Nálezy nejenom s detektorem kovů ve východní Evropě

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Nálezy a archeologické výzkumy ve východné Evropě
3 200-year-old gold necklaces, beads and jewellery in a double tomb from the Bronze Age

3 200-year-old gold necklaces, beads and jewellery in a double tomb from the Bronze Age

GM4PRO
11490 3
Armenian and Polish archaeologists have discovered a double grave from the Late Bronze Age with rich furnishings. Among other things, it contained gold and carnelian necklaces, bronze bracelets, gold and pewter pendants. The remains of two adults lay in a stone-lined box, which also contained the rare remains of a wooden burial bed and preserved Syro-Mesopotamian pottery.
Jewish treasure from the beginning of the Nazi invasion of Poland found in Lodz

Jewish treasure from the beginning of the Nazi invasion of Poland found in Lodz

GM4PRO
23172 5
During the renovation of an old tenement house in Lodz, Poland, a collection of more than 400 valuable objects of Jewish families hidden in fear of the Nazi occupation was discovered. The collection includes kiddush cups, Hanukkah cups, menorahs, sacred artifacts and fragments of the Talmud, as well as items of daily and household furnishings, including silver-plated crockery, glass perfume bottles and clothing. Everything was wrapped in Polish, Yiddish and German newspapers from October 1939.
Bronze Age treasure stolen twice over

Bronze Age treasure stolen twice over

GM4PRO
6747 6
In the Polish village of Kalisce near Biały Bór in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, two treasures from the Late Bronze Age were discovered "lying" on top of each other. They are one of the largest and most varied collections not only in Pomerania, they are also unique in Poland. Unfortunately, the context of the deposition of the finds was irretrievably destroyed during their double illegal retrieval.
13.5.2019 24 jewels and 2776 gold and silver coins

13.5.2019 24 jewels and 2776 gold and silver coins

Viky
6665 1
A real treasure was discovered in the cellar of a house in the former Jewish ghetto in Keszthely. It contained 24 jewels and 2,776 rare gold and silver coins. The original owners of this wealth are believed to have died in a concentration camp.
Unprecedented find of 6,500 years of gold rings in a Neolithic grave

Unprecedented find of 6,500 years of gold rings in a Neolithic grave

GM4PRO
30011 29
Near the city of Oradea in western Romania, a unique set has been discovered that is unparalleled in Europe. During the construction of a new A3 motorway link, workers came across the grave of a Copper Age woman. It contained two gold beads, 800 bone beads, a spiral copper bracelet and above all 169 gold rings.
"Amber elites" in ancient Kaliningrad change the view of historians

"Amber elites" in ancient Kaliningrad change the view of historians

Elmara
22887 3
Excavations of a necropolis on the Sambian Peninsula in Russia have revealed rich graves of high-ranking elites. In addition to weapons, jewellery and personal effects, items such as a Roman board game were found. The site has emerged as an important trading centre, benefiting from its interconnectedness with the whole of Europe at the time...
41,500-year-old pendant found in Poland, the oldest of its kind on the continent

41,500-year-old pendant found in Poland, the oldest of its kind on the continent

GM4PRO
12927 6
The artefact from the Polish cave Stajnia was found together with other objects in 2010, but only recently a study investigating its age was published. Radiocarbon dating has placed the pendant at 41,500 years ago, which is at least 1,500 years older than previous evidence of the production of similar artefacts by the earliest members of Homo sapiens in Europe. The object, decorated with puncture curves and smoothing, has thus "become" the oldest known decorated mammoth pendant in Eurasia.
More than 300 ceramic vessels from the 4th century found in a Roman camp

More than 300 ceramic vessels from the 4th century found in a Roman camp

GM4PRO
17010 1
The Viminacium deposit in eastern Serbia is huge and rich, and a complete exploration would take more than 300 years. The city was once inhabited by 30,000 people, larger than Pompeii. So far a considerable number of buildings and structures, statues, coins, jewellery, weapons and everyday objects have been found here. The most recent finds are hundreds of intact ceramic vessels in a building near the western wall of the military camp.

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