‘Hermetically sealed’Roman sarcophagus frozen in time for 1,700 years finally opened by archaeologists

[aggregator] downloaded image for imported item #6470

This post was originally published on this site.

Archaeologists have opened the lid on a rare, untouchedRoman sarcophagusin Hungary — the first time it’s been opened in 1,700 years.

The tomb, discovered by archaeologists with the Budapest History Museum, was found in Óbuda, a northern district of Budapest.

Óbuda was known as Aquincum in Roman times, serving as a major settlement located on the banks of theDanube River.The tomb was found in a 3rd-century burial ground, among the ruins of abandoned houses.

MAN STUMBLES ACROSS HOARD OF PRICELESS COINS WHILE OUT FOR NATURE WALK: ‘FACE TO FACE WITH HISTORY’

Remarkably, the tomb hadn’t been opened by looters since it was buried.Its stone lid was secured by molten lead and metal clamps.

Lead archaeologist Gabriella Fényes stressed the undisturbed nature of the findings in comments to The Associated Press. 

View of skeleton in ancient graveyard

Archaeologists in Budapest opened a rare Roman sarcophagus after it had been sealed for nearly 1,700 years.(Gabor Lakos, Budapest History Museum via AP)

“The peculiarity of the finding is that it was a hermetically sealed sarcophagus,” she said.“It was not disturbed previously, so it was intact.”

Inside was a complete skeleton anddozens of artifacts, including two glass vessels, bronze figures and 140 coins.

“They must have really loved who they buried here.”

Excavators deduced that the grave belonged to a young woman when they found a hairpin made of bone,amber jewelryand gold-threaded fabric.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top