Walking in the forest, the young soldier picked up the golden ring of 3,000 years
A young soldier in western Poland has unknowingly picked up a rare and precious piece of jewelry dating back 3,000 years, in a forest.
Robert Baron, who was walking in the forest near Kuźnica Głogowska village, in western Poland, was fortunate enough to pick up a rare piece of gold ring of rare value.
'I curiously picked it up and thought it was just copper objects. But after giving things to an archaeologist, I was stunned when they were really rare jewels, ' said 25-year-old Baron.
The number of gold rings picked up when measuring the set in the forest.
Marcin Kosowicz, representative of the nearby relic protection office in the town of Zielona Góra, said: "The bracelets are made of a gold wire with an oval or circular cross-section, the diameter of the gold wire. about 0.1 cm The 7-twisted wire is separate while it cannot be connected to any archaeological site known so far. '
According to archaeologists, this treasure is believed to belong to the Lusatian , a nation that existed from 1300 BC to 500 BC in most of today's Poland and part of the Czech Republic. , Slovakia, eastern Germany and western Ukraine.
These antiques are almost identical to those found in collections related to Lusatian culture from the Bronze and Hallstatt era, but none of them were found to have been twisted until 7. ring.
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