DNA research from Jesus Christ

The bones of about 200 soldiers who died from Jesus are still in good condition under peat, allowing experts to hope for their ability to study DNA.

Danish archaeologists have unearthed a mass grave of hundreds of soldiers killed from the Iron Age to search for clues about the fate of these people, as well as the brutal habits of the tribes. Germans outside the Roman Empire.

Picture 1 of DNA research from Jesus Christ
Experts hope to find clues about life outside the Roman Empire

The bones of about 200 soldiers were found inside peat bogs near the village of Alken on the Jutland Peninsula (Denmark).

Experts hope to find more corpses 2,000 years ago, in Jesus' time.

The first bones, belonging to the youngest victims of 13 years old, were discovered in 2009, according to the Daily Mail.

Cuts and whips on skeletons show that they die suddenly, but that is the only thing experts know up to this moment.

In addition to hoping to identify the origins of the victims and murderers through DNA testing, experts say the new discovery may reveal the mysteries of the situation at that time outside the empire's borders. Roman.