Brothwell was born in 1933 in
Nottingham, England. He began his involvement in archaeology as a teenager; this included analysing finds from a local gravel works, and excavating Anglo-Saxon skeletons at a local quarry with some school friends. He was involved in his first official
archaeological excavation in
Thurgarton, Nottinghamshire, where they excavated and recorded a number of medieval burials. Having finished
secondary school, he enrolled in
art college with the aim of becoming a teacher. However, after a year he returned to school to study for
A-Levels in geology, biology, and chemistry. Having earned three A-Levels, Brothwell was offered a place at
University College London to study
anthropology. However, as he had completed his A-Levels a year later than most, at 19, he was immediately
called up to serve his
National Service. With his interests in
Quakerism and knowledge of his father's experience of
World War I, he became a
conscientious objector. He was prosecuted and ordered to pay a large fine (for which his father provided the money), but was called up for a second time after settling with the court. This time his refusal resulted in a prison sentence which he served at
HM Prison Lincoln. He continued his interest in archaeology while imprisoned, including excavating a bulldog skull that he found in the yard during his daily exercise. Brothwell only served two months of a one-year sentence and was released in time to take up his place at University College London. From 1952 to 1956, while based in the Department of Anthropology, he studied a wide range of courses; these were mainly anthropology or archaeology related, but he also studied
geology,
zoology, and genetics. He graduated in 1956 with a
Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree. He then began a doctorate in
physical anthropology, but he left without completing it after two years of research to take up his first academic position. ==Academic career==