Gessel gold hoard: 3,300-year-old Bronze Age treasure among largest in prehistoric Europe
By
Kristina Killgrove
Best dunked in coffee. Better still, swap for a fresh one.
Summary
The Gessel gold hoard is a 3,300-year-old Bronze Age treasure discovered in Germany, consisting of only three pieces of jewelry yet ranking among the largest prehistoric gold hoards ever found in Europe. The article, written by archaeologist and science writer Kristina Killgrove, covers this significant archaeological discovery.
Key quotes
· 1 pulledThe Gessel gold hoard is among the largest treasures ever discovered in prehistoric Europe but has only three pieces of jewelry in it.
You might also wanna read
Second Anglo-Saxon oven unearthed at Felton dig site in Northumberland
Archaeologists have uncovered a second oven during their fourth dig at an Anglo-Saxon site near Felton, Northumberland. The site, popular wi
Skeletal remains of Queen Elisenda of Montcada and 24 others discovered in Barcelona monastery excavation
Archaeologists in Barcelona opened eight 14th-century graves at the Royal Monastery of Santa Maria Pedralbes and discovered 25 skeletons, in
livescience.com·2d ago1,200-year-old gold and silver hoard discovered along medieval Hajj route in Saudi Arabia
Archaeologists in Saudi Arabia have discovered a 1,200-year-old clay pot containing over 100 gold, silver, and gemstone-encrusted artifacts
livescience.com·4d agoArchaeologists Discover Possible Remains of Historical Musketeer d'Artagnan Under Dutch Church
Archaeologists in the Netherlands have discovered skeletal remains under a church that they believe may belong to the historical musketeer d
HS2 Archaeological Digs Reveal 450,000 Historical Artifacts in Secret Warehouse
The BBC has been granted exclusive access to a secret warehouse storing approximately 450,000 archaeological treasures unearthed during the
World's Largest Medieval Cog Discovered in Danish Waters, Dating to 1410
Maritime archaeologists from Denmark's Viking Ship Museum have discovered what they believe to be the world's largest cog, a medieval cargo
medievalists.net·4mo ago