PDA

View Full Version : Bronze Age Grave in Denmark Contained Egyptian Bead



Skywizard
12th December 2014, 18:01
http://www.archaeology.org/images/News/1412/Denmark-Egypt-glass.jpg
AARHUS, DENMARK—The chemical composition of 23 glass beads unearthed in Denmark was examined with plasma-spectrometry, and compared with the trace elements found in beads from Amarna in Egypt and Nippur in Mesopotamia. One of the beads, made of blue glass, had come from a woman’s Bronze Age burial that was excavated in 1880 at the Ølby site. She had been buried in a hollowed-out oak trunk wearing a belt disc, a string skirt with small bronze tubes, a bracelet made of amber beads, and a single blue glass bead. Science Nordic reports that the research team, made up of scientists from Moesgaard Museum, the National Museum of Denmark, Aarhus University, and the Institut de Recherche sur les Archéomatériaux in Orléans, France, matched this bead’s chemical signature to beads made 3,400 years ago in an Egyptian workshop. They now think that Egyptian glass beads, perhaps symbolizing the Egyptian sun cult, traveled north from the Mediterranean on the amber route, which carried Nordic amber south. Amber and glass beads have been found together at sites in the Middle East, Turkey, Greece, Italy, and Germany.



Source: http://www.archaeology.org/news/2771-141211-denmark-egypt-glass



peace...

Shadowself
13th December 2014, 16:25
This is not as unusual as it may seem. During that time period the Minoan trade with Egypt was prolific. It is quite possible those beads found their way to this woman via one of these trades.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minoan_civilization


Objects of Minoan manufacture suggest there was a network of trade with mainland Greece (notably Mycenae), Cyprus, Syria, Anatolia, Egypt, Mesopotamia, and westward as far as the coast of Spain.

Tesla_WTC_Solution
13th December 2014, 22:14
thanks so much for catching this Sky,

it reminds me of the Flight of the Noldori in Tolkien and the Mediterranean glass found in the Gundestrup cauldron.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Silver_cauldron.jpg/1920px-Silver_cauldron.jpg

looks very Minoan lol!

sorta like... Numenor? ;)


p.s. the celts and the Egyptian graves both contain the same spinning children's toys