A combination of bone analysis, carbon dating, stable isotope
analysis and DNA testing yielded data that "supports the
possibility" that the human bones found in 1955 are those of
Bishop Thedomir, according to a paper published on Tuesday in
the "Antiquity" journal.
Oral tradition, later written down, has it that Theodomir
discovered the tomb of St. James the Apostle between 820 and 830
AD following a divine revelation in what is now Santiago de
Compostela, the capital of the Galicia region.
News of the discovery reached King Alfonso II of the
neighbouring region of Asturias, who marched with his court from
Oviedo to Santiago.
The 146 km (90 mile) royal pilgrimage established what is today
known as the "Primitive Way", the oldest path used by pilgrims
of the Camino, or Way of St. James.
Theodomir's existence had been hotly debated until 1955, when
Spanish archaeologist Manuel Chamoso Lamas discovered a
tombstone underneath Santiago de Compostela's cathedral
inscribed with his name.
An initial study of the bones concluded that they probably came
from an elderly adult male, but three decades later a new
assessment based on photographs of the site proclaimed them to
belong to a woman aged between 50 and 70.
The newest study, led by Patxi Perez-Ramallo of the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology, combined different
analytical methods in a bid to recreate the individual's life
story.
The carbon-14 dating shows the person died after the age of 45,
and the bones' features suggest they had a weak build and
performed little physical work during their lifetime, which is
consistent with the lifestyle of high clergy during the period.
Perez-Ramallo told El Pais newspaper that there was a "98%
likelihood of it being Theodomir".
(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Charlie Devereux and
Sharon Singleton)
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