Mummipedia Wiki
Advertisement
Lindlow Woman
Biographical Information
Name(s) Lindow Woman, Lindow I, Suspected to be: Malika de Fernandez
Age 30-50 years old
Sex Female
Status
Height N/A
Source
Culture England
Date(s) 1740 ± 80BP (c.AD250)
Site
Current Location
Location Wilmslow, northwest England
Catalog #

Lindow Woman, also known as Lindow I, is the name given to the partial remains of a female bog body, discovered in a peat bog at Lindow Moss, near Wilmslow, northwest England, on 13 May 1983 by commercial peat-cutters. The remains were a skull fragment, with soft tissue and hair attached. In 1984 the same bog yielded Lindow Man, the most extensive bog body yet found in England. == The bog body of Lindow I was discovered on May 13, 1983 by commercial peat cutters Andy Mould and Stephen Dooley. They first noticed an unusual item on the conveyor belt which was comparable to a football in size.

After they freed him of the adhesive remains of peat, they realized the incomplete preserved human head with attached remnants of soft tissue, brain, eye, optic nerve, and hair. The police summoned by the Scouts suspected a crime, confiscated the remains and launched an investigation for murder. For years, a local man, Peter Reyn-Bardt, had been under suspicion of murdering his wife, Malika de Fernandez, in 1960, and of disposing of her body. Thinking that the skull fragment came from his wife's body, Reyn-Bardt confessed to her murder, and was sent for trial at Chester Crown Court in December 1983. Carbon-14dating of the skull fragment returned a date of 1740 ± 80BP (c.AD250). After this news became public, Reyn-Bardt tried revoking his confession, but he was still convicted of his wife's murder even though no trace of her body was found.[4]

Today, only the bony remains of the skull are available from the discovery after the improper handling of evidence by the police. The remains of the skull were anthropologically known as probably belonging to a 30-50 year-old woman. Recent studies however feed doubts as to the previous sex determination


Mummification

Studies

Pathology

Additional Info

External Links

Advertisement