There were thousands of samples of a rare bronze sculpture of an armed warrior in Bavaria recently searching for a celring anti -Seltatic anti -Manching. It is shown to the lungs with a shield raised on the left and with a sword in the right hand. There is a loop in the top of the data head, which shows that it is worn as a pendant. The statue was found in a ditch that is believed to be a limit. The vessels were recovered from the dates of the same layer to the third century BC
Only 75 mm (three inches) height and weight 55 grams (two ounces), a warrior is small but noteworthy complex. It was made using a lost wax casting technique, a method that includes producing a detailed model out of wax, penetrating it into the mud and then melting. The molten bronze is then inaugurated and once the wax data is filled with cavity.

Between 2021 and 2024, archaeologists from the Bavarian State Office for Memorial Personality (BLFD) have excavated 6,800 square meters of the Celtic Fort closed settlement southeast of Angolistadt, which has yielded more than 40,000 results. BLFD has comprehensive standards for recording and protecting all archaeological samples, including the need for X -rays of all metal items. This process not only helps identify searches, but also protected them because different metals require different climate environment to prevent deterioration.
A total of 15,268 pieces were recovered from the excavation of metal excavation, all of which were set up at the facility of BLFD Munich before protection. Many of these metal work were pieces and waste materials. The X -ray examination provides archaeologists with new insights about the manufacturing techniques, materials and metal recycling of OPDM workshops.
The X -ray of the bronze sculpture has revealed that the item has been attached to the dense product with copper corrosion products that confirmed its details, which was a celtic warrior manufactured in a solid bronze casting.
The complexity and scope of excavation has provided new insights to archaeologists how the residents of the opidum survive. They first managed to identify fish bones and scales, confirming the consumption of fish, which you think will be clear on the powder and Danube rivers, but in fact there has never been an archaeological document before. These things also confirmed that the opidum diet included beef and pork. The horses were slaughtered, but only in high age, so not for food. Sheep and goats were raised for their renewable resources (wool, milk), not meat.
About Manching, a group of thieves and 482 celibate gold coins have been stolen and convicted in Grameer News, in November 2022. The main accused was sentenced to 11 years in prison. Brakes suffered two of their chickens, respectively, seven years and four years and nine months. (The fourth suspect was sentenced to eight years, but for other thefts, the group has talked not to theft, but for some justice, but at least, but unfortunately they did not accept the guilty and they voluntarily have no information. The stolen treasures are still bigger than this.







