Recent archaeological investigations in the Tollense Valley led by the University of Gottingen, the State Agency for Cultural Heritage in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and the University of Greifswald have unearthed a collection of 31 unusual objects. Researchers believe this is the personal equipment of a Bronze Age warrior who died on the battlefield 3,300 years ago. This unique find was discovered by a diving team headed by Dr Joachim Kruger, from the University of Greifswald, and seems to have been protected in the river from the looting, which inevitably followed fighting. The study was published in Antiquity.
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Collection of objects was found by divers in the Tollense river and is probably the contents of a personal pouch of a warrior who died 3,300 years ago on the battlefield [Credit: Volker Minkus] |
Over 12,000 pieces of human bone have already been recovered from the valley and osteoanthropologist Ute Brinker, from the State Agency has identified more than 140 individuals - young adult males in good physical condition.
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A human skull found in the Tollense valley with fatal trauma caused by a Bronze arrowhead [Credit: Volker Minkus] |
The discovery of a new set of artefacts from the remains of battle provides important new clues. The divers could document a number of Bronze finds in their original position on the river ground, among them a decorated belt box, three dress pins and also arrow heads.
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The battlefield remains from the layer where objects were found at the site near the Tollense river in Weltzin [Credit: Stefan Sauer] |
Radiocarbon dating of the collection of objects demonstrates that the finds belong to the battlefield layer and they were probably the personal equipment of one of the victims. The finds were studied in a Master's thesis by Tobias Uhlig and the new results make it increasingly clear that there was a massive violent conflict in the older Nordic Bronze Age (2000-1200 BC). In fact, recent evidence suggests that it is likely to have been on a large scale, clearly stretching beyond regional borders.
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View of the excavation site close to the Tollense river in Weltzin where many human remains and objects were found [Credit: Stefan Sauer] |
Source: University of Gottingen [October 15, 2019]
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