The Urban Sea

Cribra Orbitalia, Porotic Hyperostosis, Linear Enamel Hypoplasia, and Sinusitis
in three diachronic urban sites from the Dutch province of Zeeland (1030-1800 CE

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Brusse, P., & Henderikx, P. (2012). Geschiedenis van Zeeland. Zwolle: Wbooks.

Casna, M., Schats, R., Hoogland, M. L. P., & Schrader, S. A. (2023). A distant city: assessing the impact of Dutch socioeconomic developments on urban and rural health using respiratory disease as a proxy. Int J Paleopathol, 42, 34–45. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpp.2023.07.003

Casna, M., & Schrader, S. (2022). Urban, and Sinusitis beings. A Bioarchaeological Approach to Socioeconomic Status, Cribra Orbitalia, Porotic Hyperostosis, Linear Enamel Hypoplasia, and Sinusitis in the Early-Modern Northern Low Countries (A.D. 1626–1850). Bioarch Int. DOI: 10.5744/BI.2022.0001

Schats, R. (2016). Life in transition: An osteoarchaeological perspective of the consequences of medieval socioeconomic developments in Holland and Zeeland (AD 1000–1600) (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Leiden University, Leiden.

Schats, R., van Hattum, I., Kootker, L. M., Hoogland, M. L. P., Waters-Rist, A. L. (2022). Diet and urbanisation in medieval Holland. Studying dietarychange through carious lesions and stable isotope analysis. Int J Osteoarchaeol, 32, 142-155. DOI: 10.1002/oa.3051

Wintle, M. (2000). An Economic and Social History of the Netherlands, 1800–1920. In An Economic and Social History of the Netherlands, 1800–1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.