Remains at Notre Dame Identified as 16th-Century Poet

News September 26, 2024

Lead sarcophagus unearthed beneath Notre Dame's transept
© Denis Gliksman, Inrap
SHARE:

PARIS, FRANCE—According to a Live Science report, human remains found in a sealed lead coffin beneath the nave of Notre Dame Cathedral have been identified as the French Renaissance poet Joachim du Bellay, who died in 1560 at the age of 37, by scientists led by Éric Crubézy of the University of Toulouse III and the French National Centre for Scientific Research. Examination of the remains revealed signs of bone tuberculosis, chronic meningitis, and frequent horseback riding. “He matches all the criteria of the portrait [of Joachim du Bellay],” Crubézy said. “He is an accomplished horseman, suffers from both conditions mentioned in some of his poems, like in La Complainte du désespéré, where he describes ‘this storm that blurs [his] mind,’ and his family belonged to the royal court and the pope’s close entourage,” he added. The poet is also known to have ridden on horseback from Paris to Rome, “which is no mean feat when you have tuberculosis like he did,” Crubézy explained. For more on the discovery of the sarcophagus, go to "Update: Notre Dame's Nobility.

  • Features September/October 2024

    Hunting for the Lost Temple of Artemis

    After a century of searching, a chance discovery led archaeologists to one of the most important sanctuaries in the ancient Greek world

    Read Article
    Courtesy Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece
  • Features September/October 2024

    Trees of the Sky World

    Why Australia’s Indigenous Wiradjuri people carved sacred symbols into trees to mark burials of their honored dead

    Read Article
    Courtesy Caroline Spry
  • Features September/October 2024

    The People Before the Book

    A trove of papyri unearthed on the Egyptian island of Elephantine gives voice to an early Jewish community

    Read Article
    Bildarchiv Steffens/Bridgeman Images
  • Features September/October 2024

    Pompeii Style

    Inside the Roman houses where archaeologists continue to discover evocative new masterpieces

    Read Article
    Courtesy Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei