Remains at Notre Dame Identified as 16th-Century Poet

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.

Lead sarcophagus unearthed beneath Notre Dame's transept

“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.

Scientists study the sarcophagus and skeleton of the man now believed to be Joachim du Bellay

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.

Centuries-old "cold case" mystery of poet buried in Notre Dame may be  solved, researchers say - CBS News

Related Posts

Echoes in Stone: The Living Art of Arnhem Land

Echoes in Stone: The Living Art of Arnhem Land

On the sun-warmed sandstone walls of Arnhem Land in northern Australia, a profound and ancient story unfolds. Here, in a vast landscape of rugged cliffs and quiet…

The Silent Witness: An Iron Age Bog Body

In the peat bogs of Northern Europe, time has a way of preserving secrets. Beneath layers of moss, mud, and acidic water, archaeologists have discovered bodies so…

Echoes of Violence: The Anglo-Saxon Mᴀss Grave at Oxford

In 2009, during routine construction work near Oxford, England, archaeologists made a chilling discovery that would send ripples across the field of medieval archaeology. Beneath a quiet…

Frozen in Ash: The Eternal Victims of Pompeii

On a late summer day in 79 CE, the thriving Roman city of Pompeii was abruptly silenced. Mount Vesuvius, looming quietly to the north of the Bay…

Faces of Eternity: The Royal Mummies of Ancient Egypt

Among the most haunting yet captivating discoveries of Egyptology are the preserved remains of Egypt’s pharaohs and queens. The pH๏τograph of two mummies—remarkably lifelike in their stillness—brings…

Silent Witness of the Sands: The Pre-Dynastic Mummy of Egypt

In the arid expanse of the Libyan Desert, on the western edge of the Nile Valley, archaeologists uncovered a hauntingly preserved human body, dating back nearly 5,000–6,000…