Bones of Britian's oldest rabbit, dating to 1AD, discovered in Roman palace

Britain's earliest rabbit which has been found at at Fishbourne Roman Palace in Sussex - a discovery which reveals bunnies arrived in the country 1,000 years earlier than previously thought.
PA
Bonnie Christian18 April 2019

Britain's earliest rabbit has been found at a Roman palace - a discovery which reveals that the animals arrived in the country 1,000 years earlier than previously thought.

Rabbits are native to Spain and France and it had been thought they were a medieval introduction to Britain, but this fresh discovery has pushed that timing back by more than a millennium.

Radiocarbon dating of the bone, which was unearthed at Fishbourne Roman Palace in West Sussex, shows the rabbit was alive in 1AD.

The 1.6in (4cm) segment of a tibia bone was found during excavations in 1964 but it remained in a box, unrecognised, until 2017, when Historic England zooarchaeologist Dr Fay Worley realised the bone was from a rabbit, and genetic analyses have proved she was right.

It had been thought rabbits were a medieval introduction to Britain, but this fresh discovery has pushed that timing back by more than a millennium.
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Britain's earliest rabbit does not bear any butchery marks and another analysis suggests it was kept in confinement.

The inhabitants at Fishbourne Palace were known to be wealthy and kept a varied menagerie, so the rabbit could have been an exotic pet.

Academics from the Universities of Exeter, Oxford and Leicester carried out the analyses.

Further research is continuing to determine where the animal came from and whether it is related to present-day rabbits.

Professor Naomi Sykes, from the University of Exeter, said: "This is a tremendously exciting discovery and this very early rabbit is already revealing new insights into the history of the Easter traditions we are all enjoying this week.

"The bone fragment was very small, meaning it was overlooked for decades, and modern research techniques mean we can learn about its date and genetic background as well.

Nearly nothing is known about the origins of the Easter Bunny traditions.

"We are looking forward to telling people about our ongoing research this week. There's a lot we don't know about the origins of Easter, and we're learning more every day."

Dr Worley said: "I was excited to find a rabbit bone from a Roman deposit, and thrilled when the radiocarbon date confirmed that it isn't from a modern rabbit that had burrowed in.

"This find will change how we interpret Roman remains and highlights that new information awaits discovery in museum collections."

Easter is the most important event in the Christian calendar, yet very little is known about when it first appeared in Britain.

Although there is an abundance of popular belief and folklore, nearly nothing is known about the origins of Easter customs, such as the giving of eggs purportedly delivered by the Easter Bunny.

The research team is using evidence from anthropology, archaeology, history, evolutionary biology, law, historical linguistics, natural history and religious studies to try to work out where and when modern Easter traditions first began and when they arrived in Britain.

The English word Easter was first documented in 8AD by the Venerable Bede, whose treatise On The Reckoning Of Time refers to spring celebrations in honour of the pagan goddess Eostre, from whom Easter takes its English and German name.

The first historical mention of an "Easter Bunny" is in fact an Easter hare, and is found in a German text from 1682.

It is not clear how, when or why the rabbit became linked to the Easter festival, although it could be due to the spread of Christian religious beliefs.

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