Posted on 09/23/2018 3:39:48 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
The Eastern Slovakia Museum in Kosice has presented two unique bronze helmets from the late Bronze Age. A mushroom picker found them last year near the village of Trhoviste in Michalovce county. The finder brought the objects to the museum in January of this year.
The museum's archaeologist Dárius Gasaj informed the Regional Monument's Board.
"This precious finding consists of two Bronze helmets, partly stuck to each other. There were also two pairs of protective cheek pads and two spiral arm guards," said Róbert Pollák, director of the museum, as quoted by the SITA newswire.
The finder wishes to remain anonymous. The archaeologist with a colleague from the Regional Monument's Board examined the site of the find in detail...
Discoveries of helmets from the Bronze Age are rare not only in Slovakia but in the whole of Europe, according to Gasaj. The helmets from Trhoviste are western European style made from two shaped bronze plates. The decorated sides are connected with a central three-toothed comb that has a hole for attaching a decorative plume. Other holes at the sides and at the bottom edge are to attach the protective cheek pads.
Only three similar pieces had been found, all of them in the Eastern Alpine area... Similar helmets have been found in Lúãky, Spisská Belá and Iaskov but they were made only from one sheet of bronze. They originated between the 12th and 10th century BC.
(Excerpt) Read more at spectator.sme.sk ...
An improvement. The photographer was emphasizing ‘drama’. But for information purposes I would have liked to see it isolated and lit better.
Well, there’s a big difference between showing off a recent discovery not yet fully examined and pieces that have been cleaned, documented and put on display. Doubt that the Slovakian museum has much of a budget. The press release might have been made in part to gather more financial support.
BTW, the choice of how to crop the site photo was mine, so... mea culpa. ;>)
Amazing what can be done on a droid phone very quickly.
Heck, even his wife was named Eileen
I got it tho his real wife was named Olympias. She was Alexander’s Mother and a priestess of some weird snake cult.
I'm just forever frustrated by poorly shot photos.
Sometimes I wonder if people are actually looking at what they're photographing.
Then there's back lighting. People don't seem understand you shine the light ON the subject not behind it. Tired of seeing everything in silhouette or having to download the photo and adjust brightness and contrast see see any detail.
End of photo rant.
Nope, the multitudes of chopped off heads prove they don’t register what’s actually visible in the viewfinder.
;>)
So cool. Thanks for posting.
The Metropolitan Museum in NYC has a few Greek Bronze Age helmets in beautiful condition on display that could have been worn at the siege of Troy. The startling thing is that they would probably only fit a 7th grader today. Much of the other Greek armor in their collection from that period, grieves and the like, are about the same size. They were small back then. Another thing rather interesting are the body shapes of the warriors depicted on pottery from that era. Their hamstrings are developed far out of proportion to the rest of the body. This is a clue that speed in closing for a sharp attack, or sprinting away to evade one, was one of the most important assets for the ideal Argive.
Her original name was Myrtale. She started calling herself Olympias when she moved up the civilizational ladder from Epirus to Macedon.
Thanks for that info.
I was a Classics major and did not know that.
as to size — you see the same small men in medieval armor. these guys were mostly five feet tall.
Inches have only been put on in the last 100 years.
When I was a kid growing up in DeFuniak Springs, FL our city library had a huge collection of Scottish armor. I noticed that they must have been small people.
The swords on the other hand were huge. I thought they must have been really strong before I learned they were two handed.
Interestingly, William Wallace was 6’4”.
Crested helmets were attributed to the Carians by Herodotus, and the Carians / Cretans / Caunians equated (same source). People on both sides probably used crested helmets, but there wasn't a standard uniform, which probably tended to result in "friendly fire" losses.
Not sure it's in the excerpt above, but are conventionally dated "between the 12th and 10th century BC". Since these were not excavated by pros, there's probably no way to get a good date on them now using scientific dating of any kind.
There's nothing wrong with the photo.
These are not Celtic, it's not likely the Celts wore anything like these, unless they got them in trade or took them off a dead guy. And if the conventional dating is correct, the Celts weren't yet in Europe; the Hallstatt culture is generally regarded as the classical era or "real" Celts. The Irish Book of Invasions records three prior layers of paint (as it were) in the British Isles. I watched a YT vid about Hallstatt culture princely tombs this morning sometime, can't remember the name, this may be similar -- Etruscan grave goods, Greek vase, along with other stuff acquired in trade, plus Celtic-worked gold items; there's a find from about mid-century, also in France I think, which had the largest surviving "vase".
The slinkies are nice, those are also armor items.
Interesting. Will have to look for that
For some reason, youtube seems to think I’m a teenage consumer of Kardashian level pop culture.
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