History Blog – Finland found Iron Age Gladed Broch.

History Blog – Finland found Iron Age Gladed Broch.

History Blog – Finland found Iron Age Gladed Broch.At the end of the emigration (475-550 AD), a rare broch was discovered in Kami, Lapland, Northern Finland. The fola of the Gulded Bronze is engraved with stylized zoomorphic data. This is a unique search for Finland.

The brooch is 2.6 inches long, with a wide range of surviving gold. The waist may have been actually targeted by silver, though it has ended. Researchers have identified five animals in complex line designs on the buckle: four bird heads and one grade, probably deer, polar deer or alkal. The iron pin that used to wear it is rusty, but two mountains are still connected to the back of the brooch for the pin.

Such brochures were used in the couple, the women of the elite were used to tie the bodies of their clothing to the shoulder straps. The women wore them as a sign of status and were often buried. The comparisons have been found in Sweden and Norway, but with a similar decorative style, the only person found in Finland was found 70 miles in Rowanimi.

The only rescue buckle in Finland with a similar decorative style was found in Rowi. No similar relief boxes have been found in northern Sweden, as the nearest Holsingland is in the central Swedish region. Similar boxes were found in Norway, especially in southern Norway. “This discovery opens a completely new approach to the Iron Age in Lipland and the Tornew Valley,” says Reinin.

During the time of the item’s creation, during the migration period, different people wandered around Europe, building their business contacts together. According to research, the development and spread of relief boxes is especially linked to the interaction between the inhabitants of the English and Norwegian areas. Objects, such as various skilled, were also transferred to the people.

It was found in an area of Kimi by Metal Detectors Marja Tallnender, where Iron Age was buried earlier. A professional excavation of the found site has been planned and has now been named a safe archaeological site in which more metal detectors have been searched illegally. (County management board is allowed to detect metal in Sweden with advance permission.)

The buckle was briefly presented at the Torontilin Museum last month and has now been handed over to the Finnish National Board of Antiquities for the protection and research.

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