Archeologists in Brazil find 200,000 items, including toothbrush thought to be emperor’s
Archeologists in Brazil find 200,000 items, including toothbrush thought to be emperors
By Associated Press, Updated: Wednesday, September 18, 6:25 PM
RIO DE JANEIRO An ivory toothbrush thought to have belonged to Brazils Emperor Pedro II and a minty toothpaste made by a European chemist for the Portuguese queen are among more than 200,000 pieces dating from the 17th through 19th centuries that archeologists have unearthed from a site in Rio de Janeiro being used for an extension the citys subway lines.
A team of more than two dozen archeologists, historians and others began excavating the plot in northern Rio last March. The plot, once the site of a slaughterhouse, is near the former imperial palace and thought to have once been used as a landfill by the imperial family and others, team members said Wednesday.
The area, now a construction site for Rios massive subway expansion projects, has not only yielded an impressive number of objects but also pieces in remarkably good condition, team leader Claudio Prado de Mello said.
What is the most impressive is the intact state of many objects, said Mello. In archeology we usually find very fragmented pieces, but this time were finding whole objects.
The ivory toothbrush thought to have belonged to Dom Pedro II, who ruled over Brazil from 1831-1889, has turned brown with age. Its boar bristles are long gone, but the inscription remains legible: His Majesty the Emperor of Brazil. A round white porcelain pot emblazoned with to the Queen of Portugal Maria of Saboia is thought to have contained mint-flavored tooth paste made specially for the queen by a chemist with offices in London and Paris.
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