Two 2,500-year-old neck rings found near Norrköping

Two Bronze Age neck rings have been discovered in a grave in Marby outside Norrköping. The find was made during an archaeological investigation ahead of new housing construction.

The two neck rings, around 2,500 years old, are known as wendelringar and are made of cast bronze. They were found together in a stone setting with burials, which the archaeologists describe as unusual or perhaps unique.

Alf Ericsson at Arkeologerna, part of the Swedish History Museums, says the team had not expected such a find. The rings are believed to have been placed as votive offerings and were a status symbol most often worn by women.

The investigation of the area east of Norrköping, which also includes rock carvings and settlement remains from the late Bronze Age, is underway because new housing is to be built there. Cremated human bones were also found in one of the graves, both in an urn and in smaller pits in the ground.

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Illustration of Brattås farm double murder crime scene from 2005 with DNA arrest overlay.
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Man held for Brattås double murder from 2005

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A man in his mid-40s has been remanded in custody on probable cause for the unsolved double murder at a farm in Brattås outside Härnösand in the summer of 2005. The arrest was enabled by DNA-based genealogy research following a new law change last year. Prosecutor Hanna Flordal confirms the man's DNA matches the trace from the crime scene.

A new study shows that people in Bronze Age Britain continued to rely on animal bone tools for copper extraction at the Great Orme mine in North Wales, even after metal tools became available. Researchers examined 150 bone artefacts and found they were shaped for specific tasks like splitting rock and scraping ore. The practice lasted at least nine centuries from 3700 to 2800 years ago.

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The Swedish National Heritage Board has paid out four million kronor as a finder's reward for a large medieval silver treasure discovered in the Stockholm area.

Archaeology students at Uppsala University have begun excavating Engelska parken to uncover remnants of past generations' student life. The project focuses on the last 150 years, seeking traces of chemistry experiments, political manifestations, and parties. Finds are displayed daily to the public.

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Artist Nygårds Karin Bengtsson, born in Mora and active in Skåne, now shows works at Rättviks konsthall. The exhibition stems from a visit to Övralid.

A possible kneeprint left by a Neanderthal has been found in clay inside Bruniquel cave in south-west France. The impression dates to around 175,000 years ago and sits close to circular structures built from broken stalagmites.

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Two people have been found dead in a villa in a village in Eslöv municipality. Police suspect murder due to the circumstances.

 

 

 

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