Feces, fragrance and medicine chemical evidence of ancient therapeutics in a Roman unguentarium
Künye
Atila, C.; Demirbolat, İ.; Babaç Çelebi, R. Feces, fragrance and medicine chemical evidence of ancient therapeutics in a Roman unguentarium. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, v.70 (2026), 105589.Özet
Fecal-based pharmacological treatments are widely attested in Greco-Roman medical texts, yet no direct
chemical evidence has until now supported their practical application. This study presents the first molecular
confirmation of such practices through GC–MS/FID analysis of organic residues from a Roman glass unguenta rium (artifact no. 4027) excavated in Pergamon, a major center of Roman medicine. The vessel’s contents
revealed a distinctive blend of human fecal biomarkers (including coprostanol and 24-ethylcoprostanol) and
aromatic compounds such as carvacrol, a major constituent of thyme oil. These results align with classical
prescriptions that combined dung with odor-masking agents to enhance patient compliance − practices noted in
the works of Galen, Dioscorides, and Pliny the Elder.
By integrating archaeometric analysis with historical and philological research, the study reframes Roman
unguentaria as vehicles not only for cosmetics, but also for socially managed therapeutic substances. The findings
contribute critical empirical support for the pharmacological use of excrement in antiquity and offer a replicable
interdisciplinary model for investigating ancient medicine. In light of contemporary interest in microbiome based therapies, this evidence also prompts a reconsideration of early traditions once dismissed as marginal
or irrational.
Kaynak
Journal of Archaeological Science: ReportsCilt
70Bağlantı
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352409X26000246https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2026.105589
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12780/1327


















