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1,700-year-old ‘barbarian’ burial discovered along Roman Empire’s frontier in Germany


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1,700-year-old ‘barbarian’ burial discovered along Roman Empire’s frontier in Germany

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Credit: Yvonne Mühleis/State Office for the Preservation of Monuments, Stuttgart Regional Council

Archaeologists in Germany have discovered the 1,700-year-old burial of a “barbarian” who lived on the edge of the

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and was given valuable grave goods, including glassware, pottery and a fine-tooth comb.

The grave, which is thought to date to the first half of the fourth century, holds the ******** of a man who ***** at around age 60. It was found in May during excavations ahead of the construction of new homes in the center of the village of Gerstetten, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) east of the city of Stuttgart in southwest Germany, according to a translated

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from the Stuttgart Regional Council.

The grave was elaborately built and enclosed by a wooden chamber, and it was situated in a solitary but prominent location, the statement said.

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Among the grave goods, one glass beaker was of particularly high quality and may have been obtained from the nearby Roman fort at Guntia, now Günzburg, while distinctive features of the other burial objects suggested they were from further north, in the Elbe-Saale region of what’s now central Germany.

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Two cracked ceramic pots with some pieces missing

Barbarian Germania

The northern limit of the Roman Empire in this region — known as the “Upper Germanic Limes” — ran just to the north of Gerstetten; beyond it were the lands known as “Magna Germania” or Greater Germania, where the Germanic tribes lived.

The

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was heavily guarded by legionaries stationed at forts along the frontier, such as the fort at Guntia, but Germanic ways of life — and Germanic burials — were practiced outside the forts.

The Romans called the Germanics “

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” — a Greek word, originally meaning “people who speak differently,” that they applied to non-Roman people outside their territories. After the fifth century, Germanic barbarians — led by the
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and
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— invaded the Roman lands to the south and precipitated the empire’s fall.

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A man digs in an excavation site with visible bones around him

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An excavation site revealing piles of bones

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A photo of an excavation site

Restoration work

The man ******* at Gerstetten was likely one of the Alemanni, a federation of Germanic tribes whose people lived near the Upper Rhine Valley, according to the statement. Alemanni graves from this time are rare in the region, the statement said. They were usually found in groups of between five and 12 individuals, and archaeologists think two more graves could yet be found in an adjacent area.

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—1,700-year-old Roman fort discovered in Germany was built to keep out barbarians

The artifacts from the Germanic grave at Gerstetten have been taken to a restoration workshop in the nearby town of Esslingen.

The human bones are still at the site so they can be documented by the archaeologists, but one of the ***** man’s ribs has already been sampled for

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at a laboratory in the city of Mannheim. The results show the man was ******* between A.D. 263 and 342, according to the statement.



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#1700yearold #barbarian #burial #discovered #Roman #Empires #frontier #Germany

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