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Old age isn’t a modern phenomenon – many people lived long enough to grow old in the olden days, too

Previously published on The Conversation. By Professor of Anthropology, University of South Carolina.

Every year I ask the college students in the course I teach about the 14th-century Black Death to imagine they are farmers or nuns or nobles in the Middle Ages. What would their lives have been like in the face of this terrifying disease that killed millions of people in just a few years?

Setting aside how they envision what it would be like to confront the plague, these undergrads often figure that during the medieval period they would already be considered middle-aged or elderly at the age of 20. Rather than being in the prime of life, they think they’d soon be decrepit and dead.

They’re reflecting a common misperception that long life spans in humans are very recent, and that no one in the past lived much beyond their 30s.

But that’s just not true. Keep on reading the entire article on The Conversation.
By
Professor of Anthropology, University of South Carolina.

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