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Why Did This Wealthy Scotsman Pay a Jeweler to Wrap His Teeth in Gold Wire Hundreds of Years Ago?

Smithsonian Magazine·Sonja Anderson·23 days ago
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What an early example of a dental bridge reveals about health, wealth and social values in the late medieval and early modern world The 20-karat gold wire was installed some time before the man died. Dittmar, J., Crozier, R., Cameron, A. et al., British Dental Journal, 2026 Researchers have identified Scotland’s oldest dental bridge , and it’s rather flashy. The twisted piece of wire, attached to the jaw of a man from the late medieval or early modern period, is made of 20-karat gold. According to a study recently published in the British Dental Journal , the bridge was drawn between the man’s lower front teeth, either securing a loose incisor or holding a false tooth in its place. The mandible in question was found two decades ago, during an archaeological excavation at St. Nicholas Kirk, an 11th- or 12th-century church in Aberdeen, Scotland. In 2006, ahead of construction, excavators pulled out about 900 human skeletons and nearly four tons of loose bones.…

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