers determined both infants were approximately 36-38 weeks gestational age. Full term. Babies who should have been born. Who were expected. Who were, perhaps, already named in the private languages of hope that parents whisper when they feel that first kick.
This episode challenges:
- The assumption that frequent infant mortality created emotional distance
- The focus on monumental archaeology over ordinary human stories
- The idea that ancient peoples were fundamentally different from us
Reference:
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Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas.
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