The authors argue that the relative lack of formal burials in fifth-century Britain could be attributed to continued mortuary treatments from the previous Iron Age and Roman period, suggesting a continuity in practices despite the withdrawal of the Roman army.
Louis IX's crusade and his subsequent defeat did not just impact his own forces but created a power vacuum that was strategically exploited by emerging leaders in the Mamluk sultanate, altering the political landscape of Egypt at the time.
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